On Thu, Dec 18, 2008 at 3:30 AM, Jean-Daniel Dupas <devli...@shadowlab.org> wrote: > > Le 18 déc. 08 à 04:55, Michael Ash a écrit : > >> On Wed, Dec 17, 2008 at 2:32 PM, Greg Parker <gpar...@apple.com> wrote: >>> >>> On Dec 16, 2008, at 7:22 PM, Michael Ash wrote: >>>> >>>> On Tue, Dec 16, 2008 at 8:02 PM, Chris Idou <idou...@yahoo.com> wrote: >>>>> >>>>> Is there any Cocoa and/or Carbon interface to UNIX signals? >>>> >>>> Nope. It's pretty easy to set up a signal handler that can call back >>>> to a Cocoa/CoreFoundation runloop though, by having it write to a pipe >>>> or mach port which the runloop monitors. >>> >>> Be warned that, to a close approximation, your code isn't allowed to do >>> anything inside the signal handler itself. This includes sending any >>> Objective-C messages to any object. (objc_msgSend may take locks. If the >>> signal is interrupting a thread that already holds those locks, you're >>> stuck.) >>> >>> The official list of functions you can call is in the sigaction man page. >>> Some Mach functions are also safe, but I don't know of an official list >>> of >>> which ones. >> >> Yep, that's a very good point. To use my suggestion, your signal >> handler must do *nothing* but write to the pipe or mach port, and it >> must ensure that the write is guaranteed non-blocking. This isn't too >> hard, but it must be adhered to rigidly. > > Although, as mention by Greg Parker, I didn't find doc that guarantee that > using mach_msg() is safe in a signal. (but Apple is using it in securityd, > so I'm not worry about it).
Good luck finding *any* documentation about the mach functions. (Seriously. If you know of good Apple-provided ones, I'd like to know!) Normally I'd be wary, but in this case not having documentation is simply par for the course. Mike
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