> Just adding a little more clarification, there is an additional change
> between [a] and [b].
> As per [a] we would just restore the signal instead of changing the
> saved_sigmask and the signal could get delivered right then. [b]
> changes this to happen at syscall exit:

Rewording above, as there seems to be a few misrepresentations:

Just adding a little more clarification, there is an additional change
between [a] and [b].
As per [a] we would just restore the signal mask instead of changing
the saved_sigmask and the even the blocked signals could get delivered
right then. [b] changes the restoration to happen at syscall exit:

> void restore_user_sigmask(const void __user *usigmask, sigset_t *sigsaved)
> {
>
>            <snip>
>
>           /*
>            * When signals are pending, do not restore them here.
>            * Restoring sigmask here can lead to delivering signals
> that the above
>            * syscalls are intended to block because of the sigmask passed in.
>            */
>            if (signal_pending(current)) {
>            current->saved_sigmask = *sigsaved;
>            set_restore_sigmask();
>            return;
> }

 -Deepa

Reply via email to