I am trying to trap a signal raised by a child process. However, my trap callback function is never called. I have the following test code
#include <csignal>
#include <iostream>
#include <thread>
#include <chrono>
int main()
{
std::this_thread::sleep_for (std::chrono::seconds(5));
std::cout << ">>> Signal Sent!" << std::endl;
raise(SIGUSR1);
return 0;
}
And this bash script
set -bm
set -e
KEEP_GOING=true
sigusr1()
{
echo "SIGUSR1 Recieved"
KEEP_GOING=false
}
trap sigusr1 SIGUSR1
./signalTest &
while $KEEP_GOING ; do
sleep 1s
echo "Waiting for signal"
done
When I run it I get the following
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
>>> Signal Sent!
[1]+ User defined signal 1 ./signalTest
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
Waiting for signal
^C
From the output I see that the signal is in fact sent, and in some capacity received. However the callback function in my trap is not executed.
Any thoughts?
raise sends the signal to the calling thread.
kill sends a signal to the specified process or thread.
To send the signal to the parent process, instead of
raise(SIGUSR1);
do
#include <unistd.h>
// ...
kill(getppid(), SIGUSR1);
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