Date: Sat, 17 Oct 2009 12:46:37 -0400 From: "Mikhail T." <mi+thun@aldan.algebra.com> To: stable@FreeBSD.org Subject: Can close-ing a pipe trigger a SIGPIPE? Message-ID: <4AD9F4ED.2050002@aldan.algebra.com>
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Hello! I'm investigating a problem caused by (what seems like a spurious) SIGPIPE. The program creates a child process using pipe, exchanges a few messages with the child (via write and read) and closes the pipe. Some times -- in about 60% of the cases -- this causes a SIGPIPE to be delivered to the parent... Now, it is quite possible for the child to have already exited by the time the parent closes its end of the pipe -- but why should that cause a SIGPIPE, unless the parent tries to write something to the widowed pipe, which it does not? >From pipe(2): A pipe that has had an end closed is considered widowed. Writing on such a pipe causes the writing process to receive a SIGPIPE signal. There is no other mention of SIGPIPE in that manual page... I set SIGPIPE on ignore around the pipe-closing as a work-around, but I think, this is a bug... The thing is part of TclX' self-test (test signal-3.0) -- and it was not dying from SIGPIPE before the FreeBSD-7.x, as far as I can remember... It still seems to be fine on Linux... Have there been any changes in this area in FreeBSD? Thanks! -mi
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