Date: Wed, 15 Apr 1998 20:49:28 +0100 From: James Raynard <fhackers@jraynard.demon.co.uk> To: rotel@indigo.ie Cc: joelh@gnu.org, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG Subject: Re: PR kern/1144 Message-ID: <19980415204928.43540@jraynard.demon.co.uk> In-Reply-To: <199804150103.CAA01392@indigo.ie>; from Niall Smart on Wed, Apr 15, 1998 at 02:03:43AM %2B0000 References: <fhackers@jraynard.demon.co.uk> <199804150103.CAA01392@indigo.ie>
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On Wed, Apr 15, 1998 at 02:03:43AM +0000, Niall Smart wrote: > On Apr 1n, 9:17pm, James Raynard wrote: > > > > In his reply to my original PR, bde posted a macro that did what you > > suggest for integer arguments (is this not in the PR database?). > > Nope. Still got it? Yep. Note there's a followup as well. James Date: Tue, 16 Apr 1996 19:20:07 +1000 From: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au> Subject: Re: kern/1144: sig{add, del}set and sigismember fns don't check signo > >Obviously the macros would be much harder to fix > > Would they? How about > > #define sigaddset(set, signo) (((signo) <= 0 || (signo) >= NSIG) ? > (errno = EINVAL, -1) : > (*(set) |= 1 << ((signo) - 1), 0)) > > (untested, as usual) Try it with: for (signo = 0; signo < 32; ) sigaddset(set, signo++); or weird and not so weird things like: void *s = set; sigaddset(set, 1.234); sigaddset(s, SIGINT); which also fail for the standard macro, but would work for a prototyped function. It is possible to write it as a safe macro using Gnu C: #define sigaddset(set, signo) \ ({ struct sigaction *__set = set; \ int __signo = (signo); \ int __rv; \ \ /* 32 because NSIG is in application namespace. */ \ if (__signo <= 0 || __signo >= 32) { \ errno = EINVAL; \ __rv = -1; \ } else { \ *__set |= 1 << __signo; \ __rv = 0; \ } \ __rv; }) Untested, as usual. Who wants all that for a function? It is probably a pessimization to inline it unless signo is a constant. A larger and uglier gcc macro could be used to handle the constant case inline and call a function otherwise. Linux once used inline versions, but switched to function versions because the macros aren't worth the trouble. POSIX.1 1990 is unclearly written in this area. I think it allows our current macros for everything except sigismember(). It doesn't explictly require detection of errors, but it requires sigismember() to either fail and return -1 or succeed and return a value other than 0 if the signal isn't a member of the set. This fits well with most uses of the macros - you check the signal number using sigismember(), or know that it is valid, and then checking it in the other macros is a waste of time. Bruce Date: Tue, 16 Apr 1996 22:37:47 +1000 From: Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au> Subject: Re: kern/1144: sig{add, del}set and sigismember fns don't check signo I wrote: >#define sigaddset(set, signo) \ > ({ struct sigaction *__set = set; \ > int __signo = (signo); \ > int __rv; \ > \ > /* 32 because NSIG is in application namespace. */ \ > if (__signo <= 0 || __signo >= 32) { \ > errno = EINVAL; \ Namespace stuff is tricky. I think EINVAL isn't supposed to be visible if only <signal.h> is included, so it can't be used directly. Bruce To Unsubscribe: send mail to majordomo@FreeBSD.org with "unsubscribe freebsd-hackers" in the body of the message
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