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authorEgor Tensin <Egor.Tensin@gmail.com>2023-06-12 01:42:08 +0200
committerEgor Tensin <Egor.Tensin@gmail.com>2023-06-13 01:37:08 +0200
commit48ce9170b057ddd2165b0239a92aede15849f7a3 (patch)
treec9928af6202081d9521107f1dc0ae362f54a6adc /.dockerignore
parentlog: refactoring (diff)
downloadcimple-48ce9170b057ddd2165b0239a92aede15849f7a3.tar.gz
cimple-48ce9170b057ddd2165b0239a92aede15849f7a3.zip
use signalfd to stop on SIGTERM
Is this an overkill? I don't know. The thing is, correctly intercepting SIGTERM (also SIGINT, etc.) is incredibly tricky. For example, before this commit, my I/O loops in server.c and worker.c were inherently racy. This was immediately obvious if you tried to run the tests. The tests (especially the Valgrind flavour) would run a worker, wait until it prints a "Waiting for a new command" line, and try to kill it using SIGTERM. The problem is, the global_stop_flag check could have already been executed by the worker, and it would hang forever in recv(). The solution seems to be to use signalfd and select()/poll(). I've never used either before, but it seems to work well enough - at least the very same tests pass and don't hang now.
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