ldbl-128ibm: Copy implementations from ldbl-128 instead of including them
[glibc.git] / bits / signum-generic.h
blob5a5683e7536340e89a9c5ae4ff55dda9d62acefc
1 /* Signal number constants. Generic template.
2 Copyright (C) 1991-2017 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
3 This file is part of the GNU C Library.
5 The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
6 modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
7 License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
8 version 2.1 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
10 The GNU C Library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
11 but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
12 MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
13 Lesser General Public License for more details.
15 You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
16 License along with the GNU C Library; if not, see
17 <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/>. */
19 #ifndef _BITS_SIGNUM_GENERIC_H
20 #define _BITS_SIGNUM_GENERIC_H 1
22 #ifndef _SIGNAL_H
23 #error "Never include <bits/signum-generic.h> directly; use <signal.h> instead."
24 #endif
26 /* Fake signal functions. */
28 #define SIG_ERR ((__sighandler_t) -1) /* Error return. */
29 #define SIG_DFL ((__sighandler_t) 0) /* Default action. */
30 #define SIG_IGN ((__sighandler_t) 1) /* Ignore signal. */
32 #ifdef __USE_XOPEN
33 # define SIG_HOLD ((__sighandler_t) 2) /* Add signal to hold mask. */
34 #endif
36 /* We define here all the signal names listed in POSIX (1003.1-2008);
37 as of 1003.1-2013, no additional signals have been added by POSIX.
38 We also define here signal names that historically exist in every
39 real-world POSIX variant (e.g. SIGWINCH).
41 Signals in the 1-15 range are defined with their historical numbers.
42 For other signals, we use the BSD numbers.
43 There are two unallocated signal numbers in the 1-31 range: 7 and 29.
44 Signal number 0 is reserved for use as kill(pid, 0), to test whether
45 a process exists without sending it a signal. */
47 /* ISO C99 signals. */
48 #define SIGINT 2 /* Interactive attention signal. */
49 #define SIGILL 4 /* Illegal instruction. */
50 #define SIGABRT 6 /* Abnormal termination. */
51 #define SIGFPE 8 /* Erroneous arithmetic operation. */
52 #define SIGSEGV 11 /* Invalid access to storage. */
53 #define SIGTERM 15 /* Termination request. */
55 /* Historical signals specified by POSIX. */
56 #define SIGHUP 1 /* Hangup. */
57 #define SIGQUIT 3 /* Quit. */
58 #define SIGTRAP 5 /* Trace/breakpoint trap. */
59 #define SIGKILL 9 /* Killed. */
60 #define SIGBUS 10 /* Bus error. */
61 #define SIGSYS 12 /* Bad system call. */
62 #define SIGPIPE 13 /* Broken pipe. */
63 #define SIGALRM 14 /* Alarm clock. */
65 /* New(er) POSIX signals (1003.1-2008, 1003.1-2013). */
66 #define SIGURG 16 /* Urgent data is available at a socket. */
67 #define SIGSTOP 17 /* Stop, unblockable. */
68 #define SIGTSTP 18 /* Keyboard stop. */
69 #define SIGCONT 19 /* Continue. */
70 #define SIGCHLD 20 /* Child terminated or stopped. */
71 #define SIGTTIN 21 /* Background read from control terminal. */
72 #define SIGTTOU 22 /* Background write to control terminal. */
73 #define SIGPOLL 23 /* Pollable event occurred (System V). */
74 #define SIGXCPU 24 /* CPU time limit exceeded. */
75 #define SIGXFSZ 25 /* File size limit exceeded. */
76 #define SIGVTALRM 26 /* Virtual timer expired. */
77 #define SIGPROF 27 /* Profiling timer expired. */
78 #define SIGUSR1 30 /* User-defined signal 1. */
79 #define SIGUSR2 31 /* User-defined signal 2. */
81 /* Nonstandard signals found in all modern POSIX systems
82 (including both BSD and Linux). */
83 #define SIGWINCH 28 /* Window size change (4.3 BSD, Sun). */
85 /* Archaic names for compatibility. */
86 #define SIGIO SIGPOLL /* I/O now possible (4.2 BSD). */
87 #define SIGIOT SIGABRT /* IOT instruction, abort() on a PDP-11. */
88 #define SIGCLD SIGCHLD /* Old System V name */
90 /* Not all systems support real-time signals. bits/signum.h indicates
91 that they are supported by overriding __SIGRTMAX to a value greater
92 than __SIGRTMIN. These constants give the kernel-level hard limits,
93 but some real-time signals may be used internally by glibc. Do not
94 use these constants in application code; use SIGRTMIN and SIGRTMAX
95 (defined in signal.h) instead. */
96 #define __SIGRTMIN 32
97 #define __SIGRTMAX __SIGRTMIN
99 /* Biggest signal number + 1 (including real-time signals). */
100 #define _NSIG (__SIGRTMAX + 1)
102 #endif /* bits/signum-generic.h. */