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-rw-r--r--signal/signal.h37
1 files changed, 23 insertions, 14 deletions
diff --git a/signal/signal.h b/signal/signal.h
index 66ab3dd09a..cd833e8783 100644
--- a/signal/signal.h
+++ b/signal/signal.h
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
-/* Copyright (C) 1991, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
+/* Copyright (C) 1991, 92, 93, 94, 95, 96, 97 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This file is part of the GNU C Library.
The GNU C Library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
@@ -47,20 +47,28 @@ typedef __sig_atomic_t sig_atomic_t;
/* Type of a signal handler. */
typedef void (*__sighandler_t) __P ((int));
-/* Set the handler for the signal SIG to HANDLER,
- returning the old handler, or SIG_ERR on error. */
+/* Set the handler for the signal SIG to HANDLER, returning the old
+ handler, or SIG_ERR on error.
+ By default `signal' has the BSD semantic. */
extern __sighandler_t signal __P ((int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler));
-#if defined __FAVOR_BSD || defined __USE_XOPEN
-/* The X/Open definition of `signal' conflicts with the BSD version.
- So they defined another function `bsd_signal'. We will use this
- implementation as the official `signal' function if the BSD
- interface is preferred. */
-extern __sighandler_t bsd_signal __P ((int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler));
+#if defined __USE_XOPEN && !defined __USE_GNU
+/* The X/Open definition of `signal' specifies the SVID semantic. Use
+ the additional function `sysv_signal' when X/Open compatibility is
+ requested. */
+extern __sighandler_t __sysv_signal __P ((int __sig,
+ __sighandler_t __handler));
+extern __sighandler_t sysv_signal __P ((int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler));
-#ifdef __FAVOR_BSD
-#define signal(sig, handler) bsd_signal ((sig), (handler))
+/* Make sure the used `signal' implementation is the SVID version. */
+#define signal(sig, handler) __sysv_signal ((sig), (handler))
#endif
+
+#ifdef __USE_XOPEN
+/* The X/Open definition of `signal' conflicts with the BSD version.
+ So they defined another function `bsd_signal'. */
+extern __sighandler_t __bsd_signal __P ((int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler));
+extern __sighandler_t bsd_signal __P ((int __sig, __sighandler_t __handler));
#endif
/* Send signal SIG to process number PID. If PID is zero,
@@ -103,13 +111,14 @@ extern int __sigsetmask __P ((int __mask));
/* The `sigpause' function has two different interfaces. The original
BSD definition defines the argument as a mask of the signal, while
the more modern interface in X/Open defines it as the signal
- number. We go with the more modern version unless the user
- explitcly selects the BSD version. */
+ number. We go with the BSD version unless the user explicitly
+ selects the X/Open version. */
extern int __sigpause __P ((int __sig_or_mask, int __is_sig));
-#if defined __USE_BSD && !defined __USE_XOPEN
+#if defined __USE_BSD || defined __USE_GNU
/* Set the mask of blocked signals to MASK,
wait for a signal to arrive, and then restore the mask. */
+extern int sigpause __P ((int __mask));
#define sigpause(mask) __sigpause ((mask), 0)
#else
#ifdef __USE_XOPEN