subshell output swallowed (patch)

Egmont Koblinger egmont at uhulinux.hu
Tue Jan 24 12:53:36 UTC 2006


On Tue, Jan 24, 2006 at 02:24:40PM +0200, Pavel Tsekov wrote:

> > > > write(1, "\33[0mcopy_reg.py\33[0m        \33[0mi"..., 100) = 53
> > >
> > > This strace is not convincing - i don't see calls failing with -1.
> >
> > No, no syscall is failing. You ask the kernel to write 100 bytes, and since
> > a signal interrupts it, it says "everything went find but I only wrote 53
> > bytes". Then it's your job not to forget to write the remaining 47 bytes.
> 
> If a system call is interrupted it returns -1 and sets errno to EINTR.

If a system call is interrupted it either returns -1 and sets errno to EINTR
(if it has not yet written anything) or returns success (the number of bytes
written so far in case of write()) and most likely sets errno to 0 (if it
has already written several bytes). I don't exactly know under what
circumstances can this second case occur, but it definitely occurs to me as
shown by the quoted strace output.

The second case can also occur when there's no signal arriving at all. It's
perfectly okay that a write() call writes fewer bytes than it is supposed to
do since there's no more room in the pipe's buffer or network socket etc...
Probably in our case that the short write is not even directly caused by the
signal. I don't know if such a thing can happen with normal files, but sure
it can with byte-oriented streams.

> Yes, that's what SA_RESTART is supposed to do.

For both cases? It seems to me that probably it only applies to the -1 EINTR
case. A short write() still has to be manually continued. Most likely since
it really might be unrelated to any signals.



-- 
Egmont



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