Re: [PATCH v3 4/7] linux/signal.h: Ignore SIGINFO by default in new tasks

From: Christian Brauner
Date: Thu Apr 30 2020 - 03:14:48 EST


On Thu, Apr 30, 2020 at 08:53:56AM +0200, Jiri Slaby wrote:
> On 30. 04. 20, 8:42, Arseny Maslennikov wrote:
> > This matches the behaviour of other Unix-like systems that have SIGINFO
> > and causes less harm to processes that do not install handlers for this
> > signal, making the keyboard status character non-fatal for them.
> >
> > This is implemented with the assumption that SIGINFO is defined
> > to be equivalent to SIGPWR; still, there is no reason for PWR to
> > result in termination of the signal recipient anyway â it does not
> > indicate there is a fatal problem with the recipient's execution
> > context (like e.g. FPE/ILL do), and we have TERM/KILL for explicit
> > termination requests.
> >
> > To put it another way:
> > The only scenario where system behaviour actually changes is when the
> > signal recipient has default disposition for SIGPWR. If a process
> > chose to interpret a SIGPWR as an incentive to cleanly terminate, it
> > would supply its own handler â and this commit does not affect processes
> > with non-default handlers.
> >
> > Signed-off-by: Arseny Maslennikov <ar@xxxxxxxxx>
> > ---
> > include/linux/signal.h | 5 +++--
> > 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-)
> >
> > diff --git a/include/linux/signal.h b/include/linux/signal.h
> > index 05bacd2ab..dc31da8fc 100644
> > --- a/include/linux/signal.h
> > +++ b/include/linux/signal.h
> > @@ -369,7 +369,7 @@ extern bool unhandled_signal(struct task_struct *tsk, int sig);
> > * | SIGSYS/SIGUNUSED | coredump |
> > * | SIGSTKFLT | terminate |
> > * | SIGWINCH | ignore |
> > - * | SIGPWR | terminate |
> > + * | SIGPWR | ignore |
>
> You need to update signal.7 too:
> https://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/docs/man-pages/man-pages.git/tree/man7/signal.7#n285

(I fail this whole thread via b4 and it appears that a bunch of messages
are missing on lore. Might just be delay though.)

How this is this not going to break userspace?
Just for a start, SIGPWR (for better or worse) was used for a long time
by some sandboxing/container runtimes to shutdown a process and still
is.

Christian