/* * Copyright (c) 2003, Intel Corporation. All rights reserved. * Created by: salwan.searty REMOVE-THIS AT intel DOT com * This file is licensed under the GPL license. For the full content * of this license, see the COPYING file at the top level of this * source tree. Attempt to add SIGKILL and SIGSTOP to the process's signal mask and verify that: - They do not get added. - sigprocmask() does not return -1. */ #include #include #include "posixtest.h" int main() { sigset_t set1, set2; int sigprocmask_return_val = 1; sigemptyset(&set1); sigemptyset(&set2); sigaddset(&set1, SIGKILL); sigaddset(&set1, SIGSTOP); sigprocmask_return_val = sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, &set1, NULL); sigprocmask(SIG_SETMASK, NULL, &set2); if (sigismember(&set2, SIGKILL)) { printf("FAIL: SIGKILL was added to the signal mask\n"); return PTS_FAIL; } if (sigismember(&set2, SIGSTOP)) { printf("FAIL: SIGSTOP was added to the signal mask\n"); return PTS_FAIL; } if (sigprocmask_return_val == -1) { printf("FAIL: sigprocmask returned -1. System should be able to enforce blocking un-ignorable signals without causing sigprocmask() to return -1.\n"); return PTS_FAIL; } printf("Test PASSED\n"); return PTS_PASS; }