Signals
Signals are short messages delivered to a process or a process group. The kernel uses signals to notify processes about the occurrence of a system event; signals are also used for communication between processes. Linux categorizes signals into two groups, namely general-purpose POSIX (classic Unix signals) and real-time signals. Each group consists of 32 distinct signals, identified by a unique ID:
#define _NSIG 64 #define _NSIG_BPW __BITS_PER_LONG #define _NSIG_WORDS (_NSIG / _NSIG_BPW) #define SIGHUP 1 #define SIGINT 2 #define SIGQUIT 3 #define SIGILL 4 #define SIGTRAP 5 #define SIGABRT 6 #define SIGIOT 6 #define SIGBUS 7 #define SIGFPE 8 #define SIGKILL 9 #define SIGUSR1 10 #define SIGSEGV 11 #define SIGUSR2 12 #define SIGPIPE 13 #define SIGALRM 14 #define SIGTERM 15 #define SIGSTKFLT 16 #define SIGCHLD 17 #define SIGCONT 18 #define SIGSTOP 19 #define SIGTSTP 20 #define SIGTTIN 21 #define SIGTTOU 22 #define SIGURG 23 #define SIGXCPU 24 #define SIGXFSZ 25 #define SIGVTALRM 26 ...