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Bug #1368

open

suspend signal race?

Added by qhwt+dfly over 15 years ago. Updated over 3 years ago.

Status:
In Progress
Priority:
Normal
Assignee:
-
Category:
Userland
Target version:
Start date:
Due date:
% Done:

0%

Estimated time:

Description

Hi.
I noticed there's still a weird "race" with regard to suspend signal
(ctrl+Z), that I used to observe back in 1.8-RELEASE days. It's 100%
reproducible on -DEVELOPMENT or 2.2-RELEASE. What I did was basically
this, followed by ctrl+Z:

$ su root -c 'vi /usr/pkg/etc/mk.conf'
[1] + Suspended (signal) su root -c vi /usr/pkg/etc/mk.conf
$ fg

The result depends on root's login shell; if it's set to /bin/csh
(the default), the suspended process silently vanishes (killed?).
$ fg

Suspended
$ pgrep -u root vi

If the root's login shell is set to /bin/sh, the vi session won't
resume and gets stuck there (pressing ctrl+T shows that the process
is in [stop] state). If I send SIGCONT to vi, the vi session resumes
and I can continue to work on it.

The behavior on csh is quite undesirable, as you may lose the suspended
process (I think I've seen that before, but didn't care at that time).
It seems to occur for commands other than vi:
$ su root -c 'cat' # affected
$ su root -c 'seq 1 10000' # affected
$ su root -c 'seq 1 10000 | tee a' # can't be interrupted

Any ideas on how to resolve this issue?

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