16.14. Sending a SignalProblemYou want to send a signal to a process. This could be sent to your own process or to another on the same system. For instance, you caught SIGINT and want to pass it on to your children. Solution
Use kill 9 => $pid; # send $pid a signal 9 kill -1 => $pgrp; # send whole job a signal 1 kill USR1 => $$; # send myself a SIGUSR1 kill HUP => @pids; # send a SIGHUP to processes in @pids Discussion
Perl's If the signal number is negative, Perl interprets remaining arguments as process group IDs and sends that signal to all those groups' processes using the killpg (2) system call. A process group is essentially a job. It's how the operating system ties related processes together. For example, when you use your shell to pipe one command into another, you've started two processes, but only one job. When you use Ctrl-C to interrupt the current job, or Ctrl-Z to suspend it, this sends the appropriate signals to the entire job, which may be more than one process.
use POSIX qw(:errno_h); if (kill 0 => $minion) { print "$minion is alive!\n"; } elsif ($! == EPERM) { # changed uid print "$minion has escaped my control!\n"; } elsif ($! == ESRCH) { print "$minion is deceased.\n"; # or zombied } else { warn "Odd; I couldn't check on the status of $minion: $!\n"; } See Also
The
"Signals"
sections in
Chapter 6
of
Programming Perl
and in
perlipc
(1); your system's
sigaction
(2),
signal
(3), and
kill
(2) manpages (if you have them); the
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