NAME
notify, noted, atnotify – handle asynchronous process notification

SYNOPSIS
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>

int notify(void (*f)(void*, char*))

int noted(int v)

int atnotify(int (*f)(void*, char*), int in)

DESCRIPTION
When a process raises an exceptional condition such as dividing by zero or writing on a closed pipe, a note is posted to communicate the exception. A note may also be posted by a write (see read(2)) to the process's /proc/n/note file or to the /proc/m/notepg file of a process in the same process group (see proc(3)). When the note is received the behavior of the process depends on the origin of the note. If the note was posted by an external process, the process receiving the note exits; if generated by the system the note string, preceded by the name and id of the process and the string "suicide: ", is printed on the process's standard error file and the process is suspended in the Broken state for debugging.

These default actions may be overridden. The notify function registers a notification handler to be called within the process when a note is received. The argument to notify replaces the previous handler, if any. An argument of zero cancels a previous handler, restoring the default action. A fork(2) system call leaves the handler registered in both the parent and the child; exec(2) restores the default behavior. Handlers may not perform floating point operations.

After a note is posted, the handler is called with two arguments: the first is a pointer to a Ureg structure (defined in /$objtype/include/ureg.h) giving the current values of registers; the second is a pointer to the note itself, a null–terminated string with no more than ERRLEN characters in it including the terminal NUL. The Ureg argument is usually not needed; it is provided to help recover from traps such as floating point exceptions. Its use and layout are machine– and system–specific.

A notification handler must finish either by exiting the program or by calling noted; if the handler returns the behavior is undefined and probably erroneous. Until the program calls noted, any further externally–generated notes (e.g., hangup or alarm) will be held off, and any further notes generated by erroneous behavior by the program (such as divide by zero) will kill the program. The argument to noted defines the action to take: NDFLT instructs the system to perform the default action as if the handler had never been registered; NCONT instructs the system to resume the process at the point it was notified. In neither case does noted return to the handler. If the note interrupted an incomplete system call, that call returns an error (with error string interrupted) after the process resumes. A notification handler can also jump out to an environment set up with setjmp using the notejmp function (see setjmp(2)), which is implemented by modifying the saved state and calling noted(NCONT).

Regardless of the origin of the note or the presence of a handler, if the process is being debugged (see proc(3)) the arrival of a note puts the process in the Stopped state and awakens the debugger.

Atnotify
Rather than using the system calls notify and noted, most programs should use atnotify to register notification handlers. The parameter in is non–zero to register the function f, and zero to cancel registration. A handler must return a non–zero number if the note was recognized (and resolved); otherwise it must return zero. When the system posts a note to the process, each handler registered with atnotify is called with arguments as described above until one of the handlers returns non–zero. Then noted is called with argument NCONT. If no registered function returns non–zero, atnotify calls noted with argument NDFLT.

APE
Noted has two other possible values for its argument. NSAVE returns from the handler and clears the note, enabling the receipt of another, but does not return to the program. Instead it starts a new handler with the same stack, stack pointer, and arguments as the original, at the address recorded in the program counter of the Ureg structure. Typically, the program counter will be overridden by the first note handler to be the address of a separate function; NSAVE is then a `trampoline' to that handler. That handler may executed noted(NRSTR) to return to the original program, usually after restoring the original program counter. NRSTR is identical to NCONT except that it can only be executed after an NSAVE. NSAVE and NRSTR are designed to improve the emulation of signals by the ANSI C/POSIX environment; their use elsewhere is discouraged.

Notes
The set of notes a process may receive is system–dependent, but there is a common set that includes:

Note                        Meaning
interrupt                   user interrupt (DEL key)
hangup                     I/O connection closed
alarm                      alarm expired
sys: breakpoint             breakpoint instruction
sys: bad address            system call address argument out of range
sys: odd address            system call address argument unaligned
sys: bad sys call           system call number out of range
sys: odd stack              system call user stack unaligned
sys: write on closed pipe    write on closed pipe
sys: fp: fptrap               floating point exception
sys: trap: trap              other exception (see below)

The notes prefixed sys: are generated by the operating system. They are suffixed by the user program counter in format pc=0x1234. If the note is due to a floating point exception, just before the pc is the address of the offending instruction in format fppc=0x1234. Notes are limited to ERRLEN bytes; if they would be longer they are truncated but the pc is always reported correctly.

The types and syntax of the trap and fptrap portions of the notes are machine–dependent.

SOURCE
/sys/src/libc/9syscall
/sys/src/libc/port/atnotify.c

SEE ALSO
intro(2), postnote(2), notejmp in setjmp(2)

BUGS
Since exec(2) discards the notification handler, there is a window of vulnerability to notes in a new process.
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