What is the workflow of processing a signal in python ? I set a signal handler, when the signal occur ,how does python invoke my function? Does the OS invoke it just like C program? If I am in a C extend of python ,is it interrupted immediately ?
Now it's clear to me how does python process handle a signal . When you set a signal by the signal module , the module will register a function signal_handler(see $src/Modules/signalmodule.c) ,which set your handler and flag it as 1(Handlers[sig_num].tripped = 1;
) , then ca开发者_JAVA百科ll Py_AddPendingCall to tell python interpreter. The python interpreter will invoke Py_MakePendingCalls to call PyErr_CheckSignals which calls your function in main loop(see $src/Python/ceval.c).
communicate me if you want to talk about this : renenglish@gmail.com
If you set a Python code signal handler using the signal module the interpreter will only run it when it re-enters the byte-code interpreter. The handler is not run right away. It is placed in a queue when the signal occurs. If the code path is currently in C code, built-in or extension module, the handler is deferred until the C code returns control to the Python byte code interpreter. This can be a long time, and you can't really predict how long.
Most notably if you are using interactive mode with readline enabled your signal handler won't run until you give it some input to interpret. this is because the input code is in the readline library (C code) and doesn't return to the interpreter until it has a complete line.
Take a look at the signal module. If you invoke a signal to a python script, from my understanding if there is a handler for it will first process that signal, and potentially has the ability to handle and ignore certain signals. ie. instead of killing on a SIGKILL, you attempt to perform some shutdown cleanup work before killing.
精彩评论