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gsubprocess: Globally ignore SIGPIPE
Just like we already do in `GSocket`. This is necessary when using `g_subprocess_communicate()` with a subprocess which calls `close()` on its stdin FD at some point. `cat` does this just before exiting, for example. This causes a `write()` to the stdin pipe in the parent process to fail with `EPIPE` and `SIGPIPE`. The condition is not detectable in advance, because the `close()` call could happen after the `GMainContext` has dispatched a `g_subprocess_communicate()` callback. If it weren’t for the `SIGPIPE`,`g_subprocess_communicate()` would be able to handle the `EPIPE` just fine. `SIGPIPE` seems like a default error handling path which was useful in 1980 for writing pipe-heavy command line apps, but which is more of a broken stair for writing larger modern apps which have more than one data flow path. Signed-off-by: Philip Withnall <pwithnall@gnome.org> Fixes: #3310
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@ -77,6 +77,12 @@
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* checked using functions such as [method@Gio.Subprocess.get_if_exited] (which
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* are similar to the familiar `WIFEXITED`-style POSIX macros).
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*
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* Note that as of GLib 2.82, creating a `GSubprocess` causes the signal
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* `SIGPIPE` to be ignored for the remainder of the program. If you are writing
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* a command-line utility that uses `GSubprocess`, you may need to take into
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* account the fact that your program will not automatically be killed
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* if it tries to write to `stdout` after it has been closed.
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*
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* Since: 2.40
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**/
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@ -493,6 +499,23 @@ g_subprocess_class_init (GSubprocessClass *class)
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{
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GObjectClass *gobject_class = G_OBJECT_CLASS (class);
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#ifdef SIGPIPE
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/* There is no portable, thread-safe way to avoid having the process
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* be killed by SIGPIPE when calling write() on a pipe to a subprocess, so we
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* are forced to simply ignore the signal process-wide.
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*
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* This can happen if `G_SUBPROCESS_FLAGS_STDIN_PIPE` is used and the
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* subprocess calls close() on its stdin FD while the parent process is
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* running g_subprocess_communicate().
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*
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* Even if we ignore it though, gdb will still stop if the app
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* receives a SIGPIPE, which can be confusing and annoying. In `gsocket.c`,
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* we can handily also set `MSG_NO_SIGNAL` / `SO_NOSIGPIPE`, but unfortunately
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* there isn’t an equivalent of those for `pipe2`() FDs.
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*/
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signal (SIGPIPE, SIG_IGN);
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#endif
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gobject_class->finalize = g_subprocess_finalize;
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gobject_class->set_property = g_subprocess_set_property;
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