compile errors using signal.h in Linux [duplicate]
Asked Answered
S

1

16

I'm writing a shell program that must handle signals. My relevant signal handling related code is as follows:

#include <signal.h>
...
#include <sys/types.h>
...
void installSigactions( int, struct sigaction* );

void handler_function( int signal_id );
...
/*define signal table*/
struct sigaction signal_action;

/*insert handler function*/
signal_action.sa_handler = handler_function;

/*init the flags field*/
 signal_action.sa_flags = 0;

/*are no masked interrupts*/
sigemptyset( &signal_action.sa_mask );

/*install the signal_actions*/
sigaction( SIGINT, &signal_action, NULL );

Compiling gives me the following warnings and errors:

gcc -Wall -ggdb -ansi -static -pedantic -o os1shell2 os1shell2.c
os1shell2.c:35: warning: 'struct sigaction' declared inside parameter list
os1shell2.c:35: warning: its scope is only this definition or declaration, 
which is probably not what you want
os1shell2.c: In function 'main':
os1shell2.c:66: error: storage size of 'signal_action' isn't known
os1shell2.c:75: warning: implicit declaration of function 'sigemptyset'
os1shell2.c:78: warning: implicit declaration of function 'sigaction'

Can anyone tell me why I'm getting these warnings and errors?

Shoulders answered 13/1, 2012 at 4:45 Comment(0)
E
13

It will work if you remove -ansi from your compile line. I suspect the problem is that the posix parts of the signal library aren't included when you specify -ansi.

If you really don't want to disable -ansi, you can also add -D_POSIX_C_SOURCE to the compiler options.

Here is a short discussion of ANSI and the gcc feature test macros.

Entozoon answered 13/1, 2012 at 4:55 Comment(2)
removing -ansi leaves me with: /tmp/ccl4HmT7.o: In function main': /home/stu1/s11/gaw9451/Courses/OS_3/os1shell2.c:68: undefined reference to handler_function' collect2: ld returned 1 exit status Adding the -D_POSIX_C_SOURCE does the same. Any ideas on this??Shoulders
Do you have handler_function defined anywhere? It's declared in your question, but there's no code for it. I had to add void handler_function( int signal_id ) {}, and then your code compiled fine.Entozoon

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