cpython/Parser/intrcheck.c

212 lines
3.6 KiB
C

/***********************************************************
Copyright (c) 2000, BeOpen.com.
Copyright (c) 1995-2000, Corporation for National Research Initiatives.
Copyright (c) 1990-1995, Stichting Mathematisch Centrum.
All rights reserved.
See the file "Misc/COPYRIGHT" for information on usage and
redistribution of this file, and for a DISCLAIMER OF ALL WARRANTIES.
******************************************************************/
/* Check for interrupts */
#include "config.h"
/* config.h may or may not define DL_IMPORT */
#ifndef DL_IMPORT /* declarations for DLL import/export */
#define DL_IMPORT(RTYPE) RTYPE
#endif
#include "myproto.h"
#include "mymalloc.h" /* For ANY */
#include "intrcheck.h"
/* Copied here from ceval.h -- can't include that file. */
int Py_AddPendingCall Py_PROTO((int (*func) Py_PROTO((ANY *)), ANY *arg));
#ifdef QUICKWIN
#include <io.h>
void
PyOS_InitInterrupts()
{
}
void
PyOS_FiniInterrupts()
{
}
int
PyOS_InterruptOccurred()
{
_wyield();
}
#define OK
#endif /* QUICKWIN */
#if defined(_M_IX86) && !defined(__QNX__)
#include <io.h>
#endif
#if defined(MSDOS) && !defined(QUICKWIN)
#ifdef __GNUC__
/* This is for DJGPP's GO32 extender. I don't know how to trap
* control-C (There's no API for ctrl-C, and I don't want to mess with
* the interrupt vectors.) However, this DOES catch control-break.
* --Amrit
*/
#include <go32.h>
void
PyOS_InitInterrupts()
{
_go32_want_ctrl_break(1 /* TRUE */);
}
void
PyOS_FiniInterrupts()
{
}
int
PyOS_InterruptOccurred()
{
return _go32_was_ctrl_break_hit();
}
#else /* !__GNUC__ */
/* This might work for MS-DOS (untested though): */
void
PyOS_InitInterrupts()
{
}
void
PyOS_FiniInterrupts()
{
}
int
PyOS_InterruptOccurred()
{
int interrupted = 0;
while (kbhit()) {
if (getch() == '\003')
interrupted = 1;
}
return interrupted;
}
#endif /* __GNUC__ */
#define OK
#endif /* MSDOS && !QUICKWIN */
#ifdef macintosh
/* The Mac interrupt code has moved to macglue.c */
#define OK
#endif /* macintosh */
#ifndef OK
/* Default version -- for real operating systems and for Standard C */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <signal.h>
#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
#include <unistd.h>
#endif
static int interrupted;
void
PyErr_SetInterrupt()
{
interrupted = 1;
}
extern int PyErr_CheckSignals();
/* ARGSUSED */
static RETSIGTYPE
#if defined(_M_IX86) && !defined(__QNX__)
intcatcher(int sig) /* So the C compiler shuts up */
#else /* _M_IX86 */
intcatcher(sig)
int sig; /* Not used by required by interface */
#endif /* _M_IX86 */
{
extern void Py_Exit Py_PROTO((int));
static char message[] =
"python: to interrupt a truly hanging Python program, interrupt once more.\n";
switch (interrupted++) {
case 0:
break;
case 1:
write(2, message, strlen(message));
break;
case 2:
interrupted = 0;
Py_Exit(1);
break;
}
signal(SIGINT, intcatcher);
Py_AddPendingCall(PyErr_CheckSignals, NULL);
}
static RETSIGTYPE (*old_siginthandler)() = SIG_DFL;
void
PyOS_InitInterrupts()
{
if ((old_siginthandler = signal(SIGINT, SIG_IGN)) != SIG_IGN)
signal(SIGINT, intcatcher);
#ifdef HAVE_SIGINTERRUPT
/* This is for SunOS and other modern BSD derivatives.
It means that system calls (like read()) are not restarted
after an interrupt. This is necessary so interrupting a
read() or readline() call works as expected.
XXX On old BSD (pure 4.2 or older) you may have to do this
differently! */
siginterrupt(SIGINT, 1);
#endif /* HAVE_SIGINTERRUPT */
}
void
PyOS_FiniInterrupts()
{
signal(SIGINT, old_siginthandler);
}
int
PyOS_InterruptOccurred()
{
if (!interrupted)
return 0;
interrupted = 0;
return 1;
}
#endif /* !OK */
void
PyOS_AfterFork()
{
}