Linux Signals: Difference between revisions

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Hangup is the signal that is sent to the process when the terminal closes on a foreground process.
Hangup is the signal that is sent to the process when the terminal closes on a foreground process.


Also see:
<blockquote style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: solid thin lightgrey;">
<blockquote style="background-color: #f9f9f9; border: solid thin lightgrey;">
:[[Nohup#Overview|nohup]]
:[[Nohup#Overview|nohup]]

Revision as of 18:56, 14 October 2016

Internal

Signals

SIGHUP (1)

POSIX signal. Hangup.

Hangup is the signal that is sent to the process when the terminal closes on a foreground process.

Also see:

nohup

SIGINT (2)

Sends the process an interrupt. Guaranteed to be present on all systems.

SIGQUIT (3)

SIGILL (4)

SIGTRAP (5)

SIGFPE (8)

SIGKILL (9)

POSIX. Kill the process. The signal cannot be caught or ignored. Guaranteed to be present on all systems.

SIGUSR1 (10)

SIGSEGV (11)

SIGUSR2 (12)

SIGPIPE (13)

SIGALRM (14)

SIGTERM (15)

SIGSTKFLT (16)

SIGCHLD (17)

SIGCONT (18)

POSIX. Continue executing, if stopped.

Also see:

Suspending JVM Execution

SIGSTOP (19)

POSIX. Stop executing. The signal cannot be caught or ignored.

Also see:

Suspending JVM Execution

SIGTSTP (20)

SIGTTIN (21)

SIGTTOU (22)

SIGURG (23)

SIGXCPU (24)

SIGXFSZ (25)

Signals in Go

Signals in Go