#include #include #include #include // Reg test for bug #93328: we were using too-big sigset types, and thus // trashing memory when we wrote out the 'oldset' param from sigprocmask(). int main(void) { #if defined(__NR_sigprocmask) \ && !defined(__powerpc64__) \ && !defined(__s390x__) \ && !defined(__arm__) // arm-linux uses rt_sigprocmask, so no sigset mangling takes place int x[6], *s, *os, i; x[0] = 0x11111111; x[1] = 0x89abcdef; x[2] = 0x22222222; x[3] = 0x33333333; x[4] = 0x0; x[5] = 0x44444444; s = &x[1]; os = &x[4]; // Make sure the system is in a known state with no signals // blocked as perl has been known to leave some signals blocked // when starting child processes which can cause failures in // this test unless we reset things here. syscall(__NR_sigprocmask, SIG_SETMASK, os, NULL); fprintf(stderr, "before\n"); for (i = 0; i < 6; i++) { fprintf(stderr, "%x ", x[i]); } fprintf(stderr, "\n"); syscall(__NR_sigprocmask, SIG_BLOCK, s, os); fprintf(stderr, "after1\n"); for (i = 0; i < 6; i++) { fprintf(stderr, "%x ", x[i]); } fprintf(stderr, "\n"); syscall(__NR_sigprocmask, SIG_BLOCK, s, os); fprintf(stderr, "after2\n"); for (i = 0; i < 6; i++) { fprintf(stderr, "%x ", x[i]); } fprintf(stderr, "\n"); #else fprintf(stderr, "__NR_sigprocmask not supported on this platform\n"); #endif return(0); }