Re: Ctrl+C doesn't interrupt process waiting for I/O
From: Jeremy Fitzhardinge
Date: Sun Jun 29 2008 - 01:14:50 EST
Avi Kivity wrote:
Yes, it's intended behaviour. Filesystem IO syscalls are considered
"fast" and are interruptible. Usermode code can reasonably expect
that file IO will never return EINTR.
That's filesystem dependent; if you mount an nfs filesystem with the
'intr' mount option, it will be interruptible (which makes sense, as
it is impossible to guarantee the server's responsiveness).
'intr' is a pretty bad idea, and I would never recommend it ('soft' is
better). It's an excellent way to destroy data when a stray signal
causes a syscall to fail with EINTR in an unexpected way (write being
the obvious one, but link, unlink, truncate or even close can fail in
odd ways can cause havok).
I don't know of any other filesystem with a similarly bad option.
J
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