in reply to Re^6: SIGHUP delivered on Windows
in thread SIGHUP delivered on Windows
could it be that an exception occuring within this signal handler (or a second signal arriving by that time) could be translated somehow into a SIGHUP?
I cannot see how that could happen.
Firstly, for you to get to the line where you do kill SIGHUP, $$, your process would have to have already received a SIGHUP; because you're just rethrowing it. But I am unaware of anything that would ever send you a SIGHUP.
There is the vague possibility that another Perl process could be sending your process a SIGHUP; but as far as I'm aware, any attempt to do so would simply get translated into a SIGTERM.
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Re^8: SIGHUP delivered on Windows
by rovf (Priest) on May 24, 2013 at 11:33 UTC | |
by bulk88 (Priest) on May 25, 2013 at 01:14 UTC | |
by rovf (Priest) on May 28, 2013 at 14:54 UTC |