On Tue, May 30, 2017 at 6:21 AM, Thomas Gleixner <tglx@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > Linus, any recollection? > > IMO, it's perfectly reasonable to discard ignored signals even when the > signal is in the blocked mask. When its unblocked and SIG_IGN is replaced > then the next signal will be delivered. But hell knows, how much user space > depends on this weird behaviour by now. Is there any real reason you care? Because clearly we're doing what POSIX allows, and I'd be nervous about changing existing behavior. There are various races wrt signals that happen particularly around fork/exec, and the way that programs handle those races is to block signals. I don't know that anybody cares about the exact semantics of this, but I could *imagine* that they do. Our current behavior is actually very nice: blocking a signal basically guarantees that you're now "atomic" wrt that signal. You won't lose signaling events after the blocking, unless you explicitly throw them away. So I would suggest *not* changing the semantics unless you have a major real reason for wanting to do that. Linus -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-man" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html