// i386-signal.h - Catch runtime signals and turn them into exceptions.
-/* Copyright (C) 1998, 1999 Free Software Foundation
+/* Copyright (C) 1998, 1999, 2001 Free Software Foundation
This file is part of libgcj.
#define JAVA_SIGNAL_H 1
#include <signal.h>
+#include <sys/syscall.h>
#define HANDLE_SEGV 1
#define HANDLE_FPE 1
act.sa_handler = catch_fpe; \
sigemptyset (&act.sa_mask); \
act.sa_flags = 0; \
- __sigaction (SIGFPE, &act, NULL); \
+ syscall (SYS_sigaction, SIGFPE, &act, NULL); \
} \
while (0)
+/* You might wonder why we use syscall(SYS_sigaction) in INIT_FPE
+ * instead of the standard sigaction(). This is necessary because of
+ * the shenanigans above where we increment the PC saved in the
+ * context and then return. This trick will only work when we are
+ * called _directly_ by the kernel, because linuxthreads wraps signal
+ * handlers and its wrappers do not copy the sigcontext struct back
+ * when returning from a signal handler. If we return from our divide
+ * handler to a linuxthreads wrapper, we will lose the PC adjustment
+ * we made and return to the faulting instruction again. Using
+ * syscall(SYS_sigaction) causes our handler to be called directly by
+ * the kernel, bypassing any wrappers. This is a kludge, and a future
+ * version of this handler will do something better. */
+
#endif /* JAVA_SIGNAL_H */