typo, words.
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@ -111,7 +111,7 @@ signal" value and sets errno to this, if so. Finally, it restores all
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of the register values that were in effect when sigdelayed was called.
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Ok, you thought I had forgotten about the 'pending' stuff didn't you?
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Well, if you can rewind up to the discussion of sig_handle we'll return
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Well, if you can rewind up to the discussion of sig_handle, we'll return
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to the situation where sigsave was currently active. In this case,
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setup_handler will set a "pending" flag, will reincrement the appropriate
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element of the above signal array, and will return 0 to indicate that
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@ -119,9 +119,10 @@ the interrupt did not occur. Otherwise setup_handler returns 1.
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For pending signals, the theory is that the signal handler thread will
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be forced to be rerun by having some strategic cygwin function call
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sig_send with a __SIGFLUSH argument. This causes the signal handler
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to rescan the signal array looking for pending signals.
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sig_send with a __SIGFLUSH "argument" to it. This causes the signal
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handler to rescan the signal array looking for pending signals.
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This leads us to the sig_send function. This is the "client side" part
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of the signal manipulation process. sig_send is the low-level function
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called by a high level process like kill().
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called by a high level process like kill(). You would use sig_send
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to send a __SIGFLUSH to the signal thread.
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