]> granicus.if.org Git - postgresql/commit
In the postmaster, rely on the signal infrastructure to block signals.
authorTom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Sun, 13 Oct 2019 19:48:26 +0000 (15:48 -0400)
committerTom Lane <tgl@sss.pgh.pa.us>
Sun, 13 Oct 2019 19:48:26 +0000 (15:48 -0400)
commit9abb2bfc046070b22e3be28173a0736da31cab5a
tree436d534545df7601feb65f98c37221e68982b255
parentf38291e927fa8c04eb772e6a17a3dd44da2b69e8
In the postmaster, rely on the signal infrastructure to block signals.

POSIX sigaction(2) can be told to block a set of signals while a
signal handler executes.  Make use of that instead of manually
blocking and unblocking signals in the postmaster's signal handlers.
This should save a few cycles, and it also prevents recursive
invocation of signal handlers when many signals arrive in close
succession.  We have seen buildfarm failures that seem to be due to
postmaster stack overflow caused by such recursion (exacerbated by
a Linux PPC64 kernel bug).

This doesn't change anything about the way that it works on Windows.
Somebody might consider adjusting port/win32/signal.c to let it work
similarly, but I'm not in a position to do that.

For the moment, just apply to HEAD.  Possibly we should consider
back-patching this, but it'd be good to let it age awhile first.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/14878.1570820201@sss.pgh.pa.us
src/backend/libpq/pqsignal.c
src/backend/postmaster/postmaster.c
src/include/libpq/pqsignal.h
src/include/port.h
src/port/pqsignal.c