On 3/19/19 9:28 AM, LRN wrote: > ASS[0] is documented for Linux (and for POSIX) but i'm failing to find any > information on how this applies to Cygwin. I assume, since there are no "real" > signals on Cygwin, that it's not possible for a signal handler to break the > state of some function that happened to be executed when the signal handler was > triggered. But i could be wrong. You are wrong. It IS applicable. Cygwin has signals and signal handlers; although Windows may not have POSIX signals as such, it DOES have the ability to interrupt a process mid-function when a timer expires, and cygwin's implementation of signals on top of the semantics that windows provides can indeed result in interrupting the middle of a non-async-safe function. Hence, a signal handler that calls a non-async-safe function at the same time that the signal has interrupted another non-async-safe function is indeed observable on Cygwin and can indeed result in deadlocks (a classic example being the case if you malloc() from a signal handler that interrupted an ongoing malloc() call). -- Eric Blake, Principal Software Engineer Red Hat, Inc. +1-919-301-3226 Virtualization: qemu.org | libvirt.org