diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'node_modules/signal-exit/signals.js')
-rw-r--r-- | node_modules/signal-exit/signals.js | 53 |
1 files changed, 53 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/node_modules/signal-exit/signals.js b/node_modules/signal-exit/signals.js new file mode 100644 index 0000000..3bd67a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/node_modules/signal-exit/signals.js @@ -0,0 +1,53 @@ +// This is not the set of all possible signals. +// +// It IS, however, the set of all signals that trigger +// an exit on either Linux or BSD systems. Linux is a +// superset of the signal names supported on BSD, and +// the unknown signals just fail to register, so we can +// catch that easily enough. +// +// Don't bother with SIGKILL. It's uncatchable, which +// means that we can't fire any callbacks anyway. +// +// If a user does happen to register a handler on a non- +// fatal signal like SIGWINCH or something, and then +// exit, it'll end up firing `process.emit('exit')`, so +// the handler will be fired anyway. +// +// SIGBUS, SIGFPE, SIGSEGV and SIGILL, when not raised +// artificially, inherently leave the process in a +// state from which it is not safe to try and enter JS +// listeners. +module.exports = [ + 'SIGABRT', + 'SIGALRM', + 'SIGHUP', + 'SIGINT', + 'SIGTERM' +] + +if (process.platform !== 'win32') { + module.exports.push( + 'SIGVTALRM', + 'SIGXCPU', + 'SIGXFSZ', + 'SIGUSR2', + 'SIGTRAP', + 'SIGSYS', + 'SIGQUIT', + 'SIGIOT' + // should detect profiler and enable/disable accordingly. + // see #21 + // 'SIGPROF' + ) +} + +if (process.platform === 'linux') { + module.exports.push( + 'SIGIO', + 'SIGPOLL', + 'SIGPWR', + 'SIGSTKFLT', + 'SIGUNUSED' + ) +} |