On Tue, 12 Nov 2024 10:53:58 +0100 Christian Franke wrote: > Found with 'stress-ng --cpu-sched' from current stress-ng upstream HEAD: > > Testcase (attached): > > $ gcc -O2 -o manysignals manysignals.c > > $ ./manysignals > fork() = 1833 > ... > fork() = 1848 > ... > kill(1833, 17) > ... > kill(1848, 17) > kill(1833, 9) > ... > kill(1848, 9) > waitpid(1833, ., 0) > > > Run this in second terminal: > > $ watch "ps | sed -n '1p;/manysignals/{/sed/d;p}'" > > If 'S' appear in the first column, the child processes likely reached > the final SIGSTOP state. This takes some time. The parent process may > still hang in first waitpid() but should not. > > If the parent process is aborted with ^C, child processes may be stopped > or left behind. Occasionally a child process that can not be stopped by > Cygwin (kill -9) is left behind. > > Tested with ancient (i7-2600K) and more recent (i7-14700K) CPU :-) > > > Unrelated to the above, but related to 'stress-ng --cpu-sched' which > uses sched_get/setscheduler(): > > - sched_getscheduler() always returns SCHED_FIFO. As far as I understand > Linux sched(7), this is a non-preemptive real-time policy. The > preemptive SCHED_RR would possibly a more reasonable value. > Unfortunately SCHED_OTHER cannot be used because it would require to > ignore the priority. > > - sched_setscheduler() always fails with ENOSYS. It IMO should allow to > set 'param->sched_priority' if 'policy' is equal to the value returned > by sched_getscheduler().
Thanks for the report and the test case. I'm now looking into the issue. Please wait a while. -- Takashi Yano <takashi.y...@nifty.ne.jp> -- Problem reports: https://cygwin.com/problems.html FAQ: https://cygwin.com/faq/ Documentation: https://cygwin.com/docs.html Unsubscribe info: https://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple