Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-6CF8A41B-C2DD-5D57-A71D-6405CE08A06B.dita
changeset 5 f345bda72bc4
parent 3 46218c8b8afa
child 14 578be2adaf3e
--- a/Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-6CF8A41B-C2DD-5D57-A71D-6405CE08A06B.dita	Tue Mar 30 11:42:04 2010 +0100
+++ b/Symbian3/PDK/Source/GUID-6CF8A41B-C2DD-5D57-A71D-6405CE08A06B.dita	Tue Mar 30 11:56:28 2010 +0100
@@ -1,36 +1,51 @@
-<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
-<!-- Copyright (c) 2007-2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies) All rights reserved. -->
-<!-- This component and the accompanying materials are made available under the terms of the License 
-"Eclipse Public License v1.0" which accompanies this distribution, 
-and is available at the URL "http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html". -->
-<!-- Initial Contributors:
-    Nokia Corporation - initial contribution.
-Contributors: 
--->
-<!DOCTYPE concept
-  PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Concept//EN" "concept.dtd">
-<concept xml:lang="en" id="GUID-6CF8A41B-C2DD-5D57-A71D-6405CE08A06B"><title>Using Signals to Handle Asynchronous Events</title><prolog><metadata><keywords/></metadata></prolog><conbody><p>You can use signals to handle asynchronous user events. A process (program code) can send a signal to itself that can be handled asynchronously based on the signal handler registered for it. This provides a way to perform tasks in parallel without any complex thread manipulation in the program code. </p> <p>The following example code demonstrates how a program code sets a signal to itself and how it handles the signal asynchronously in a signal handler: </p> <codeblock id="GUID-4424321B-112A-5556-AD29-41F613A60C84" xml:space="preserve">#include &lt;signal.h&gt;
-#include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
-void sighandler(int signum)
-    {
-    if(signum == SIGUSR1)
-        {
-        // Code to perform custom handling
-        }
-    else if(signum == SIGUSR2)
-        {
-        // Code to perform custom handling
-        }
-    }
-int main()
-    {
-    signal(SIGUSR1,sighandler);
-    signal(SIGUSR2,sighandler);
-    // program logic
-    raise(SIGUSR1); // indicates user event one
-    // program logic
-    raise(SIGUSR2); // indicates user event two
-    // program logic
-    return 0;
-    }</codeblock> </conbody><related-links><link href="GUID-66C1493D-5B85-558A-9A39-454E6EBA307B.dita"><linktext>Signal Emulation on Symbian
-                Platform</linktext> </link> <link href="GUID-186B9876-2A08-5F23-BB49-49EC34C51507.dita"><linktext>Using Signals to Terminate Processes</linktext> </link> <link href="GUID-E65D91AE-482F-5592-B83C-0F29126C2EFA.dita"><linktext>Using Signals to Handle Exceptions</linktext> </link> </related-links></concept>
\ No newline at end of file
+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<!-- Copyright (c) 2007-2010 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies) All rights reserved. -->
+<!-- This component and the accompanying materials are made available under the terms of the License 
+"Eclipse Public License v1.0" which accompanies this distribution, 
+and is available at the URL "http://www.eclipse.org/legal/epl-v10.html". -->
+<!-- Initial Contributors:
+    Nokia Corporation - initial contribution.
+Contributors: 
+-->
+<!DOCTYPE concept
+  PUBLIC "-//OASIS//DTD DITA Concept//EN" "concept.dtd">
+<concept id="GUID-6CF8A41B-C2DD-5D57-A71D-6405CE08A06B" xml:lang="en"><title>Using
+Signals to Handle Asynchronous Events</title><prolog><metadata><keywords/></metadata></prolog><conbody>
+<p>You can use signals to handle asynchronous user events. A process (program
+code) can send a signal to itself that can be handled asynchronously based
+on the signal handler registered for it. This provides a way to perform tasks
+in parallel without any complex thread manipulation in the program code. </p>
+<p>The following example code demonstrates how a program code sets a signal
+to itself and how it handles the signal asynchronously in a signal handler: </p>
+<codeblock id="GUID-4424321B-112A-5556-AD29-41F613A60C84" xml:space="preserve">#include &lt;signal.h&gt;
+#include &lt;stdio.h&gt;
+void sighandler(int signum)
+    {
+    if(signum == SIGUSR1)
+        {
+        // Code to perform custom handling
+        }
+    else if(signum == SIGUSR2)
+        {
+        // Code to perform custom handling
+        }
+    }
+int main()
+    {
+    signal(SIGUSR1,sighandler);
+    signal(SIGUSR2,sighandler);
+    // program logic
+    raise(SIGUSR1); // indicates user event one
+    // program logic
+    raise(SIGUSR2); // indicates user event two
+    // program logic
+    return 0;
+    }</codeblock>
+</conbody><related-links>
+<link href="GUID-66C1493D-5B85-558A-9A39-454E6EBA307B.dita"><linktext>Signal Emulation
+on the Symbian Platform</linktext></link>
+<link href="GUID-186B9876-2A08-5F23-BB49-49EC34C51507.dita"><linktext>Using Signals
+to Terminate Processes</linktext></link>
+<link href="GUID-E65D91AE-482F-5592-B83C-0F29126C2EFA.dita"><linktext>Using Signals
+to Handle Exceptions</linktext></link>
+</related-links></concept>
\ No newline at end of file