helix-term: send the STOP signal to all processes in the process group (#3546)

* helix-term: send the STOP signal to all processes in the process group

From kill(3p):

    If pid is 0, sig shall be sent to all processes (excluding an unspecified set
    of  system processes) whose process group ID is equal to the process group ID
    of the sender, and for which the process has permission to send a signal.

This fixes the issue of running `git commit`, attempting to suspend
helix with ^Z, and then not regaining control over the terminal and
having to press ^Z again.

* helix-term: use libc directly to send STOP signal

* helix-term: document safety of libc::kill

* helix-term: properly handle libc::kill's failure

I misread the manpage for POSIX `kill` -- it returns `-1` in
the failure case, and sets `errno`, which is retrieved via
`std::io::Error::last_os_error()`, has its string representation printed
out, and then exits with the matching status code (or 1 if, for whatever
reason, there is no matching status code).

* helix-term: expand upon why we need to SIGSTOP the entire process group

Also add a link back to one of the upstream issues.
This commit is contained in:
Cole Helbling 2023-03-13 05:08:57 -07:00 committed by GitHub
parent 4f066b1cc6
commit 34934733b3
No known key found for this signature in database
GPG key ID: 4AEE18F83AFDEB23
3 changed files with 29 additions and 5 deletions

1
Cargo.lock generated
View file

@ -1177,6 +1177,7 @@ dependencies = [
"helix-view",
"ignore",
"indoc",
"libc",
"log",
"once_cell",
"pulldown-cmark",

View file

@ -68,6 +68,7 @@ grep-searcher = "0.1.11"
[target.'cfg(not(windows))'.dependencies] # https://github.com/vorner/signal-hook/issues/100
signal-hook-tokio = { version = "0.3", features = ["futures-v0_3"] }
libc = "0.2.132"
[build-dependencies]
helix-loader = { version = "0.6", path = "../helix-loader" }

View file

@ -40,10 +40,7 @@ use anyhow::{Context, Error};
use crossterm::{event::Event as CrosstermEvent, tty::IsTty};
#[cfg(not(windows))]
use {
signal_hook::{consts::signal, low_level},
signal_hook_tokio::Signals,
};
use {signal_hook::consts::signal, signal_hook_tokio::Signals};
#[cfg(windows)]
type Signals = futures_util::stream::Empty<()>;
@ -447,7 +444,32 @@ impl Application {
match signal {
signal::SIGTSTP => {
self.restore_term().unwrap();
low_level::emulate_default_handler(signal::SIGTSTP).unwrap();
// SAFETY:
//
// - helix must have permissions to send signals to all processes in its signal
// group, either by already having the requisite permission, or by having the
// user's UID / EUID / SUID match that of the receiving process(es).
let res = unsafe {
// A pid of 0 sends the signal to the entire process group, allowing the user to
// regain control of their terminal if the editor was spawned under another process
// (e.g. when running `git commit`).
//
// We have to send SIGSTOP (not SIGTSTP) to the entire process group, because,
// as mentioned above, the terminal will get stuck if `helix` was spawned from
// an external process and that process waits for `helix` to complete. This may
// be an issue with signal-hook-tokio, but the author of signal-hook believes it
// could be a tokio issue instead:
// https://github.com/vorner/signal-hook/issues/132
libc::kill(0, signal::SIGSTOP)
};
if res != 0 {
let err = std::io::Error::last_os_error();
eprintln!("{}", err);
let res = err.raw_os_error().unwrap_or(1);
std::process::exit(res);
}
}
signal::SIGCONT => {
self.claim_term().await.unwrap();