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#include <libunwind.h>
int unw_is_signal_frame(unw_cursor_t *cp);
The unw_is_signal_frame() routine returns a positive value if the current frame identified by cp is a signal frame, and a value of 0 otherwise. For the purpose of this discussion, a signal frame is a frame that was created in response to a potentially asynchronous interruption. For UNIX and UNIX-like platforms, such frames are normally created by the kernel when delivering a signal. In a kernel-environment, a signal frame might, for example, correspond to a frame created in response to a device interrupt.
Signal frames are somewhat unusual because the asynchronous nature of the events that create them require storing the contents of registers that are normally treated as scratch (``caller-saved'') registers.
On successful completion, unw_is_signal_frame() returns a positive value if the current frame is a signal frame, or 0 if it is not. Otherwise, a negative value of one of the error-codes below is returned.
unw_is_signal_frame() is thread-safe as well as safe to use from a signal handler.
UNW_ENOINFO Libunwind is unable to determine whether or not the current frame is a signal frame.
libunwind(3), unw_get_reg(3), unw_set_reg(3), unw_get_fpreg(3), unw_set_fpreg(3)
David Mosberger-Tang
Email: dmosberger (at] gmail.com
WWW: http://www.nongnu.org/libunwind/.
NOTE: This file is generated, DO NOT EDIT.