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Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form in the Sun OS Reference Manual, from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2004 Edition, Standard for Information Technology -- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2004 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the event of any discrepancy between these versions and the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html. 5 .\" This notice shall appear on any product containing this material. 6 .\" The contents of this file are subject to the terms of the Common Development and Distribution License (the "License"). 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If applicable, add the following below this CDDL HEADER, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]" replaced with your own identifying information: Portions Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner] 9 .Dd "Jul 20, 2014" 10 .Dt GETCONTEXT 2 11 .Os 12 .Sh NAME 13 .Nm getcontext, setcontext 14 .Nd get and set current user context 15 .Sh SYNOPSIS 16 .In ucontext.h 17 .Ft int 18 .Fn getcontext "ucontext_t *ucp" 19 .Ft int 20 .Fn setcontext "const ucontext_t *ucp" 21 .Sh DESCRIPTION 22 The 23 .Fn getcontext 24 function initializes the structure pointed to by 25 .Fa ucp 26 to the current user context of the calling process. The 27 .Fa ucontext_t 28 type that 29 .Fa ucp 30 points to defines the user context and 31 includes the contents of the calling process' machine registers, the signal 32 mask, and the current execution stack. 33 .Lp 34 The 35 .Fn setcontext 36 function restores the user context pointed to by 37 .Fa ucp . 38 A successful call to 39 .Fn setcontext 40 does not return; program 41 execution resumes at the point specified by the 42 .Fa ucp 43 argument passed to 44 .Fn setcontext . 45 The 46 .Fa ucp 47 argument should be created either by a prior 48 call to 49 .Fn getcontext , 50 or by being passed as an argument to a signal 51 handler. 52 .Lp 53 If the 54 .Fa ucp 55 argument was created with 56 .Fn getcontext , 57 program execution continues as if the corresponding call of 58 .Fn getcontext 59 had just returned. 60 .Lp 61 If the 62 .Fa ucp 63 argument was created with 64 .Xr makecontext 3C , 65 program execution continues with the function passed to 66 .Xr makecontext 3C . 67 When that function returns, the process continues as if after a call to 68 .Fn setcontext 69 with the 70 .Fa ucp 71 argument that was input to 72 .Xr makecontext 3C . 73 .Lp 74 If the 75 .Fa ucp 76 argument was passed to a signal 77 handler, program execution continues with the program instruction following the 78 instruction interrupted by the signal. 79 .Lp 80 If the 81 .Fa uc_link 82 member of the 83 .Ft ucontext_t 84 structure pointed to by the 85 .Fa ucp 86 argument is equal to 0, 87 then this context is the main context, and the process will exit when this 88 context returns. The effects of passing a 89 .Fa ucp 90 argument obtained from any other source are unspecified. 91 .Sh RETURN VALUES 92 On successful completion, 93 .Fn setcontext 94 does not return and 95 .Fn getcontext() 96 returns 0. Otherwise, -1 is returned. 97 .Sh ERRORS 98 No errors are defined. 99 .Sh USAGE 100 When a signal handler is executed, the current user context is saved and a new 101 context is created. If the thread leaves the signal handler via 102 .Xr longjmp 3C , 103 then it is unspecified whether the context at the time of 104 the corresponding 105 .Xr setjmp 3C 106 call is restored and thus whether future 107 calls to 108 .Fn getcontext 109 will provide an accurate representation of the 110 current context, since the context restored by 111 .Xr longjmp 3C 112 may not contain all the information that 113 .Fn setcontext 114 requires. Signal handlers 115 should use 116 .Xr siglongjmp 3C 117 instead. 118 .Lp 119 Portable applications should not modify or access the 120 .Fa uc_mcontext 121 member 122 of 123 .Ft ucontext_t . 124 A portable application cannot assume that context 125 includes any process-wide static data, possibly including 126 .Va errno . 127 Users manipulating contexts should take care to handle these explicitly when 128 required. 129 .Lp 130 Portable applications should make use of the 131 .Xr pthreads 5 132 routines for co-processing instead of these routines. 133 .Sh INTERFACE STABILITY 134 .Sy Obsolete Standard . 135 .Sh SEE ALSO 136 .Xr sigaction 2 , 137 .Xr sigaltstack 2 , 138 .Xr sigprocmask 2 , 139 .Xr bsd_signal 3C , 140 .Xr makecontext 3C , 141 .Xr setjmp 3C , 142 .Xr sigsetjmp 3C , 143 .Xr ucontext.h 3HEAD , 144 .Xr pthreads 5 , 145 .Xr standards 5 146 .Sh STANDARDS 147 These routines were introduced in 148 .St -xpg4.2 149 and subsequently removed in 150 .St -p1003.1-2008 .