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Date:      Tue, 23 Mar 1999 00:27:22 +0000
From:      Karl Pielorz <kpielorz@tdx.co.uk>
To:        Greg Black <gjb@comkey.com.au>
Cc:        Masahiro Ariga <mariga@cd.mbn.or.jp>, freebsd-questions@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: how to die gracefully
Message-ID:  <36F6DFEA.F0005E9@tdx.co.uk>
References:  <000501be7472$3bbeb400$064ca8c0@gateway> <36F65B11.610DAE9D@tdx.co.uk> <19990322213250.9969.qmail@alpha.comkey.com.au>

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Greg Black wrote:

> > AFAIK - when your program quit's, the O/S should free up it's memory and close
> > it's files etc. (as a kind of last-resort) - it's probably not good practice
> > to rely on this though, especially if your program is designed to run for long
> > periods of time...
> 
> This is wrong.  The OS reclaims everything when the program exits.

Yes, _but_ it's still good practice to do your own housekeeping - especially
if your program is going to be running hours on end - rather than have it eat
file descriptors/memory etc. :-) (Which is the point I was making).

> > SIGQUIT I think - check the man pages out (man signal)...
> 
> Wrong.  It's SIGINT.  The QUIT signal is usually attached to
> Ctl-\ and generates a core dump as well as interrupting the
> process.

Yeah, a 'redo' (like typo) at my end :-)

-Kp


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