Human-friendly process signals.
This is a map of known process signals with some information about each signal.
Unlike
os.constants.signals
this includes:
- human-friendly descriptions
- default actions, including whether they can be prevented
- whether the signal is supported by the current OS
Example
import { signalsByName, signalsByNumber } from 'human-signals'
console.log(signalsByName.SIGINT)
// {
// name: 'SIGINT',
// number: 2,
// description: 'User interruption with CTRL-C',
// supported: true,
// action: 'terminate',
// forced: false,
// standard: 'ansi'
// }
console.log(signalsByNumber[8])
// {
// name: 'SIGFPE',
// number: 8,
// description: 'Floating point arithmetic error',
// supported: true,
// action: 'core',
// forced: false,
// standard: 'ansi'
// }
Install
npm install human-signals
This package works in Node.js >=16.17.0.
This is an ES module. It must be loaded using
an import
or import()
statement,
not require()
. If TypeScript is used, it must be configured to
output ES modules,
not CommonJS.
Usage
signalsByName
Type: object
Object whose keys are signal names and values are signal objects.
signalsByNumber
Type: object
Object whose keys are signal numbers and values are signal objects.
signal
Type: object
Signal object with the following properties.
name
Type: string
Standard name of the signal, for example 'SIGINT'
.
number
Type: number
Code number of the signal, for example 2
. While most number
are
cross-platform, some are different between different OS.
description
Type: string
Human-friendly description for the signal, for example
'User interruption with CTRL-C'
.
supported
Type: boolean
Whether the current OS can handle this signal in Node.js using
process.on(name, handler)
.
The list of supported signals is OS-specific.
action
Type: string
Enum: 'terminate'
, 'core'
, 'ignore'
, 'pause'
, 'unpause'
What is the default action for this signal when it is not handled.
forced
Type: boolean
Whether the signal's default action cannot be prevented. This is true
for
SIGTERM
, SIGKILL
and SIGSTOP
.
standard
Type: string
Enum: 'ansi'
, 'posix'
, 'bsd'
, 'systemv'
, 'other'
Which standard defined that signal.
Support
For any question, don't hesitate to submit an issue on GitHub.
Everyone is welcome regardless of personal background. We enforce a Code of conduct in order to promote a positive and inclusive environment.
Contributing
This project was made with
If the documentation is unclear or has a typo, please click on the page's Edit
button (pencil icon) and suggest a correction.
If you would like to help us fix a bug or add a new feature, please check our guidelines. Pull requests are welcome!
Thanks go to our wonderful contributors:
ehmicky |
electrovir |