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1 Commits (6212d1de68a836105865b76c5e90b603a7e07ac0)

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yifeng Li 840c9755d5 Handle SIGINT for openEMS and Python, with graceful exit support.
Currently, openEMS doesn't have any special code to handle SIGINT (which
is raised by pressing Control-C). By default, the program is terminated
without saving data. This worked okay in the past, but now its
limitations are becoming obvious.

1. When openEMS is used as a Python module, Control-C stops working
because SIGINT is now managed by Python in order to generate
KeyboardInterrupt exceptions, normally this isn't a problem, but if
we are running an external C++ (Cython) function such as openEMS, the
Python interpreter mainloop has no control until we return. As a
result, SIGINT is received but never handled. In Cython, programs are
expected to call PyErr_CheckSignals() in its blocking loop periodically
to temporally transfer control back to Python to handle signals. But
this introduces a dependency of Cython in the FDTD mainloop.

2. During a simulation, it's not possible to abort it gracefully by
pressing Control-C, this is a limitation of openEMS itself, it's
always a force exit. Currently the only supported method for graceful
exit is creating a file called "ABORT" in the simulation directory.
If we already need to implement a signal handler, adding a graceful
exit at the same time would be a good idea.

This commit installs SIGINT handlers during SetupFDTD() and RunFDTD().

1. In RunFDTD(), if SIGINT is received once, a status flag is set, which
is then checked in CheckAbortCond(), allowing a graceful exit with the
same effect of an "ABORT" file. If SIGINT is received twice, openEMS
force exit without saving data (just like the old default behavior).

2. In SetupFDTD(), if SIGINT is received, openEMS immediately force
exit without saving data, identical to the old behavior. In a huge
simulation, initializing and compressing operators may have a long
time. so we want an early exit before RunFDTD().

3. Before RunFDTD() and SetupFDTD() return, the original signal handler
for SIGINT is restored. This is important since when we're acting as
a shared library. When a program (such as the Python interpreter) calls
us, changing the SIGINT handler unilaterally may overwrite the original
handler and affect the functionality of the original program. For
example, Python would never be able to raise KeyboardInterrupt again.
Thus, we save the original handler and restore it later.

Signed-off-by: Yifeng Li <tomli@tomli.me>
2023-11-18 12:32:44 +01:00