Name Description Size
ctrl_c.rs 2080
mod.rs Asynchronous signal handling for Tokio. Note that signal handling is in general a very tricky topic and should be used with great care. This crate attempts to implement 'best practice' for signal handling, but it should be evaluated for your own applications' needs to see if it's suitable. There are some fundamental limitations of this crate documented on the OS specific structures, as well. # Examples Print on "ctrl-c" notification. ```rust,no_run use tokio::signal; #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> { signal::ctrl_c().await?; println!("ctrl-c received!"); Ok(()) } ``` Wait for SIGHUP on Unix ```rust,no_run # #[cfg(unix)] { use tokio::signal::unix::{signal, SignalKind}; #[tokio::main] async fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn std::error::Error>> { // An infinite stream of hangup signals. let mut stream = signal(SignalKind::hangup())?; // Print whenever a HUP signal is received loop { stream.recv().await; println!("got signal HUP"); } } # } ``` 2454
registry.rs 7701
reusable_box.rs 7118
unix.rs Unix-specific types for signal handling. This module is only defined on Unix platforms and contains the primary `Signal` type for receiving notifications of signals. 17133
windows
windows.rs Windows-specific types for signal handling. This module is only defined on Windows and allows receiving "ctrl-c", "ctrl-break", "ctrl-logoff", "ctrl-shutdown", and "ctrl-close" notifications. These events are listened for via the `SetConsoleCtrlHandler` function which receives the corresponding windows_sys event type. 15728