Expand description
Completes when a “ctrl-c” notification is sent to the process.
While signals are handled very differently between Unix and Windows, both platforms support receiving a signal on “ctrl-c”. This function provides a portable API for receiving this notification.
Once the returned future is polled, a listener is registered. The future
will complete on the first received ctrl-c
after the initial call to
either Future::poll
or .await
.
Caveats
On Unix platforms, the first time that a Signal
instance is registered for a
particular signal kind, an OS signal-handler is installed which replaces the
default platform behavior when that signal is received, for the duration of
the entire process.
For example, Unix systems will terminate a process by default when it
receives a signal generated by “CTRL+C” on the terminal. But, when a
ctrl_c
stream is created to listen for this signal, the time it arrives,
it will be translated to a stream event, and the process will continue to
execute. Even if this Signal
instance is dropped, subsequent SIGINT
deliveries will end up captured by Tokio, and the default platform behavior
will NOT be reset.
Thus, applications should take care to ensure the expected signal behavior occurs as expected after listening for specific signals.
Examples
use tokio::signal;
#[tokio::main]
async fn main() {
println!("waiting for ctrl-c");
signal::ctrl_c().await.expect("failed to listen for event");
println!("received ctrl-c event");
}
Listen in the background:
tokio::spawn(async move {
tokio::signal::ctrl_c().await.unwrap();
// Your handler here
});