You want to install a signal handler only for a particular subroutine. For instance, your subroutine catches SIGINT, and you don't want to disturb SIGINT handling outside the subroutine.
Use local
to temporarily override a signal's behavior:
# the signal handler sub ding { $SIG{INT} = \&ding; warn "\aEnter your name!\n"; } # prompt for name, overriding SIGINT sub get_name { local $SIG{INT} = \&ding; my $name; print "Kindly Stranger, please enter your name: "; chomp( $name = <> ); return $name; }
You must use local
rather than my
to save away one value out of %SIG
. The change remains in effect throughout the execution of that block, including in anything called from it. In this case, that's the get_name
subroutine. If the signal is delivered while another function that your function calls is running, your signal handler is triggered - unless the called subroutine installs its own signal handler. The previous value of the hash is automatically restored when the block exits. This is one of the (few) places where dynamic scoping is more convenient than confusing.