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A process sentinel is a function that is called whenever the associated process changes status for any reason, including signals (whether sent by Emacs or caused by the process’s own actions) that terminate, stop, or continue the process. The process sentinel is also called if the process exits. The sentinel receives two arguments: the process for which the event occurred, and a string describing the type of event.
The string describing the event looks like one of the following:
"finished\n"
.
"exited abnormally with code exitcode\n"
.
"name-of-signal\n"
.
"name-of-signal (core dumped)\n"
.
A sentinel runs only while Emacs is waiting (e.g., for terminal
input, or for time to elapse, or for process output). This avoids the
timing errors that could result from running sentinels at random places in
the middle of other Lisp programs. A program can wait, so that
sentinels will run, by calling sit-for
or sleep-for
(see Waiting), or accept-process-output
(see Accepting Output). Emacs also allows sentinels to run when the command loop is
reading input. delete-process
calls the sentinel when it
terminates a running process.
Emacs does not keep a queue of multiple reasons to call the sentinel of one process; it records just the current status and the fact that there has been a change. Therefore two changes in status, coming in quick succession, can call the sentinel just once. However, process termination will always run the sentinel exactly once. This is because the process status can’t change again after termination.
Emacs explicitly checks for output from the process before running the process sentinel. Once the sentinel runs due to process termination, no further output can arrive from the process.
A sentinel that writes the output into the buffer of the process
should check whether the buffer is still alive. If it tries to insert
into a dead buffer, it will get an error. If the buffer is dead,
(buffer-name (process-buffer process))
returns nil
.
Quitting is normally inhibited within a sentinel—otherwise, the
effect of typing C-g at command level or to quit a user command
would be unpredictable. If you want to permit quitting inside a
sentinel, bind inhibit-quit
to nil
. In most cases, the
right way to do this is with the macro with-local-quit
.
See Quitting.
If an error happens during execution of a sentinel, it is caught
automatically, so that it doesn’t stop the execution of whatever
programs was running when the sentinel was started. However, if
debug-on-error
is non-nil
, errors are not caught.
This makes it possible to use the Lisp debugger to debug the
sentinel. See Debugger.
While a sentinel is running, the process sentinel is temporarily
set to nil
so that the sentinel won’t run recursively.
For this reason it is not possible for a sentinel to specify
a new sentinel.
Note that Emacs automatically saves and restores the match data while executing sentinels. See Match Data.
This function associates sentinel with process. If
sentinel is nil
, then the process will have the default
sentinel, which inserts a message in the process’s buffer when the
process status changes.
Changes in process sentinels take effect immediately—if the sentinel is slated to be run but has not been called yet, and you specify a new sentinel, the eventual call to the sentinel will use the new one.
(defun msg-me (process event) (princ (format "Process: %s had the event `%s'" process event))) (set-process-sentinel (get-process "shell") 'msg-me) ⇒ msg-me
(kill-process (get-process "shell")) -| Process: #<process shell> had the event `killed' ⇒ #<process shell>
This function returns the sentinel of process.
In case a process status changes need to be passed to several sentinels, you
can use add-function
to combine an existing sentinel with a new one.
See Advising Functions.
While a sentinel or filter function is running, this function returns
non-nil
if Emacs was waiting for keyboard input from the user at
the time the sentinel or filter function was called, or nil
if it
was not.
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