The shell can continue a stopped job by sending a SIGCONT
signal
to its process group. If the job is being continued in the foreground,
the shell should first invoke tcsetpgrp
to give the job access to
the terminal, and restore the saved terminal settings. After continuing
a job in the foreground, the shell should wait for the job to stop or
complete, as if the job had just been launched in the foreground.
The sample shell program handles both newly created and continued jobs
with the same pair of functions, put_job_in_foreground
and
put_job_in_background
. The definitions of these functions
were given in Foreground and Background. When continuing a
stopped job, a nonzero value is passed as the cont argument to
ensure that the SIGCONT
signal is sent and the terminal modes
reset, as appropriate.
This leaves only a function for updating the shell’s internal bookkeeping about the job being continued:
/* Mark a stopped job J as being running again. */
void
mark_job_as_running (job *j)
{
Process *p;
for (p = j->first_process; p; p = p->next)
p->stopped = 0;
j->notified = 0;
}
/* Continue the job J. */
void
continue_job (job *j, int foreground)
{
mark_job_as_running (j);
if (foreground)
put_job_in_foreground (j, 1);
else
put_job_in_background (j, 1);
}