212 lines
7.5 KiB
Scheme
212 lines
7.5 KiB
Scheme
;;; Copyright (c) 1993 by Olin Shivers.
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;;; Signal handler system
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;;; The principal trickiness here is that we have to interface to Unix signals
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;;; *through* an intermediate interface, the S48 vm's idea of interrupts.
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;;; So there is a difference between delivering a signal to the underlying
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;;; Unix process and delivering it to the program that runs on the VM.
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;;;
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;;; One effect is that we have two separate codes for the same thing -- the
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;;; Unix signal code, and the S48 interrupt value. E.g., SIGNAL/TSTP and
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;;; INTERRUPT/TSTP.
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;;; These system calls can return EINTR or restart. In order for the S48 vm's
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;;; interrupt system to detect a signal and invoke the handler, they *must*
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;;; return EINTR, and this must cause a return from C to Scheme.
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;;;
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;;; open close dup2 accept connect
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;;; read recv recvfrom recvmsg
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;;; write send sendto sendmsg
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;;; select
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;;; wait
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;;; fcntl* ioctl
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;;; sigsuspend
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;;; HP-UX, but I don't use: poll lockf msem_lock msgsnd msgrcv semop
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;;;
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;;; * Only during a F_SETLKW
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;;;
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;;; From rts/interrupt.scm (package interrupts, interface interrupts-interface)
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;;; WITH-INTERRUPTS INTERRUPT-HANDLERS SET-ENABLED-INTERRUPTS !
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;;; ENABLED-INTERRUPTS
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;;; Must define WITH-INTERRUPTS* and WITH-INTERRUPTS.
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;;; Map a Unix async signal to its S48 interrupt value.
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;;; -1 => Not defined.
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(import-lambda-definition %signal->interrupt (sig) "sig2interrupt")
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(define (signal->interrupt sig)
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(let ((int (%signal->interrupt sig)))
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(if (>= int 0) int
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(error "Unix signal has no Scheme 48 interrupt." sig))))
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(define (interrupt-enabled? int mask)
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(interrupt-in-set? int mask))
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(define (interrupt-enable int mask)
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(insert-interrupt int mask))
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(define *enabled-interrupts*
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(let lp ((i 0) (mask 0))
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(if (= i number-of-interrupts)
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mask
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(lp (+ i 1) (interrupt-enable i mask)))))
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(define (enabled-interrupts) *enabled-interrupts*)
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(define *pending-interrupts* 0)
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(define (interrupt-pending? int)
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(interrupt-in-set? int *pending-interrupts*))
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(define (make-interrupt-pending int)
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(insert-interrupt int *pending-interrupts*))
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(define (remove-pending-interrupt int)
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(remove-interrupt int *pending-interrupts*))
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;;; I'm trying to be consistent about the ! suffix -- I don't use it
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;;; when frobbing process state. This is not a great rule; perhaps I
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;;; should change it.
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;;;
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;;; I think you should...
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(define (set-enabled-interrupts new-enabled-interrupts)
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(do ((int 0 (+ int 1)))
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((= int number-of-interrupts) new-enabled-interrupts)
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(let ((old-state (interrupt-enabled? int *enabled-interrupts*))
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(new-state (interrupt-enabled? int new-enabled-interrupts)))
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(if (and (not old-state) new-state (interrupt-pending? int))
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(call-interrupt-handler int))))
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(set! *enabled-interrupts* new-enabled-interrupts))
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(define-simple-syntax (with-enabled-interrupts interrupt-set body ...)
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(begin
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(with-enabled-interrupts* interrupt-set (lambda () body ...))))
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(define (with-enabled-interrupts* interrupt-set thunk)
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(let ((before *enabled-interrupts*))
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(set-enabled-interrupts interrupt-set)
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(let ((return (thunk)))
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(set-enabled-interrupts before)
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return)))
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(define *interrupt-handlers-vector*
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(make-vector number-of-interrupts #t))
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(define (interrupt-handlers-vector)
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*interrupt-handlers-vector*)
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(define (interrupt-handler-ref int)
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(if (or (< int 0) (>= int number-of-interrupts))
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(error "ill signum in interrupt-handler-ref" int)
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(vector-ref *interrupt-handlers-vector* int)))
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(define (call-interrupt-handler int)
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(let ((handler (interrupt-handler-ref int)))
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(case handler
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((#t) ((vector-ref default-int-handler-vec int) (enabled-interrupts)))
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((#f) (if #f #f))
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(else (handler (enabled-interrupts))))))
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;;; Get/Set signal handlers
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;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;
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;;; When you set a signal's handler to "default," if the default for that
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;;; signal is something other than "ignore," we actually install this guy.
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;;; When he is called by the S48 interrupt system, he'll magically make
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;;; the default action happen (by calling C code that *really* sets the
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;;; handler to SIGDFL, and then re-sending the signal). This basically
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;;; terminates the process, since if the default isn't "ignore," it's always
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;;; "terminate" of some kind. Doing it this way means the exit code given
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;;; to our waiting parent proc correctly reflects how we died, and also
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;;; makes the core dump happen if it should. Details, details.
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(import-lambda-definition %do-default-sigaction (signal) "do_default_sigaction")
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(define default-int-handler-vec
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;; Non-Unix-signal interrupts just get their default values from
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;; the current value of I-H.
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(let ((v (make-vector 32)))
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(do ((sig 31 (- sig 1))) ; For each Unix signal
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((< sig 0)) ; make & install a default
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(let ((i (%signal->interrupt sig))) ; signal handler.
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(if (>= i 0) ; Don't mess with non-signal interrupts.
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(vector-set! v i (if (memv sig signals-ignored-by-default)
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(lambda (enabled-interrupts) #f)
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(lambda (enabled-interrupts)
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(%do-default-sigaction sig)))))))
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v))
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;;; HANDLER is #f (ignore), #t (default), or a procedure taking an integer
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;;; argument. The interrupt is delivered to a procedure by (1) setting the
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;;; ENABLED-INTERRUPTS register to 0 (i.e., blocking all interrupts), and (2)
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;;; applying the procedure to the previous value of the ENABLED-INTERRUPTS
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;;; register. If the procedure returns normally, the ENABLED-INTERRUPTS
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;;; register will be restored to its previous value.
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(define (set-interrupt-handler int handler)
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(if (or (< int 0) (>= int number-of-interrupts))
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(error "ill signum in set-interrupt-handler!" int)
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(let ((old-handler (vector-ref *interrupt-handlers-vector* int)))
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(vector-set! *interrupt-handlers-vector* int handler)
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old-handler)))
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(define (interrupt-handler int)
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(interrupt-handler-ref int))
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(define (with-scsh-sighandlers interactive? thunk)
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(do ((int 0 (+ int 1)))
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((= int number-of-interrupts))
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(set-interrupt-handler
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int
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(lambda a #f)))
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(do ((sig 32 (- sig 1)))
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((< sig 0))
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(let ((i (%signal->interrupt sig)))
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(if (not (or (= i -1)
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(= sig signal/alrm))) ; Leave alarm handler alone.
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(set-interrupt-handler
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i
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#t))))
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(let ((scsh-initial-thread (current-thread)))
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(if (not (eq? (thread-name scsh-initial-thread)
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'scsh-initial-thread))
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(error "sighandler did not find scsh-initial-thread, but"
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scsh-initial-thread))
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;; Note: this will prevent any other system to work, since it pushes
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;; a new command level !
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(if interactive?
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(set-interrupt-handler interrupt/keyboard
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(lambda stuff
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((structure-ref threads-internal schedule-event)
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scsh-initial-thread
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(enum
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(structure-ref threads-internal event-type)
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interrupt)
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(enum interrupt keyboard))))))
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(run-as-long-as deliver-interrupts thunk 'deliver-interrupts))
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(define (deliver-interrupts)
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(let lp ((last ((structure-ref sigevents most-recent-sigevent))))
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(let ((event ((structure-ref sigevents next-sigevent-set)
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last full-interrupt-set)))
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(call-interrupt-handler ((structure-ref sigevents sigevent-type) event))
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(lp event))))
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;;; I am ashamed to say the 33 below is completely bogus.
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;;; What we want is a value that is 1 + max interrupt value.
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(define int->sig-vec
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(let ((v (make-vector 33 #f)))
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(do ((sig 32 (- sig 1)))
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((< sig 0))
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(let ((i (%signal->interrupt sig)))
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(if (not (= i -1)) (vector-set! v i sig))))
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v))
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(define (int->signal i) (and (<= 0 i 32) (vector-ref int->sig-vec i)))
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