REGEXVAULTv2.0
Dev & Systems/Shell
Verified Safe

Unix Signal Name Regex for Go

/^(?:SIG)?(HUP|INT|QUIT|ILL|TRAP|ABRT|BUS|FPE|KILL|USR1|SEGV|USR2|PIPE|ALRM|TERM|CHLD|CONT|STOP|TSTP|TTIN|TTOU|URG|XCPU|XFSZ|VTALRM|PROF|WINCH|IO|PWR|SYS|RTMIN(?:\+[1-9]|\+[12][0-9]|\+30)?|RTMAX(?:-[1-9]|-[12][0-9]|-30)?)$/i

What this pattern does

This page provides a comprehensive, battle-tested regular expression for matching unix signal name, ported and verified for Go. A rigorously tested regex reduces debugging time and protects your application from edge-case failures. The snippet below is ready to drop into your Go project — whether you're validating in a Gin handler, a gRPC service, or a command-line tool.

Go Implementation

Go
// Unix Signal Name
// ReDoS-safe | RegexVault — Dev & Systems > Shell

package validation

import "regexp"

var unixSignalNameRe = regexp.MustCompile(`^(?:SIG)?(HUP|INT|QUIT|ILL|TRAP|ABRT|BUS|FPE|KILL|USR1|SEGV|USR2|PIPE|ALRM|TERM|CHLD|CONT|STOP|TSTP|TTIN|TTOU|URG|XCPU|XFSZ|VTALRM|PROF|WINCH|IO|PWR|SYS|RTMIN(?:\+[1-9]|\+[12][0-9]|\+30)?|RTMAX(?:-[1-9]|-[12][0-9]|-30)?)$`)

func ValidateUnixSignalName(s string) bool {
    return unixSignalNameRe.MatchString(s)
}

// Example
// fmt.Println(ValidateUnixSignalName("SIGTERM")) // true

Test Cases

Matches (Valid)
Rejects (Invalid)
SIGTERMSIGINVALID
SIGKILLSIGNAL
SIGHUPSIG
SIGINTKILL all
USR1999
TERM
RTMIN+1
SIGRTMAX-5

When to use this pattern

This pattern is drawn from the Dev & Systems > Shell category and carries a ReDoS-safe certification. That matters for Go developers because Go's RE2 engine is inherently safe from catastrophic backtracking, but this pattern has been additionally verified for correctness. RegexVault audits patterns against known backtracking attack vectors, ensuring you have the necessary context before using this regex in a high-stakes production environment.

Common Pitfalls

Signal numbers vary by OS (SIGBUS is 10 on macOS, 7 on Linux). Always use signal names, not numbers, for portability across Unix variants.

Technical Notes

The SIG prefix is optional. SIGKILL (9) and SIGSTOP (19/17/23 by OS) cannot be caught or ignored. Real-time signals (RTMIN, RTMAX) are available on Linux for application-defined signaling.

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