I am pretty sure you have to see the documentation
Edit:
How about this list then?
From man signal
:
NOTES
The effects of this call in a multi-threaded process are unspecified.
The routine handler must be very careful, since processing elsewhere
was interrupted at some arbitrary point. POSIX has the concept of "safe
function". If a signal interrupts an unsafe function, and handler
calls an unsafe function, then the behavior is undefined. Safe func-
tions are listed explicitly in the various standards. The POSIX.1-2003
list is
_Exit() _exit() abort() accept() access() aio_error() aio_return()
aio_suspend() alarm() bind() cfgetispeed() cfgetospeed() cfsetispeed()
cfsetospeed() chdir() chmod() chown() clock_gettime() close() connect()
creat() dup() dup2() execle() execve() fchmod() fchown() fcntl() fdata-
sync() fork() fpathconf() fstat() fsync() ftruncate() getegid()
geteuid() getgid() getgroups() getpeername() getpgrp() getpid() getp-
pid() getsockname() getsockopt() getuid() kill() link() listen()
lseek() lstat() mkdir() mkfifo() open() pathconf() pause() pipe()
poll() posix_trace_event() pselect() raise() read() readlink() recv()
recvfrom() recvmsg() rename() rmdir() select() sem_post() send()
sendmsg() sendto() setgid() setpgid() setsid() setsockopt() setuid()
shutdown() sigaction() sigaddset() sigdelset() sigemptyset() sig-
fillset() sigismember() signal() sigpause() sigpending() sigprocmask()
sigqueue() sigset() sigsuspend() sleep() socket() socketpair() stat()
symlink() sysconf() tcdrain() tcflow() tcflush() tcgetattr() tcgetp-
grp() tcsendbreak() tcsetattr() tcsetpgrp() time() timer_getoverrun()
timer_gettime() timer_settime() times() umask() uname() unlink()
utime() wait() waitpid() write().
According to POSIX, the behaviour of a process is undefined after it
ignores a SIGFPE, SIGILL, or SIGSEGV signal that was not generated by
the kill(2) or the raise(3) functions. Integer division by zero has
undefined result. On some architectures it will generate a SIGFPE sig-
nal. (Also dividing the most negative integer by -1 may generate
SIGFPE.) Ignoring this signal might lead to an endless loop.
See sigaction(2) for details on what happens when SIGCHLD is set to
SIG_IGN.
The use of sighandler_t is a GNU extension. Various versions of libc
predefine this type; libc4 and libc5 define SignalHandler, glibc
defines sig_t and, when _GNU_SOURCE is defined, also sighandler_t.
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