Hello, I'm looking for someone in the python community to help with a problem of anti-patterns showing up dealing with SIGPIPE. Specifically I've noticed an anti-pattern developing where folks will try to suppress broken pipe errors written to stdout by setting SIGPIPE's disposition to SIG_DFL. This is actually very common, and also rather broken due to the fact that for all but the most simple text filters this opens up a problem where the process can exit unexpectedly due to SIGPIPE being generated from a remote connection the program makes. I have attached a test program which shows the problem. to use this program it takes several args. # 1. Illustrate the 'ugly output to stderr' that folks want to avoid: % python3 t0.py nocatch | head -1 # 2. Illustrate the anti-pattern, the program exits on about line 47 which most folks to not understand % python3 t0.py dfl | head -1 # 3. Show a better solution where we catch the pipe error and cleanup to avoid the message: % python3 t0.py | head -1 I did a recent audit of a few code bases and saw this pattern pop often often enough that I am asking if there's a way we can discourage the use of "signal(SIGPIPE, SIG_DFL)" unless the user really understands what they are doing. I do have a pull req here: https://github.com/python/cpython/pull/6773 where I am trying to document this on the signal page, but I can't sort out how to land this doc change. thank you, -Alfred