| /* Extended support for using errno values. |
| Written by Fred Fish. fnf@cygnus.com |
| This file is in the public domain. --Per Bothner. */ |
| |
| #include "ansidecl.h" |
| #include "libiberty.h" |
| |
| #include "config.h" |
| |
| #ifdef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| /* Note that errno.h (not sure what OS) or stdio.h (BSD 4.4, at least) |
| might declare sys_errlist in a way that the compiler might consider |
| incompatible with our later declaration, perhaps by using const |
| attributes. So we hide the declaration in errno.h (if any) using a |
| macro. */ |
| #define sys_errlist sys_errlist__ |
| #endif |
| |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| #include <errno.h> |
| |
| #ifdef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| #undef sys_errlist |
| #endif |
| |
| /* Routines imported from standard C runtime libraries. */ |
| |
| #ifdef HAVE_STDLIB_H |
| #include <stdlib.h> |
| #else |
| extern PTR malloc (); |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifdef HAVE_STRING_H |
| #include <string.h> |
| #else |
| extern PTR memset (); |
| #endif |
| |
| #ifndef MAX |
| # define MAX(a,b) ((a) > (b) ? (a) : (b)) |
| #endif |
| |
| static void init_error_tables PARAMS ((void)); |
| |
| /* Translation table for errno values. See intro(2) in most UNIX systems |
| Programmers Reference Manuals. |
| |
| Note that this table is generally only accessed when it is used at runtime |
| to initialize errno name and message tables that are indexed by errno |
| value. |
| |
| Not all of these errnos will exist on all systems. This table is the only |
| thing that should have to be updated as new error numbers are introduced. |
| It's sort of ugly, but at least its portable. */ |
| |
| struct error_info |
| { |
| int value; /* The numeric value from <errno.h> */ |
| const char *name; /* The equivalent symbolic value */ |
| #ifndef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| const char *msg; /* Short message about this value */ |
| #endif |
| }; |
| |
| #ifndef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| # define ENTRY(value, name, msg) {value, name, msg} |
| #else |
| # define ENTRY(value, name, msg) {value, name} |
| #endif |
| |
| static const struct error_info error_table[] = |
| { |
| #if defined (EPERM) |
| ENTRY(EPERM, "EPERM", "Not owner"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOENT) |
| ENTRY(ENOENT, "ENOENT", "No such file or directory"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESRCH) |
| ENTRY(ESRCH, "ESRCH", "No such process"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EINTR) |
| ENTRY(EINTR, "EINTR", "Interrupted system call"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EIO) |
| ENTRY(EIO, "EIO", "I/O error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENXIO) |
| ENTRY(ENXIO, "ENXIO", "No such device or address"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (E2BIG) |
| ENTRY(E2BIG, "E2BIG", "Arg list too long"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOEXEC) |
| ENTRY(ENOEXEC, "ENOEXEC", "Exec format error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADF) |
| ENTRY(EBADF, "EBADF", "Bad file number"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ECHILD) |
| ENTRY(ECHILD, "ECHILD", "No child processes"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EWOULDBLOCK) /* Put before EAGAIN, sometimes aliased */ |
| ENTRY(EWOULDBLOCK, "EWOULDBLOCK", "Operation would block"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EAGAIN) |
| ENTRY(EAGAIN, "EAGAIN", "No more processes"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOMEM) |
| ENTRY(ENOMEM, "ENOMEM", "Not enough space"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EACCES) |
| ENTRY(EACCES, "EACCES", "Permission denied"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EFAULT) |
| ENTRY(EFAULT, "EFAULT", "Bad address"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTBLK) |
| ENTRY(ENOTBLK, "ENOTBLK", "Block device required"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBUSY) |
| ENTRY(EBUSY, "EBUSY", "Device busy"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EEXIST) |
| ENTRY(EEXIST, "EEXIST", "File exists"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EXDEV) |
| ENTRY(EXDEV, "EXDEV", "Cross-device link"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENODEV) |
| ENTRY(ENODEV, "ENODEV", "No such device"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTDIR) |
| ENTRY(ENOTDIR, "ENOTDIR", "Not a directory"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EISDIR) |
| ENTRY(EISDIR, "EISDIR", "Is a directory"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EINVAL) |
| ENTRY(EINVAL, "EINVAL", "Invalid argument"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENFILE) |
| ENTRY(ENFILE, "ENFILE", "File table overflow"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EMFILE) |
| ENTRY(EMFILE, "EMFILE", "Too many open files"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTTY) |
| ENTRY(ENOTTY, "ENOTTY", "Not a typewriter"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ETXTBSY) |
| ENTRY(ETXTBSY, "ETXTBSY", "Text file busy"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EFBIG) |
| ENTRY(EFBIG, "EFBIG", "File too large"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOSPC) |
| ENTRY(ENOSPC, "ENOSPC", "No space left on device"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESPIPE) |
| ENTRY(ESPIPE, "ESPIPE", "Illegal seek"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EROFS) |
| ENTRY(EROFS, "EROFS", "Read-only file system"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EMLINK) |
| ENTRY(EMLINK, "EMLINK", "Too many links"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EPIPE) |
| ENTRY(EPIPE, "EPIPE", "Broken pipe"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EDOM) |
| ENTRY(EDOM, "EDOM", "Math argument out of domain of func"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ERANGE) |
| ENTRY(ERANGE, "ERANGE", "Math result not representable"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOMSG) |
| ENTRY(ENOMSG, "ENOMSG", "No message of desired type"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EIDRM) |
| ENTRY(EIDRM, "EIDRM", "Identifier removed"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ECHRNG) |
| ENTRY(ECHRNG, "ECHRNG", "Channel number out of range"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EL2NSYNC) |
| ENTRY(EL2NSYNC, "EL2NSYNC", "Level 2 not synchronized"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EL3HLT) |
| ENTRY(EL3HLT, "EL3HLT", "Level 3 halted"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EL3RST) |
| ENTRY(EL3RST, "EL3RST", "Level 3 reset"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELNRNG) |
| ENTRY(ELNRNG, "ELNRNG", "Link number out of range"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EUNATCH) |
| ENTRY(EUNATCH, "EUNATCH", "Protocol driver not attached"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOCSI) |
| ENTRY(ENOCSI, "ENOCSI", "No CSI structure available"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EL2HLT) |
| ENTRY(EL2HLT, "EL2HLT", "Level 2 halted"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EDEADLK) |
| ENTRY(EDEADLK, "EDEADLK", "Deadlock condition"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOLCK) |
| ENTRY(ENOLCK, "ENOLCK", "No record locks available"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADE) |
| ENTRY(EBADE, "EBADE", "Invalid exchange"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADR) |
| ENTRY(EBADR, "EBADR", "Invalid request descriptor"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EXFULL) |
| ENTRY(EXFULL, "EXFULL", "Exchange full"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOANO) |
| ENTRY(ENOANO, "ENOANO", "No anode"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADRQC) |
| ENTRY(EBADRQC, "EBADRQC", "Invalid request code"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADSLT) |
| ENTRY(EBADSLT, "EBADSLT", "Invalid slot"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EDEADLOCK) |
| ENTRY(EDEADLOCK, "EDEADLOCK", "File locking deadlock error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBFONT) |
| ENTRY(EBFONT, "EBFONT", "Bad font file format"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOSTR) |
| ENTRY(ENOSTR, "ENOSTR", "Device not a stream"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENODATA) |
| ENTRY(ENODATA, "ENODATA", "No data available"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ETIME) |
| ENTRY(ETIME, "ETIME", "Timer expired"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOSR) |
| ENTRY(ENOSR, "ENOSR", "Out of streams resources"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENONET) |
| ENTRY(ENONET, "ENONET", "Machine is not on the network"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOPKG) |
| ENTRY(ENOPKG, "ENOPKG", "Package not installed"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EREMOTE) |
| ENTRY(EREMOTE, "EREMOTE", "Object is remote"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOLINK) |
| ENTRY(ENOLINK, "ENOLINK", "Link has been severed"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EADV) |
| ENTRY(EADV, "EADV", "Advertise error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESRMNT) |
| ENTRY(ESRMNT, "ESRMNT", "Srmount error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ECOMM) |
| ENTRY(ECOMM, "ECOMM", "Communication error on send"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EPROTO) |
| ENTRY(EPROTO, "EPROTO", "Protocol error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EMULTIHOP) |
| ENTRY(EMULTIHOP, "EMULTIHOP", "Multihop attempted"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EDOTDOT) |
| ENTRY(EDOTDOT, "EDOTDOT", "RFS specific error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADMSG) |
| ENTRY(EBADMSG, "EBADMSG", "Not a data message"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENAMETOOLONG) |
| ENTRY(ENAMETOOLONG, "ENAMETOOLONG", "File name too long"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EOVERFLOW) |
| ENTRY(EOVERFLOW, "EOVERFLOW", "Value too large for defined data type"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTUNIQ) |
| ENTRY(ENOTUNIQ, "ENOTUNIQ", "Name not unique on network"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EBADFD) |
| ENTRY(EBADFD, "EBADFD", "File descriptor in bad state"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EREMCHG) |
| ENTRY(EREMCHG, "EREMCHG", "Remote address changed"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELIBACC) |
| ENTRY(ELIBACC, "ELIBACC", "Can not access a needed shared library"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELIBBAD) |
| ENTRY(ELIBBAD, "ELIBBAD", "Accessing a corrupted shared library"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELIBSCN) |
| ENTRY(ELIBSCN, "ELIBSCN", ".lib section in a.out corrupted"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELIBMAX) |
| ENTRY(ELIBMAX, "ELIBMAX", "Attempting to link in too many shared libraries"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELIBEXEC) |
| ENTRY(ELIBEXEC, "ELIBEXEC", "Cannot exec a shared library directly"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EILSEQ) |
| ENTRY(EILSEQ, "EILSEQ", "Illegal byte sequence"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOSYS) |
| ENTRY(ENOSYS, "ENOSYS", "Operation not applicable"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ELOOP) |
| ENTRY(ELOOP, "ELOOP", "Too many symbolic links encountered"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ERESTART) |
| ENTRY(ERESTART, "ERESTART", "Interrupted system call should be restarted"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESTRPIPE) |
| ENTRY(ESTRPIPE, "ESTRPIPE", "Streams pipe error"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTEMPTY) |
| ENTRY(ENOTEMPTY, "ENOTEMPTY", "Directory not empty"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EUSERS) |
| ENTRY(EUSERS, "EUSERS", "Too many users"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTSOCK) |
| ENTRY(ENOTSOCK, "ENOTSOCK", "Socket operation on non-socket"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EDESTADDRREQ) |
| ENTRY(EDESTADDRREQ, "EDESTADDRREQ", "Destination address required"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EMSGSIZE) |
| ENTRY(EMSGSIZE, "EMSGSIZE", "Message too long"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EPROTOTYPE) |
| ENTRY(EPROTOTYPE, "EPROTOTYPE", "Protocol wrong type for socket"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOPROTOOPT) |
| ENTRY(ENOPROTOOPT, "ENOPROTOOPT", "Protocol not available"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EPROTONOSUPPORT) |
| ENTRY(EPROTONOSUPPORT, "EPROTONOSUPPORT", "Protocol not supported"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESOCKTNOSUPPORT) |
| ENTRY(ESOCKTNOSUPPORT, "ESOCKTNOSUPPORT", "Socket type not supported"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EOPNOTSUPP) |
| ENTRY(EOPNOTSUPP, "EOPNOTSUPP", "Operation not supported on transport endpoint"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EPFNOSUPPORT) |
| ENTRY(EPFNOSUPPORT, "EPFNOSUPPORT", "Protocol family not supported"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EAFNOSUPPORT) |
| ENTRY(EAFNOSUPPORT, "EAFNOSUPPORT", "Address family not supported by protocol"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EADDRINUSE) |
| ENTRY(EADDRINUSE, "EADDRINUSE", "Address already in use"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EADDRNOTAVAIL) |
| ENTRY(EADDRNOTAVAIL, "EADDRNOTAVAIL","Cannot assign requested address"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENETDOWN) |
| ENTRY(ENETDOWN, "ENETDOWN", "Network is down"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENETUNREACH) |
| ENTRY(ENETUNREACH, "ENETUNREACH", "Network is unreachable"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENETRESET) |
| ENTRY(ENETRESET, "ENETRESET", "Network dropped connection because of reset"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ECONNABORTED) |
| ENTRY(ECONNABORTED, "ECONNABORTED", "Software caused connection abort"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ECONNRESET) |
| ENTRY(ECONNRESET, "ECONNRESET", "Connection reset by peer"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOBUFS) |
| ENTRY(ENOBUFS, "ENOBUFS", "No buffer space available"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EISCONN) |
| ENTRY(EISCONN, "EISCONN", "Transport endpoint is already connected"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTCONN) |
| ENTRY(ENOTCONN, "ENOTCONN", "Transport endpoint is not connected"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESHUTDOWN) |
| ENTRY(ESHUTDOWN, "ESHUTDOWN", "Cannot send after transport endpoint shutdown"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ETOOMANYREFS) |
| ENTRY(ETOOMANYREFS, "ETOOMANYREFS", "Too many references: cannot splice"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ETIMEDOUT) |
| ENTRY(ETIMEDOUT, "ETIMEDOUT", "Connection timed out"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ECONNREFUSED) |
| ENTRY(ECONNREFUSED, "ECONNREFUSED", "Connection refused"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EHOSTDOWN) |
| ENTRY(EHOSTDOWN, "EHOSTDOWN", "Host is down"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EHOSTUNREACH) |
| ENTRY(EHOSTUNREACH, "EHOSTUNREACH", "No route to host"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EALREADY) |
| ENTRY(EALREADY, "EALREADY", "Operation already in progress"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EINPROGRESS) |
| ENTRY(EINPROGRESS, "EINPROGRESS", "Operation now in progress"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ESTALE) |
| ENTRY(ESTALE, "ESTALE", "Stale NFS file handle"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EUCLEAN) |
| ENTRY(EUCLEAN, "EUCLEAN", "Structure needs cleaning"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENOTNAM) |
| ENTRY(ENOTNAM, "ENOTNAM", "Not a XENIX named type file"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (ENAVAIL) |
| ENTRY(ENAVAIL, "ENAVAIL", "No XENIX semaphores available"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EISNAM) |
| ENTRY(EISNAM, "EISNAM", "Is a named type file"), |
| #endif |
| #if defined (EREMOTEIO) |
| ENTRY(EREMOTEIO, "EREMOTEIO", "Remote I/O error"), |
| #endif |
| ENTRY(0, NULL, NULL) |
| }; |
| |
| #ifdef EVMSERR |
| /* This is not in the table, because the numeric value of EVMSERR (32767) |
| lies outside the range of sys_errlist[]. */ |
| static struct { int value; const char *name, *msg; } |
| evmserr = { EVMSERR, "EVMSERR", "VMS-specific error" }; |
| #endif |
| |
| /* Translation table allocated and initialized at runtime. Indexed by the |
| errno value to find the equivalent symbolic value. */ |
| |
| static const char **error_names; |
| static int num_error_names = 0; |
| |
| /* Translation table allocated and initialized at runtime, if it does not |
| already exist in the host environment. Indexed by the errno value to find |
| the descriptive string. |
| |
| We don't export it for use in other modules because even though it has the |
| same name, it differs from other implementations in that it is dynamically |
| initialized rather than statically initialized. */ |
| |
| #ifndef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| |
| static int sys_nerr; |
| static const char **sys_errlist; |
| |
| #else |
| |
| extern int sys_nerr; |
| extern char *sys_errlist[]; |
| |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| /* |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| init_error_tables -- initialize the name and message tables |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| |
| static void init_error_tables (); |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Using the error_table, which is initialized at compile time, generate |
| the error_names and the sys_errlist (if needed) tables, which are |
| indexed at runtime by a specific errno value. |
| |
| BUGS |
| |
| The initialization of the tables may fail under low memory conditions, |
| in which case we don't do anything particularly useful, but we don't |
| bomb either. Who knows, it might succeed at a later point if we free |
| some memory in the meantime. In any case, the other routines know |
| how to deal with lack of a table after trying to initialize it. This |
| may or may not be considered to be a bug, that we don't specifically |
| warn about this particular failure mode. |
| |
| */ |
| |
| static void |
| init_error_tables () |
| { |
| const struct error_info *eip; |
| int nbytes; |
| |
| /* If we haven't already scanned the error_table once to find the maximum |
| errno value, then go find it now. */ |
| |
| if (num_error_names == 0) |
| { |
| for (eip = error_table; eip -> name != NULL; eip++) |
| { |
| if (eip -> value >= num_error_names) |
| { |
| num_error_names = eip -> value + 1; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| /* Now attempt to allocate the error_names table, zero it out, and then |
| initialize it from the statically initialized error_table. */ |
| |
| if (error_names == NULL) |
| { |
| nbytes = num_error_names * sizeof (char *); |
| if ((error_names = (const char **) malloc (nbytes)) != NULL) |
| { |
| memset (error_names, 0, nbytes); |
| for (eip = error_table; eip -> name != NULL; eip++) |
| { |
| error_names[eip -> value] = eip -> name; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #ifndef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| |
| /* Now attempt to allocate the sys_errlist table, zero it out, and then |
| initialize it from the statically initialized error_table. */ |
| |
| if (sys_errlist == NULL) |
| { |
| nbytes = num_error_names * sizeof (char *); |
| if ((sys_errlist = (const char **) malloc (nbytes)) != NULL) |
| { |
| memset (sys_errlist, 0, nbytes); |
| sys_nerr = num_error_names; |
| for (eip = error_table; eip -> name != NULL; eip++) |
| { |
| sys_errlist[eip -> value] = eip -> msg; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| #endif |
| |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| errno_max -- return the max errno value |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| |
| int errno_max (); |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Returns the maximum errno value for which a corresponding symbolic |
| name or message is available. Note that in the case where |
| we use the sys_errlist supplied by the system, it is possible for |
| there to be more symbolic names than messages, or vice versa. |
| In fact, the manual page for perror(3C) explicitly warns that one |
| should check the size of the table (sys_nerr) before indexing it, |
| since new error codes may be added to the system before they are |
| added to the table. Thus sys_nerr might be smaller than value |
| implied by the largest errno value defined in <errno.h>. |
| |
| We return the maximum value that can be used to obtain a meaningful |
| symbolic name or message. |
| |
| */ |
| |
| int |
| errno_max () |
| { |
| int maxsize; |
| |
| if (error_names == NULL) |
| { |
| init_error_tables (); |
| } |
| maxsize = MAX (sys_nerr, num_error_names); |
| return (maxsize - 1); |
| } |
| |
| #ifndef HAVE_STRERROR |
| |
| /* |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| strerror -- map an error number to an error message string |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| |
| char *strerror (int errnoval) |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Maps an errno number to an error message string, the contents of |
| which are implementation defined. On systems which have the external |
| variables sys_nerr and sys_errlist, these strings will be the same |
| as the ones used by perror(). |
| |
| If the supplied error number is within the valid range of indices |
| for the sys_errlist, but no message is available for the particular |
| error number, then returns the string "Error NUM", where NUM is the |
| error number. |
| |
| If the supplied error number is not a valid index into sys_errlist, |
| returns NULL. |
| |
| The returned string is only guaranteed to be valid only until the |
| next call to strerror. |
| |
| */ |
| |
| char * |
| strerror (errnoval) |
| int errnoval; |
| { |
| char *msg; |
| static char buf[32]; |
| |
| #ifndef HAVE_SYS_ERRLIST |
| |
| if (error_names == NULL) |
| { |
| init_error_tables (); |
| } |
| |
| #endif |
| |
| if ((errnoval < 0) || (errnoval >= sys_nerr)) |
| { |
| #ifdef EVMSERR |
| if (errnoval == evmserr.value) |
| msg = evmserr.msg; |
| else |
| #endif |
| /* Out of range, just return NULL */ |
| msg = NULL; |
| } |
| else if ((sys_errlist == NULL) || (sys_errlist[errnoval] == NULL)) |
| { |
| /* In range, but no sys_errlist or no entry at this index. */ |
| sprintf (buf, "Error %d", errnoval); |
| msg = buf; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* In range, and a valid message. Just return the message. */ |
| msg = (char *) sys_errlist[errnoval]; |
| } |
| |
| return (msg); |
| } |
| |
| #endif /* ! HAVE_STRERROR */ |
| |
| |
| /* |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| strerrno -- map an error number to a symbolic name string |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| |
| const char *strerrno (int errnoval) |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Given an error number returned from a system call (typically |
| returned in errno), returns a pointer to a string containing the |
| symbolic name of that error number, as found in <errno.h>. |
| |
| If the supplied error number is within the valid range of indices |
| for symbolic names, but no name is available for the particular |
| error number, then returns the string "Error NUM", where NUM is |
| the error number. |
| |
| If the supplied error number is not within the range of valid |
| indices, then returns NULL. |
| |
| BUGS |
| |
| The contents of the location pointed to are only guaranteed to be |
| valid until the next call to strerrno. |
| |
| */ |
| |
| const char * |
| strerrno (errnoval) |
| int errnoval; |
| { |
| const char *name; |
| static char buf[32]; |
| |
| if (error_names == NULL) |
| { |
| init_error_tables (); |
| } |
| |
| if ((errnoval < 0) || (errnoval >= num_error_names)) |
| { |
| #ifdef EVMSERR |
| if (errnoval == evmserr.value) |
| name = evmserr.name; |
| else |
| #endif |
| /* Out of range, just return NULL */ |
| name = NULL; |
| } |
| else if ((error_names == NULL) || (error_names[errnoval] == NULL)) |
| { |
| /* In range, but no error_names or no entry at this index. */ |
| sprintf (buf, "Error %d", errnoval); |
| name = (const char *) buf; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| /* In range, and a valid name. Just return the name. */ |
| name = error_names[errnoval]; |
| } |
| |
| return (name); |
| } |
| |
| /* |
| |
| NAME |
| |
| strtoerrno -- map a symbolic errno name to a numeric value |
| |
| SYNOPSIS |
| |
| int strtoerrno (char *name) |
| |
| DESCRIPTION |
| |
| Given the symbolic name of a error number, map it to an errno value. |
| If no translation is found, returns 0. |
| |
| */ |
| |
| int |
| strtoerrno (name) |
| const char *name; |
| { |
| int errnoval = 0; |
| |
| if (name != NULL) |
| { |
| if (error_names == NULL) |
| { |
| init_error_tables (); |
| } |
| for (errnoval = 0; errnoval < num_error_names; errnoval++) |
| { |
| if ((error_names[errnoval] != NULL) && |
| (strcmp (name, error_names[errnoval]) == 0)) |
| { |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| if (errnoval == num_error_names) |
| { |
| #ifdef EVMSERR |
| if (strcmp (name, evmserr.name) == 0) |
| errnoval = evmserr.value; |
| else |
| #endif |
| errnoval = 0; |
| } |
| } |
| return (errnoval); |
| } |
| |
| |
| /* A simple little main that does nothing but print all the errno translations |
| if MAIN is defined and this file is compiled and linked. */ |
| |
| #ifdef MAIN |
| |
| #include <stdio.h> |
| |
| int |
| main () |
| { |
| int errn; |
| int errnmax; |
| const char *name; |
| char *msg; |
| char *strerror (); |
| |
| errnmax = errno_max (); |
| printf ("%d entries in names table.\n", num_error_names); |
| printf ("%d entries in messages table.\n", sys_nerr); |
| printf ("%d is max useful index.\n", errnmax); |
| |
| /* Keep printing values until we get to the end of *both* tables, not |
| *either* table. Note that knowing the maximum useful index does *not* |
| relieve us of the responsibility of testing the return pointer for |
| NULL. */ |
| |
| for (errn = 0; errn <= errnmax; errn++) |
| { |
| name = strerrno (errn); |
| name = (name == NULL) ? "<NULL>" : name; |
| msg = strerror (errn); |
| msg = (msg == NULL) ? "<NULL>" : msg; |
| printf ("%-4d%-18s%s\n", errn, name, msg); |
| } |
| |
| return 0; |
| } |
| |
| #endif |