/** * slibc — Yet another C library * Copyright © 2015 Mattias Andrée (maandree@member.fsf.org) * * This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by * the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or * (at your option) any later version. * * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the * GNU General Public License for more details. * * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License * along with this program. If not, see . */ #ifndef _SLIBC_ERROR_H #define _SLIBC_ERROR_H #include #include #ifndef __PORTABLE #include #include /** * Store the current line, so we know which line failed, when * `PRINT_CUSTOM_FAILURE`, `PRINT_FAILURE` or `slibc_perror` * is called. This expression will be evaluated. * * Example usage: * ``` * int my_function(void) * { * size_t n; * void* array; * ... * if (FAILABLE_CALL(array = malloc(n)) == NULL) * goto fail; * ... * return 0; * * fail: * PRINT_FAILURE(NULL); * ... * return errno = 0, -1; * } * ``` * * A more scalable example: * ``` * #define fail_if (call_and_check) \ * do { if (FAILABLE_CALL(call_and_check)) goto fail; } while (0) * // `try` or simply `t` may be even better. * * #define fail_unless (call_and_check) fail_if(!(call_and_check)) * // `f` may be even better. * * int my_function(void) * { * size_t n; * void* array; * ... * fail_if (!(array = malloc(n))); * // or perhaps, fail_unless (array = malloc(n)); * ... * return 0; * * fail: * PRINT_FAILURE(NULL); * ... * return errno = 0, -1; * } * ``` * * This is a slibc extension. */ #define FAILABLE_CALL(expression) \ ({ typeof(expression) __slibc_r = (expression); *__slibc_error_line() = __LINE__; __slibc_r; }) /** * Check whether an error occurred. If an error occurred, * stored the line, for `PRINT_CUSTOM_FAILURE`, `PRINT_FAILURE` * or `slibc_perror`, where the error occurred. * * Example usage: * ``` * int my_function(void) * { * char* buf; * size_t bufsize; * ssize_t r; * int fd; * ... * for (;;) * { * r = read(fd, buf, bufsize); * if (FAILURE_CHECK(r < 0, 1)) * { * if (errno != EINTR) // Possibly FAILURE_CHECK(errno != EINTR, 3) here instead. * goto fail; * continue; * } * ... * } * ... * return 0; * * fail: * PRINT_FAILURE(NULL); * ... * return errno = 0, -1; * } * ``` * * This is a slibc extension. * * @param condition Should evaluate to non-zero on and only on error. * @param offset The number of lines above the current line * that was the line that failed, if `condition` * evaluates to non-zero. * @return 1 if `condition` evaluates to non-zero, 0 otherwise. */ #define FAILURE_CHECK(condition, offset) \ ((condition) ? (*__slibc_error_line() = (__LINE__ - (offset)), 1) : 0) /** * Print an error message describing the error, and where the error * happened. Optionally with detailed description of the action that * failed. * * This function must be called in the same file and function as the * the expansion of `FAILABLE_CALL` or `FAILURE_CHECK`. It is recommended * that this is done all the way down the call-stack to `main'. This is * however problematic (although it is possible) if you do not want the * process to exit. * * Example of recursion: * ``` * static int b(void) * { * if (FAILABLE_CALL(some_function()) < 0) goto fail; * return 0; fail: PRINT_FAILURE(NULL); return -1; * } * static int a(void) * { * if (FAILABLE_CALL(b()) < 0) goto fail; * return 0; fail: PRINT_FAILURE(NULL); return -1; * } * int main(void) * { * if (FAILABLE_CALL(a()) < 0) goto fail; * return 0; fail: PRINT_FAILURE(NULL); return 1; * } * ``` * * This function will set `errno` to zero. If you have statements * after the call to this function that may modify `errno`, be sure * to set `errno` to zero before returning. A good way to do this * is to have the return statement look like `return errno = 0, -1`. * * This is a slibc extension. * * @param ... Formatting-string followed by formatting-arguments used * to describe what action failed. If the first argument is * `NULL`, this is not printed and only the location of the * error and `errno` is used to describe the error. */ #define PRINT_FAILURE(...) \ (PRINT_CUSTOM_FAILURE(errno, NULL, __VA_ARGS__)) /** * Variant of `PRINT_FAILURE` that allows another function than `strerror` * to be used to get a textual description of the error code. * (This function will not set `errno` to zero unless it is the first argument.) * * Example: `PRINT_CUSTOM_FAILURE(r, gai_strerror(r), _("fail to connect to server: %s"), host)` * * This is a slibc extension. * * @param error_code The error code, must be a modifiable lvalue, as it will be * modified to zero to indicate that the error string has * already been printed. Thus, on the original error location * this value must not be zero. * @param error_string Textual representation of the error. If `errno` indicates * the error, this should usually be `strerror(errno)`. * @param ... Formatting-string followed by formatting-arguments used * to describe what action failed. If the first argument is * `NULL`, this is not printed and only the location of the * error and `error_string` is used to describe the error. */ #define PRINT_CUSTOM_FAILURE(error_code, error_string, ...) \ (slibc_perror(NULL, __FILE__, *__slibc_error_line(), __func__, &(error_code), error_string, __VA_ARGS__)) /** * Helper function to keep track of the line of origin, in a * thread-safe manner, without requiring new revisions of C. */ int* __slibc_error_line(void) __GCC_ONLY(__attribute__((const))); /* TODO not implemented */ /** * Print a description of an error, and where the error occurred. * This function is capable of printed the full call-stack. * * It is not recommended to used this function direction. * Use the macros in instead. * * This is a slibc extension. * * @param progname The name of the program, `NULL` to use `program_invocation_name`. * @param filename The source code file where the error occurred. * @param linenum The line in the source code where the error occurred. * @param function The function in the source code where the error occurred. * @param error_code Pointer the variable that stores the error code, will zeroed. * @param error_string Textual description of the error code, `NULL` if `strerror` should be used. * This parameter is unused if `error_code` is zero. * @param format Formatting-string for a description of the action that failed. `NULL` if * no description other than the location and `error_string` should be printed. * @param ... Formatting-arguments for `format`. */ void slibc_perror(const char*, const char*, int, const char*, int*, const char*, const char*, ...) __GCC_ONLY(__attribute__((nonnull(2, 4), format(printf, 7, 8)))); #endif #endif