2 * <errno.h> wrapper functions.
14 Mono_Posix_Stdlib_GetLastError (void)
20 Mono_Posix_Stdlib_SetLastError (int error_number
)
25 #ifdef HAVE_STRERROR_R
28 * There are two versions of strerror_r:
29 * - the GNU version: char *strerror_r (int errnum, char *buf, size_t n);
30 * - the XPG version: int strerror_r (int errnum, char *buf, size_t n);
32 * Ideally I could stick with the XPG version, but we need to support
33 * Red Hat 9, which only supports the GNU version.
35 * Furthermore, I do NOT want to export the GNU version in Mono.Posix.dll,
36 * as that's supposed to contain *standard* function definitions (give or
37 * take a few GNU extensions). Portability trumps all.
39 * Consequently, we export the functionality of the XPG version.
40 * Internally, we se the GNU version if _GNU_SOURCE is defined, otherwise
41 * we assume that the XPG version is present.
45 #define mph_min(x,y) ((x) <= (y) ? (x) : (y))
47 /* If you pass an invalid errno value to glibc 2.3.2's strerror_r, you get
48 * back the string "Unknown error" with the error value appended. */
49 static const char mph_unknown
[] = "Unknown error ";
52 * Translate the GNU semantics to the XPG semantics.
54 * From reading the (RH9-using) GLibc 2.3.2 sysdeps/generic/_strerror.c,
55 * we can say the following:
56 * - If errnum is a valid error number, a pointer to a constant string is
57 * returned. Thus, the prototype *lies* (it's not really a char*).
58 * `buf' is unchanged (WTF?).
59 * - If errnum is an *invalid* error number, an error message is copied
60 * into `buf' and `buf' is returned. The error message returned is
61 * "Unknown error %i", where %i is the input errnum.
63 * Meanwhile, XPG always modifies `buf' if there's enough space, and either
64 * returns 0 (success) or -1 (error) with errno = EINVAL (bad errnum) or
65 * ERANGE (`buf' isn't big enough). Also, GLibc 2.3.3 (which has the XPG
66 * version) first checks the validity of errnum first, then does the copy.
68 * Assuming that the GNU implementation doesn't change much (ha!), we can
69 * check for EINVAL by comparing the strerror_r return to `buf', OR by
70 * comparing the return value to "Uknown error". (This assumes that
71 * strerror_r will always only return the input buffer for errors.)
73 * Check for ERANGE by comparing the string length returned by strerror_r to
76 * Then pray that this actually works...
79 Mono_Posix_Syscall_strerror_r (int errnum
, char *buf
, mph_size_t n
)
82 char ebuf
[sizeof(mph_unknown
)];
86 mph_return_if_size_t_overflow (n
);
88 /* first, check for valid errnum */
90 /* Android NDK defines _GNU_SOURCE but strerror_r follows the XSI semantics
91 * not the GNU one. XSI version returns an integer, as opposed to the GNU one
92 * which returns pointer to the buffer.
94 if (strerror_r (errnum
, ebuf
, sizeof(ebuf
)) == -1) {
95 /* XSI strerror_r will return -1 if errno is set, but if we leave the value
96 * alone it breaks Mono.Posix StdioFileStream tests, so we'll ignore the value
97 * and set errno as below
104 r
= strerror_r (errnum
, ebuf
, sizeof(ebuf
));
113 strncmp (r
, mph_unknown
, mph_min (len
, sizeof(mph_unknown
))) == 0) {
118 /* valid errnum (we hope); is buffer big enough? */
120 if ((len
+1) > blen
) {
125 strncpy (buf
, r
, len
);
131 #else /* !def _GNU_SOURCE */
134 Mono_Posix_Syscall_strerror_r (int errnum
, char *buf
, mph_size_t n
)
136 mph_return_if_size_t_overflow (n
);
137 return strerror_r (errnum
, buf
, (size_t) n
);
140 #endif /* def _GNU_SOURCE */
142 #endif /* def HAVE_STRERROR_R */