ERRSTR(3)ERRSTR(3)

NAME
errstr, rerrstr, werrstr – description of last system call error

SYNOPSIS
#include <u.h>
#include <libc.h>
int errstr(char *err, uint nerr)
void rerrstr(char *err, uint nerr)
void werrstr(char *fmt, ...)

DESCRIPTION
When a system call fails it returns –1 and records a null terminated string describing the error in a per-process buffer. Errstr swaps the contents of that buffer with the contents of the array err. Errstr will write at most nerr bytes into err; if the per-process error string does not fit, it is silently truncated at a UTF character boundary. The returned string is NUL-terminated. Usually errstr will be called with an empty string, but the exchange property provides a mechanism for libraries to set the return value for the next call to errstr.
The per-process buffer is ERRMAX bytes long. Any error string provided by the user will be truncated at ERRMAX−1 bytes. ERRMAX is defined in <libc.h>.
If no system call has generated an error since the last call to errstr with an empty string, the result is an empty string.
The verb r in print(3) calls errstr and outputs the error string.
Rerrstr reads the error string but does not modify the per-process buffer, so a subsequent errstr will recover the same string.
Werrstr takes a print style format as its argument and uses it to format a string to pass to errstr. The string returned from errstr is discarded.
The error string is maintained in parallel with the Unix error number errno. Changing errno will reset the error string, and changing the error string via errstr or werrstr will reset errno.

SOURCE
/usr/local/plan9/src/lib9/errstr.c

DIAGNOSTICS
Errstr always returns 0.

SEE ALSO
intro(3), perror(3)

BUGS
The implementation sets errno to the (somewhat arbitrary) constant 0x19283745 when the error string is valid. When errno is set to other values, the error string is synthesized using strerror(3).

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