errnoname is a C library that lets us get the
symbolic name for each errno integer value, by mentalisttraceur.
Run:
$ npm i errnoname.cAnd then include errnoname.h as follows:
#include "node_modules/errnoname.c/errnoname.h"You may also want to include errnoname.c as follows:
#ifndef __ERRNONAME_C__
#define __ERRNONAME_C__
#include "node_modules/errnoname.c/errnoname.c"
#endifThis will include both the function declaration and their definitions into a single file.
The library has a single function:
char const * errnoname(int)Pass an errno value in, get back a pointer to
a null-terminated string containing the name.
If the errno value does not match a known name, a null pointer
is returned. (This intentionally includes errno value 0.)
This function is always thread-safe and reentrant.
This function never sets errno.
Here is a "hello world" with error handling:
#include <errno.h> /* errno */
#include <stdio.h> /* EOF, fflush, fprintf, fputs, stderr, stdout */
#include <stdlib.h> /* EXIT_FAILURE, EXIT_SUCCESS */
#include "errnoname.h" /* errnoname */
int main(int argc, char * * argv)
{
char const * error_name;
/* `fputs` and `fflush` return `EOF` for all errors: */
if(fputs("Hello world\n", stdout) != EOF
&& fflush(stdout) != EOF)
{
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
/* since `fputs` or `fflush` failed, `errno` should be */
/* the error from the underlying `write` on most systems: */
error_name = errnoname(errno);
/* check if null, which means this `errno` value is unknown: */
if(!error_name)
{
fprintf(stderr, "unknown error number: %d\n", errno);
}
else
{
fprintf(stderr, "error: %s\n", error_name);
}
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}The errnoname.h header will only ever define identifiers
whose first nine characters are errnoname or ERRNONAME.
So names like errno_name, errnoName, ErrnoName, or
ERRNO_NAME will always remain available for you to use.
Just compile and link errnoname.c as normal.
errnoname.c also has an include guard, so you can use
it instead of errnoname.h as a header-only library.
If errnoname.c is compiled with the ERRNONAME_SAFE_TO_USE_ARRAY
preprocessor macro defined, it will use an array of errno names
indexed by errno values instead of a switch statement. Your
compiler must support designated initializers for this to work.
Note that modern compilers can already automatically convert the switch to an array lookup when optimizations are turned up high enough if it is safe and more efficient to do so.
The best way to help this library is making sure that
we have the best coverage of errno names possible:
-
Check if the
for-maintainers/gather-errno-names.shscript has the most complete and up-to-date sources of information forerrnonames - maybe you know a better way to get the latest ones for some system, and maybe we are missing a source we should include. -
Check if the
for-maintainers/errno-list.txtfile is missing anyerrnonames that you know about. -
Check if the
for-maintainers/generate-c.shscript file handles allerrnonames that alias the same errno value on any system.
You can also help by sharing your use-cases, what features
you want, and design suggestions - the errnoname
function is a good minimal foundation, but there might be
other features or performance optimizations worth doing.