/* strerror_r.c --- POSIX compatible system error routine Copyright (C) 2010-2013 Free Software Foundation, Inc. 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 . */ /* Written by Bruno Haible , 2010. */ #include /* Enable declaration of sys_nerr and sys_errlist in on NetBSD. */ #define _NETBSD_SOURCE 1 /* Specification. */ #include #include #include #include #include "strerror-override.h" #if (__GLIBC__ >= 2 || defined __UCLIBC__ || defined __CYGWIN__) && HAVE___XPG_STRERROR_R /* glibc >= 2.3.4, cygwin >= 1.7.9 */ # define USE_XPG_STRERROR_R 1 extern int __xpg_strerror_r (int errnum, char *buf, size_t buflen); #elif HAVE_DECL_STRERROR_R && !(__GLIBC__ >= 2 || defined __UCLIBC__ || defined __CYGWIN__) /* The system's strerror_r function is OK, except that its third argument is 'int', not 'size_t', or its return type is wrong. */ # include # define USE_SYSTEM_STRERROR_R 1 #else /* (__GLIBC__ >= 2 || defined __UCLIBC__ || defined __CYGWIN__ ? !HAVE___XPG_STRERROR_R : !HAVE_DECL_STRERROR_R) */ /* Use the system's strerror(). Exclude glibc and cygwin because the system strerror_r has the wrong return type, and cygwin 1.7.9 strerror_r clobbers strerror. */ # undef strerror # define USE_SYSTEM_STRERROR 1 # if defined __NetBSD__ || defined __hpux || ((defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__) && !defined __CYGWIN__) || defined __sgi || (defined __sun && !defined _LP64) || defined __CYGWIN__ /* No locking needed. */ /* Get catgets internationalization functions. */ # if HAVE_CATGETS # include # endif /* Get sys_nerr, sys_errlist on HP-UX (otherwise only declared in C++ mode). Get sys_nerr, sys_errlist on IRIX (otherwise only declared with _SGIAPI). */ # if defined __hpux || defined __sgi extern int sys_nerr; extern char *sys_errlist[]; # endif /* Get sys_nerr on Solaris. */ # if defined __sun && !defined _LP64 extern int sys_nerr; # endif # else # include "glthread/lock.h" /* This lock protects the buffer returned by strerror(). We assume that no other uses of strerror() exist in the program. */ gl_lock_define_initialized(static, strerror_lock) # endif #endif /* On MSVC, there is no snprintf() function, just a _snprintf(). It is of lower quality, but sufficient for the simple use here. We only have to make sure to NUL terminate the result (_snprintf does not NUL terminate, like strncpy). */ #if !HAVE_SNPRINTF static int local_snprintf (char *buf, size_t buflen, const char *format, ...) { va_list args; int result; va_start (args, format); result = _vsnprintf (buf, buflen, format, args); va_end (args); if (buflen > 0 && (result < 0 || result >= buflen)) buf[buflen - 1] = '\0'; return result; } # define snprintf local_snprintf #endif /* Copy as much of MSG into BUF as possible, without corrupting errno. Return 0 if MSG fit in BUFLEN, otherwise return ERANGE. */ static int safe_copy (char *buf, size_t buflen, const char *msg) { size_t len = strlen (msg); int ret; if (len < buflen) { /* Although POSIX allows memcpy() to corrupt errno, we don't know of any implementation where this is a real problem. */ memcpy (buf, msg, len + 1); ret = 0; } else { memcpy (buf, msg, buflen - 1); buf[buflen - 1] = '\0'; ret = ERANGE; } return ret; } int strerror_r (int errnum, char *buf, size_t buflen) #undef strerror_r { /* Filter this out now, so that rest of this replacement knows that there is room for a non-empty message and trailing NUL. */ if (buflen <= 1) { if (buflen) *buf = '\0'; return ERANGE; } *buf = '\0'; /* Check for gnulib overrides. */ { char const *msg = strerror_override (errnum); if (msg) return safe_copy (buf, buflen, msg); } { int ret; int saved_errno = errno; #if USE_XPG_STRERROR_R { ret = __xpg_strerror_r (errnum, buf, buflen); if (ret < 0) ret = errno; if (!*buf) { /* glibc 2.13 would not touch buf on err, so we have to fall back to GNU strerror_r which always returns a thread-safe untruncated string to (partially) copy into our buf. */ safe_copy (buf, buflen, strerror_r (errnum, buf, buflen)); } } #elif USE_SYSTEM_STRERROR_R if (buflen > INT_MAX) buflen = INT_MAX; # ifdef __hpux /* On HP-UX 11.31, strerror_r always fails when buflen < 80; it also fails to change buf on EINVAL. */ { char stackbuf[80]; if (buflen < sizeof stackbuf) { ret = strerror_r (errnum, stackbuf, sizeof stackbuf); if (ret == 0) ret = safe_copy (buf, buflen, stackbuf); } else ret = strerror_r (errnum, buf, buflen); } # else ret = strerror_r (errnum, buf, buflen); /* Some old implementations may return (-1, EINVAL) instead of EINVAL. */ if (ret < 0) ret = errno; # endif # ifdef _AIX /* AIX returns 0 rather than ERANGE when truncating strings; try again until we are sure we got the entire string. */ if (!ret && strlen (buf) == buflen - 1) { char stackbuf[STACKBUF_LEN]; size_t len; strerror_r (errnum, stackbuf, sizeof stackbuf); len = strlen (stackbuf); /* STACKBUF_LEN should have been large enough. */ if (len + 1 == sizeof stackbuf) abort (); if (buflen <= len) ret = ERANGE; } # else /* Solaris 10 does not populate buf on ERANGE. OpenBSD 4.7 truncates early on ERANGE rather than return a partial integer. We prefer the maximal string. We set buf[0] earlier, and we know of no implementation that modifies buf to be an unterminated string, so this strlen should be portable in practice (rather than pulling in a safer strnlen). */ if (ret == ERANGE && strlen (buf) < buflen - 1) { char stackbuf[STACKBUF_LEN]; /* STACKBUF_LEN should have been large enough. */ if (strerror_r (errnum, stackbuf, sizeof stackbuf) == ERANGE) abort (); safe_copy (buf, buflen, stackbuf); } # endif #else /* USE_SYSTEM_STRERROR */ /* Try to do what strerror (errnum) does, but without clobbering the buffer used by strerror(). */ # if defined __NetBSD__ || defined __hpux || ((defined _WIN32 || defined __WIN32__) && !defined __CYGWIN__) || defined __CYGWIN__ /* NetBSD, HP-UX, native Windows, Cygwin */ /* NetBSD: sys_nerr, sys_errlist are declared through _NETBSD_SOURCE and above. HP-UX: sys_nerr, sys_errlist are declared explicitly above. native Windows: sys_nerr, sys_errlist are declared in . Cygwin: sys_nerr, sys_errlist are declared in . */ if (errnum >= 0 && errnum < sys_nerr) { # if HAVE_CATGETS && (defined __NetBSD__ || defined __hpux) # if defined __NetBSD__ nl_catd catd = catopen ("libc", NL_CAT_LOCALE); const char *errmsg = (catd != (nl_catd)-1 ? catgets (catd, 1, errnum, sys_errlist[errnum]) : sys_errlist[errnum]); # endif # if defined __hpux nl_catd catd = catopen ("perror", NL_CAT_LOCALE); const char *errmsg = (catd != (nl_catd)-1 ? catgets (catd, 1, 1 + errnum, sys_errlist[errnum]) : sys_errlist[errnum]); # endif # else const char *errmsg = sys_errlist[errnum]; # endif if (errmsg == NULL || *errmsg == '\0') ret = EINVAL; else ret = safe_copy (buf, buflen, errmsg); # if HAVE_CATGETS && (defined __NetBSD__ || defined __hpux) if (catd != (nl_catd)-1) catclose (catd); # endif } else ret = EINVAL; # elif defined __sgi || (defined __sun && !defined _LP64) /* IRIX, Solaris <= 9 32-bit */ /* For a valid error number, the system's strerror() function returns a pointer to a not copied string, not to a buffer. */ if (errnum >= 0 && errnum < sys_nerr) { char *errmsg = strerror (errnum); if (errmsg == NULL || *errmsg == '\0') ret = EINVAL; else ret = safe_copy (buf, buflen, errmsg); } else ret = EINVAL; # else gl_lock_lock (strerror_lock); { char *errmsg = strerror (errnum); /* For invalid error numbers, strerror() on - IRIX 6.5 returns NULL, - HP-UX 11 returns an empty string. */ if (errmsg == NULL || *errmsg == '\0') ret = EINVAL; else ret = safe_copy (buf, buflen, errmsg); } gl_lock_unlock (strerror_lock); # endif #endif if (ret == EINVAL && !*buf) snprintf (buf, buflen, "Unknown error %d", errnum); errno = saved_errno; return ret; } }