diff options
Diffstat (limited to 'lib/erl_interface/doc/src/erl_error.xml')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/erl_interface/doc/src/erl_error.xml | 94 |
1 files changed, 51 insertions, 43 deletions
diff --git a/lib/erl_interface/doc/src/erl_error.xml b/lib/erl_interface/doc/src/erl_error.xml index abe84780e1..8139c9b343 100644 --- a/lib/erl_interface/doc/src/erl_error.xml +++ b/lib/erl_interface/doc/src/erl_error.xml @@ -11,7 +11,7 @@ Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at - + http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software @@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License. - + </legalnotice> <title>erl_error</title> @@ -28,61 +28,66 @@ <docno></docno> <approved>Bjarne Däcker</approved> <checked>Torbjörn Törnkvist</checked> - <date>961014</date> + <date>1996-10-14</date> <rev>A</rev> - <file>erl_error.sgml</file> + <file>erl_error.xml</file> </header> <lib>erl_error</lib> - <libsummary>Error Print Routines</libsummary> + <libsummary>Error print routines.</libsummary> <description> <p>This module contains some error printing routines taken - from <em>Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment</em> - by W. Richard Stevens. </p> + from "Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment" + by W. Richard Stevens.</p> + <p>These functions are all called in the same manner as - <c><![CDATA[printf()]]></c>, i.e. with a string containing format specifiers - followed by a list of corresponding arguments. All output from - these functions is to <c><![CDATA[stderr]]></c>.</p> + <c>printf()</c>, that is, with a string containing format + specifiers followed by a list of corresponding arguments. All output from + these functions is to <c>stderr</c>.</p> </description> + <funcs> <func> <name><ret>void</ret><nametext>erl_err_msg(FormatStr, ... )</nametext></name> - <fsummary>Non-fatal error, and not system call error</fsummary> + <fsummary>Non-fatal error, and not system call error.</fsummary> <type> <v>const char *FormatStr;</v> </type> <desc> <p>The message provided by the caller is printed. This - function is simply a wrapper for <c><![CDATA[fprintf()]]></c>.</p> + function is simply a wrapper for <c>fprintf()</c>.</p> </desc> </func> + <func> <name><ret>void</ret><nametext>erl_err_quit(FormatStr, ... )</nametext></name> - <fsummary>Fatal error, but not system call error</fsummary> + <fsummary>Fatal error, but not system call error.</fsummary> <type> <v>const char *FormatStr;</v> </type> <desc> <p>Use this function when a fatal error has occurred that - is not due to a system call. The message provided by the - caller is printed and the process terminates with an exit - value of 1. The function does not return.</p> + is not because of a system call. The message provided by the + caller is printed and the process terminates with exit + value <c>1</c>. This function does not return.</p> </desc> </func> + <func> <name><ret>void</ret><nametext>erl_err_ret(FormatStr, ... )</nametext></name> - <fsummary>Non-fatal system call error</fsummary> + <fsummary>Non-fatal system call error.</fsummary> <type> <v>const char *FormatStr;</v> </type> <desc> <p>Use this function after a failed system call. The message provided by the caller is printed followed by a string - describing the reason for failure. </p> + describing the reason for failure.</p> </desc> </func> + <func> <name><ret>void</ret><nametext>erl_err_sys(FormatStr, ... )</nametext></name> - <fsummary>Fatal system call error</fsummary> + <fsummary>Fatal system call error.</fsummary> <type> <v>const char *FormatStr;</v> </type> @@ -90,7 +95,7 @@ <p>Use this function after a failed system call. The message provided by the caller is printed followed by a string describing the reason for failure, and the process - terminates with an exit value of 1. The function does not + terminates with exit value <c>1</c>. This function does not return.</p> </desc> </func> @@ -98,40 +103,43 @@ <section> <title>Error Reporting</title> - <p>Most functions in erl_interface report failures to the caller by - returning some otherwise meaningless value (typically <c><![CDATA[NULL]]></c> + <p>Most functions in <c>Erl_Interface</c> report failures to the caller by + returning some otherwise meaningless value (typically + <c>NULL</c> or a negative number). As this only tells you that things did not - go well, you will have to examine the error code in - <c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> if you want to find out more about the failure.</p> + go well, examine the error code in <c>erl_errno</c> if you + want to find out more about the failure.</p> </section> + <funcs> <func> <name><ret>volatile int</ret><nametext>erl_errno</nametext></name> - <fsummary>The variable <c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c>contains the erl_interface error number. You can change the value if you wish. </fsummary> + <fsummary>Variable <c>erl_errno</c> contains the + Erl_Interface error number. You can change the value if you wish. + </fsummary> <desc> - <p><c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> is initially (at program startup) zero and - is then set by many erl_interface functions on failure to a - non-zero error code to indicate what kind of error it - encountered. A successful function call might change - <c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> (by calling some other function that - fails), but no function will ever set it to zero. This means - that you cannot use <c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> to see <em>if</em> a + <p><c>erl_errno</c> is initially (at program startup) zero + and is then set by many <c>Erl_Interface</c> functions on failure to + a non-zero error code to indicate what kind of error it + encountered. A successful function call can change + <c>erl_errno</c> (by calling some other function that + fails), but no function does never set it to zero. This means + that you cannot use <c>erl_errno</c> to see <em>if</em> a function call failed. Instead, each function reports failure in its own way (usually by returning a negative number or - <c><![CDATA[NULL]]></c>), in which case you can examine <c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> - for details.</p> - <p><c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> uses the error codes defined in your - system's <c><![CDATA[<errno.h>]]></c>.</p> + <c>NULL</c>), in which case you can examine + <c>erl_errno</c> for details.</p> + <p><c>erl_errno</c> uses the error codes defined in your + system's <c><errno.h></c>.</p> <note> - <p>Actually, <c><![CDATA[erl_errno]]></c> is a "modifiable lvalue" (just - like ISO C defines <c><![CDATA[errno]]></c> to be) rather than a - variable. This means it might be implemented as a macro - (expanding to, e.g., <c><![CDATA[*_erl_errno()]]></c>). For reasons of - thread- (or task-)safety, this is exactly what we do on most - platforms.</p> + <p><c>erl_errno</c> is a "modifiable lvalue" (just + like ISO C defines <c>errno</c> to be) rather than a + variable. This means it can be implemented as a macro + (expanding to, for example, <c>*_erl_errno()</c>). + For reasons of thread safety (or task safety), this is exactly what + we do on most platforms.</p> </note> </desc> </func> </funcs> </cref> - |