From be8efac78d067c138ad8dda03df4336e73f94887 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: =?UTF-8?q?J=C3=B6rg=20Frings-F=C3=BCrst?= Date: Sat, 8 Jan 2022 11:51:07 +0100 Subject: New upstream version 1.0 --- tests/strerror_r.c | 451 +++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 451 insertions(+) create mode 100644 tests/strerror_r.c (limited to 'tests/strerror_r.c') diff --git a/tests/strerror_r.c b/tests/strerror_r.c new file mode 100644 index 0000000..85a2189 --- /dev/null +++ b/tests/strerror_r.c @@ -0,0 +1,451 @@ +/* strerror_r.c --- POSIX compatible system error routine + + Copyright (C) 2010-2022 Free Software Foundation, Inc. + + This file is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify + it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public License as + published by the Free Software Foundation; either version 2.1 of the + License, or (at your option) any later version. + + This file 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 Lesser General Public License for more details. + + You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser 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 +#if !HAVE_SNPRINTF +# include +#endif + +#include "strerror-override.h" + +#if STRERROR_R_CHAR_P + +# if HAVE___XPG_STRERROR_R +_GL_EXTERN_C int __xpg_strerror_r (int errnum, char *buf, size_t buflen); +# endif + +#elif HAVE_DECL_STRERROR_R + +/* The system's strerror_r function's API is OK, except that its third argument + is 'int', not 'size_t', or its return type is wrong. */ + +# include + +#else + +/* 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 + +# if defined __NetBSD__ || defined __hpux || (defined _WIN32 && !defined __CYGWIN__) || defined __sgi || (defined __sun && !defined _LP64) || defined __CYGWIN__ + +/* No locking needed. */ + +/* Get catgets internationalization functions. */ +# if HAVE_CATGETS +# include +# endif + +#ifdef __cplusplus +extern "C" { +#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 + +#ifdef __cplusplus +} +#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; +} +# undef snprintf +# 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); + size_t moved = len < buflen ? len : buflen - 1; + + /* Although POSIX lets memmove corrupt errno, we don't + know of any implementation where this is a real problem. */ + memmove (buf, msg, moved); + buf[moved] = '\0'; + return len < buflen ? 0 : ERANGE; +} + + +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 STRERROR_R_CHAR_P + + { + ret = 0; + +# if HAVE___XPG_STRERROR_R + ret = __xpg_strerror_r (errnum, buf, buflen); + if (ret < 0) + ret = errno; +# endif + + 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. */ + char *errstring = strerror_r (errnum, buf, buflen); + ret = errstring ? safe_copy (buf, buflen, errstring) : errno; + } + } + +#elif HAVE_DECL_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. + But on Haiku, valid error numbers are negative. */ +# if !defined __HAIKU__ + if (ret < 0) + ret = errno; +# endif +# endif + +# if defined _AIX || defined __HAIKU__ + /* AIX and Haiku return 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 /* strerror_r is not declared. */ + + /* Try to do what strerror (errnum) does, but without clobbering the + buffer used by strerror(). */ + +# if defined __NetBSD__ || defined __hpux || (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 defined _WIN32 && !defined __CYGWIN__ + /* MSVC 14 defines names for many error codes in the range 100..140, + but _sys_errlist contains strings only for the error codes + < _sys_nerr = 43. */ + if (ret == EINVAL) + { + const char *errmsg; + + switch (errnum) + { + case 100 /* EADDRINUSE */: + errmsg = "Address already in use"; + break; + case 101 /* EADDRNOTAVAIL */: + errmsg = "Cannot assign requested address"; + break; + case 102 /* EAFNOSUPPORT */: + errmsg = "Address family not supported by protocol"; + break; + case 103 /* EALREADY */: + errmsg = "Operation already in progress"; + break; + case 105 /* ECANCELED */: + errmsg = "Operation canceled"; + break; + case 106 /* ECONNABORTED */: + errmsg = "Software caused connection abort"; + break; + case 107 /* ECONNREFUSED */: + errmsg = "Connection refused"; + break; + case 108 /* ECONNRESET */: + errmsg = "Connection reset by peer"; + break; + case 109 /* EDESTADDRREQ */: + errmsg = "Destination address required"; + break; + case 110 /* EHOSTUNREACH */: + errmsg = "No route to host"; + break; + case 112 /* EINPROGRESS */: + errmsg = "Operation now in progress"; + break; + case 113 /* EISCONN */: + errmsg = "Transport endpoint is already connected"; + break; + case 114 /* ELOOP */: + errmsg = "Too many levels of symbolic links"; + break; + case 115 /* EMSGSIZE */: + errmsg = "Message too long"; + break; + case 116 /* ENETDOWN */: + errmsg = "Network is down"; + break; + case 117 /* ENETRESET */: + errmsg = "Network dropped connection on reset"; + break; + case 118 /* ENETUNREACH */: + errmsg = "Network is unreachable"; + break; + case 119 /* ENOBUFS */: + errmsg = "No buffer space available"; + break; + case 123 /* ENOPROTOOPT */: + errmsg = "Protocol not available"; + break; + case 126 /* ENOTCONN */: + errmsg = "Transport endpoint is not connected"; + break; + case 128 /* ENOTSOCK */: + errmsg = "Socket operation on non-socket"; + break; + case 129 /* ENOTSUP */: + errmsg = "Not supported"; + break; + case 130 /* EOPNOTSUPP */: + errmsg = "Operation not supported"; + break; + case 132 /* EOVERFLOW */: + errmsg = "Value too large for defined data type"; + break; + case 133 /* EOWNERDEAD */: + errmsg = "Owner died"; + break; + case 134 /* EPROTO */: + errmsg = "Protocol error"; + break; + case 135 /* EPROTONOSUPPORT */: + errmsg = "Protocol not supported"; + break; + case 136 /* EPROTOTYPE */: + errmsg = "Protocol wrong type for socket"; + break; + case 138 /* ETIMEDOUT */: + errmsg = "Connection timed out"; + break; + case 140 /* EWOULDBLOCK */: + errmsg = "Operation would block"; + break; + default: + errmsg = NULL; + break; + } + if (errmsg != NULL) + ret = safe_copy (buf, buflen, errmsg); + } +#endif + + if (ret == EINVAL && !*buf) + { +#if defined __HAIKU__ + /* For consistency with perror(). */ + snprintf (buf, buflen, "Unknown Application Error (%d)", errnum); +#else + snprintf (buf, buflen, "Unknown error %d", errnum); +#endif + } + + errno = saved_errno; + return ret; + } +} -- cgit v1.2.3