* Copyright (C) 1995-1997 Peter Mattis, Spencer Kimball and Josh MacDonald
*
* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
- * modify it under the terms of the GNU Library General Public
+ * modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
*
* This library 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
- * Library General Public License for more details.
+ * Lesser General Public License for more details.
*
- * You should have received a copy of the GNU Library General Public
+ * You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
* License along with this library; if not, write to the
* Free Software Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place - Suite 330,
* Boston, MA 02111-1307, USA.
*/
-/*
- * MT safe ; except for g_on_error_stack_trace, but who wants thread safety
- * then
+/*
+ * Modified by the GLib Team and others 1997-2000. See the AUTHORS
+ * file for a list of people on the GLib Team. See the ChangeLog
+ * files for a list of changes. These files are distributed with
+ * GLib at ftp://ftp.gtk.org/pub/gtk/.
*/
-#ifdef HAVE_CONFIG_H
-#include <config.h>
-#endif
-
-#include <signal.h>
-#include <stdarg.h>
-#include <stdio.h>
-#include <stdlib.h>
-#include "glib.h"
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIME_H
-#include <sys/time.h>
-#endif
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_TIMES_H
-#include <sys/times.h>
-#endif
-#include <sys/types.h>
-
-#include <time.h>
-#ifdef HAVE_UNISTD_H
-#include <unistd.h>
-#endif
-
-#ifdef HAVE_SYS_SELECT_H
-#include <sys/select.h>
-#endif /* HAVE_SYS_SELECT_H */
-
-#ifdef STDC_HEADERS
-#include <string.h> /* for bzero on BSD systems */
-#endif
-
-#ifdef _MSC_VER
-#include <process.h> /* For _getpid() */
-#endif
-
-#ifndef NO_FD_SET
-# define SELECT_MASK fd_set
-#else
-# ifndef _AIX
- typedef long fd_mask;
-# endif
-# if defined(_IBMR2)
-# define SELECT_MASK void
-# else
-# define SELECT_MASK int
-# endif
-#endif
-
-
-static void stack_trace (char **args);
-
-extern volatile gboolean glib_on_error_halt;
-volatile gboolean glib_on_error_halt = TRUE;
+/**
+ * SECTION:error_reporting
+ * @Title: Error Reporting
+ * @Short_description: a system for reporting errors
+ *
+ * GLib provides a standard method of reporting errors from a called
+ * function to the calling code. (This is the same problem solved by
+ * exceptions in other languages.) It's important to understand that
+ * this method is both a <emphasis>data type</emphasis> (the #GError
+ * object) and a <emphasis>set of rules.</emphasis> If you use #GError
+ * incorrectly, then your code will not properly interoperate with other
+ * code that uses #GError, and users of your API will probably get confused.
+ *
+ * First and foremost: <emphasis>#GError should only be used to report
+ * recoverable runtime errors, never to report programming
+ * errors.</emphasis> If the programmer has screwed up, then you should
+ * use g_warning(), g_return_if_fail(), g_assert(), g_error(), or some
+ * similar facility. (Incidentally, remember that the g_error() function
+ * should <emphasis>only</emphasis> be used for programming errors, it
+ * should not be used to print any error reportable via #GError.)
+ *
+ * Examples of recoverable runtime errors are "file not found" or
+ * "failed to parse input." Examples of programming errors are "NULL
+ * passed to strcmp()" or "attempted to free the same pointer twice."
+ * These two kinds of errors are fundamentally different: runtime errors
+ * should be handled or reported to the user, programming errors should
+ * be eliminated by fixing the bug in the program. This is why most
+ * functions in GLib and GTK+ do not use the #GError facility.
+ *
+ * Functions that can fail take a return location for a #GError as their
+ * last argument. For example:
+ * |[
+ * gboolean g_file_get_contents (const gchar *filename,
+ * gchar **contents,
+ * gsize *length,
+ * GError **error);
+ * ]|
+ * If you pass a non-%NULL value for the <literal>error</literal>
+ * argument, it should point to a location where an error can be placed.
+ * For example:
+ * |[
+ * gchar *contents;
+ * GError *err = NULL;
+ * g_file_get_contents ("foo.txt", &contents, NULL, &err);
+ * g_assert ((contents == NULL && err != NULL) || (contents != NULL && err == NULL));
+ * if (err != NULL)
+ * {
+ * /* Report error to user, and free error */
+ * g_assert (contents == NULL);
+ * fprintf (stderr, "Unable to read file: %s\n", err->message);
+ * g_error_free (err);
+ * }
+ * else
+ * {
+ * /* Use file contents */
+ * g_assert (contents != NULL);
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ * Note that <literal>err != NULL</literal> in this example is a
+ * <emphasis>reliable</emphasis> indicator of whether
+ * g_file_get_contents() failed. Additionally, g_file_get_contents()
+ * returns a boolean which indicates whether it was successful.
+ *
+ * Because g_file_get_contents() returns %FALSE on failure, if you
+ * are only interested in whether it failed and don't need to display
+ * an error message, you can pass %NULL for the <literal>error</literal>
+ * argument:
+ * |[
+ * if (g_file_get_contents ("foo.txt", &contents, NULL, NULL)) /* ignore errors */
+ * /* no error occurred */ ;
+ * else
+ * /* error */ ;
+ * ]|
+ *
+ * The #GError object contains three fields: <literal>domain</literal>
+ * indicates the module the error-reporting function is located in,
+ * <literal>code</literal> indicates the specific error that occurred,
+ * and <literal>message</literal> is a user-readable error message with
+ * as many details as possible. Several functions are provided to deal
+ * with an error received from a called function: g_error_matches()
+ * returns %TRUE if the error matches a given domain and code,
+ * g_propagate_error() copies an error into an error location (so the
+ * calling function will receive it), and g_clear_error() clears an
+ * error location by freeing the error and resetting the location to
+ * %NULL. To display an error to the user, simply display
+ * <literal>error->message</literal>, perhaps along with additional
+ * context known only to the calling function (the file being opened,
+ * or whatever -- though in the g_file_get_contents() case,
+ * <literal>error->message</literal> already contains a filename).
+ *
+ * When implementing a function that can report errors, the basic
+ * tool is g_set_error(). Typically, if a fatal error occurs you
+ * want to g_set_error(), then return immediately. g_set_error()
+ * does nothing if the error location passed to it is %NULL.
+ * Here's an example:
+ * |[
+ * gint
+ * foo_open_file (GError **error)
+ * {
+ * gint fd;
+ *
+ * fd = open ("file.txt", O_RDONLY);
+ *
+ * if (fd < 0)
+ * {
+ * g_set_error (error,
+ * FOO_ERROR, /* error domain */
+ * FOO_ERROR_BLAH, /* error code */
+ * "Failed to open file: %s", /* error message format string */
+ * g_strerror (errno));
+ * return -1;
+ * }
+ * else
+ * return fd;
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ *
+ * Things are somewhat more complicated if you yourself call another
+ * function that can report a #GError. If the sub-function indicates
+ * fatal errors in some way other than reporting a #GError, such as
+ * by returning %TRUE on success, you can simply do the following:
+ * |[
+ * gboolean
+ * my_function_that_can_fail (GError **err)
+ * {
+ * g_return_val_if_fail (err == NULL || *err == NULL, FALSE);
+ *
+ * if (!sub_function_that_can_fail (err))
+ * {
+ * /* assert that error was set by the sub-function */
+ * g_assert (err == NULL || *err != NULL);
+ * return FALSE;
+ * }
+ *
+ * /* otherwise continue, no error occurred */
+ * g_assert (err == NULL || *err == NULL);
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ *
+ * If the sub-function does not indicate errors other than by
+ * reporting a #GError, you need to create a temporary #GError
+ * since the passed-in one may be %NULL. g_propagate_error() is
+ * intended for use in this case.
+ * |[
+ * gboolean
+ * my_function_that_can_fail (GError **err)
+ * {
+ * GError *tmp_error;
+ *
+ * g_return_val_if_fail (err == NULL || *err == NULL, FALSE);
+ *
+ * tmp_error = NULL;
+ * sub_function_that_can_fail (&tmp_error);
+ *
+ * if (tmp_error != NULL)
+ * {
+ * /* store tmp_error in err, if err != NULL,
+ * * otherwise call g_error_free() on tmp_error
+ * */
+ * g_propagate_error (err, tmp_error);
+ * return FALSE;
+ * }
+ *
+ * /* otherwise continue, no error occurred */
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ *
+ * Error pileups are always a bug. For example, this code is incorrect:
+ * |[
+ * gboolean
+ * my_function_that_can_fail (GError **err)
+ * {
+ * GError *tmp_error;
+ *
+ * g_return_val_if_fail (err == NULL || *err == NULL, FALSE);
+ *
+ * tmp_error = NULL;
+ * sub_function_that_can_fail (&tmp_error);
+ * other_function_that_can_fail (&tmp_error);
+ *
+ * if (tmp_error != NULL)
+ * {
+ * g_propagate_error (err, tmp_error);
+ * return FALSE;
+ * }
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ * <literal>tmp_error</literal> should be checked immediately after
+ * sub_function_that_can_fail(), and either cleared or propagated
+ * upward. The rule is: <emphasis>after each error, you must either
+ * handle the error, or return it to the calling function</emphasis>.
+ * Note that passing %NULL for the error location is the equivalent
+ * of handling an error by always doing nothing about it. So the
+ * following code is fine, assuming errors in sub_function_that_can_fail()
+ * are not fatal to my_function_that_can_fail():
+ * |[
+ * gboolean
+ * my_function_that_can_fail (GError **err)
+ * {
+ * GError *tmp_error;
+ *
+ * g_return_val_if_fail (err == NULL || *err == NULL, FALSE);
+ *
+ * sub_function_that_can_fail (NULL); /* ignore errors */
+ *
+ * tmp_error = NULL;
+ * other_function_that_can_fail (&tmp_error);
+ *
+ * if (tmp_error != NULL)
+ * {
+ * g_propagate_error (err, tmp_error);
+ * return FALSE;
+ * }
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ *
+ * Note that passing %NULL for the error location
+ * <emphasis>ignores</emphasis> errors; it's equivalent to
+ * <literal>try { sub_function_that_can_fail (); } catch (...) {}</literal>
+ * in C++. It does <emphasis>not</emphasis> mean to leave errors
+ * unhandled; it means to handle them by doing nothing.
+ *
+ * Error domains and codes are conventionally named as follows:
+ * <itemizedlist>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * The error domain is called
+ * <literal><NAMESPACE>_<MODULE>_ERROR</literal>,
+ * for example %G_SPAWN_ERROR or %G_THREAD_ERROR:
+ * |[
+ * #define G_SPAWN_ERROR g_spawn_error_quark ()
+ *
+ * GQuark
+ * g_spawn_error_quark (void)
+ * {
+ * return g_quark_from_static_string ("g-spawn-error-quark");
+ * }
+ * ]|
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * The quark function for the error domain is called
+ * <literal><namespace>_<module>_error_quark</literal>,
+ * for example g_spawn_error_quark() or g_thread_error_quark().
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * The error codes are in an enumeration called
+ * <literal><Namespace><Module>Error</literal>;
+ * for example,#GThreadError or #GSpawnError.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * Members of the error code enumeration are called
+ * <literal><NAMESPACE>_<MODULE>_ERROR_<CODE></literal>,
+ * for example %G_SPAWN_ERROR_FORK or %G_THREAD_ERROR_AGAIN.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * If there's a "generic" or "unknown" error code for unrecoverable
+ * errors it doesn't make sense to distinguish with specific codes,
+ * it should be called <literal><NAMESPACE>_<MODULE>_ERROR_FAILED</literal>,
+ * for example %G_SPAWN_ERROR_FAILED.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * </itemizedlist>
+ *
+ * Summary of rules for use of #GError:
+ * <itemizedlist>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * Do not report programming errors via #GError.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * The last argument of a function that returns an error should
+ * be a location where a #GError can be placed (i.e. "#GError** error").
+ * If #GError is used with varargs, the #GError** should be the last
+ * argument before the "...".
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * The caller may pass %NULL for the #GError** if they are not interested
+ * in details of the exact error that occurred.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * If %NULL is passed for the #GError** argument, then errors should
+ * not be returned to the caller, but your function should still
+ * abort and return if an error occurs. That is, control flow should
+ * not be affected by whether the caller wants to get a #GError.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * If a #GError is reported, then your function by definition
+ * <emphasis>had a fatal failure and did not complete whatever
+ * it was supposed to do</emphasis>. If the failure was not fatal,
+ * then you handled it and you should not report it. If it was fatal,
+ * then you must report it and discontinue whatever you were doing
+ * immediately.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * If a #GError is reported, out parameters are not guaranteed to
+ * be set to any defined value.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * A #GError* must be initialized to %NULL before passing its address
+ * to a function that can report errors.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * "Piling up" errors is always a bug. That is, if you assign a
+ * new #GError to a #GError* that is non-%NULL, thus overwriting
+ * the previous error, it indicates that you should have aborted
+ * the operation instead of continuing. If you were able to continue,
+ * you should have cleared the previous error with g_clear_error().
+ * g_set_error() will complain if you pile up errors.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * By convention, if you return a boolean value indicating success
+ * then %TRUE means success and %FALSE means failure. If %FALSE is
+ * returned, the error <emphasis>must</emphasis> be set to a non-%NULL
+ * value.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * A %NULL return value is also frequently used to mean that an error
+ * occurred. You should make clear in your documentation whether %NULL
+ * is a valid return value in non-error cases; if %NULL is a valid value,
+ * then users must check whether an error was returned to see if the
+ * function succeeded.
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * <listitem><para>
+ * When implementing a function that can report errors, you may want
+ * to add a check at the top of your function that the error return
+ * location is either %NULL or contains a %NULL error (e.g.
+ * <literal>g_return_if_fail (error == NULL || *error == NULL);</literal>).
+ * </para></listitem>
+ * </itemizedlist>
+ */
+
+#include "config.h"
+#include "gerror.h"
+
+#include "gslice.h"
+#include "gstrfuncs.h"
+#include "gtestutils.h"
+
+/**
+ * g_error_new_valist:
+ * @domain: error domain
+ * @code: error code
+ * @format: printf()-style format for error message
+ * @args: #va_list of parameters for the message format
+ *
+ * Creates a new #GError with the given @domain and @code,
+ * and a message formatted with @format.
+ *
+ * Returns: a new #GError
+ *
+ * Since: 2.22
+ */
+GError*
+g_error_new_valist (GQuark domain,
+ gint code,
+ const gchar *format,
+ va_list args)
+{
+ GError *error;
+
+ /* Historically, GError allowed this (although it was never meant to work),
+ * and it has significant use in the wild, which g_return_val_if_fail
+ * would break. It should maybe g_return_val_if_fail in GLib 4.
+ * (GNOME#660371, GNOME#560482)
+ */
+ g_warn_if_fail (domain != 0);
+ g_warn_if_fail (format != NULL);
+
+ error = g_slice_new (GError);
+
+ error->domain = domain;
+ error->code = code;
+ error->message = g_strdup_vprintf (format, args);
+
+ return error;
+}
+
+/**
+ * g_error_new:
+ * @domain: error domain
+ * @code: error code
+ * @format: printf()-style format for error message
+ * @...: parameters for message format
+ *
+ * Creates a new #GError with the given @domain and @code,
+ * and a message formatted with @format.
+ *
+ * Return value: a new #GError
+ */
+GError*
+g_error_new (GQuark domain,
+ gint code,
+ const gchar *format,
+ ...)
+{
+ GError* error;
+ va_list args;
+
+ g_return_val_if_fail (format != NULL, NULL);
+ g_return_val_if_fail (domain != 0, NULL);
+
+ va_start (args, format);
+ error = g_error_new_valist (domain, code, format, args);
+ va_end (args);
+
+ return error;
+}
+
+/**
+ * g_error_new_literal:
+ * @domain: error domain
+ * @code: error code
+ * @message: error message
+ *
+ * Creates a new #GError; unlike g_error_new(), @message is
+ * not a printf()-style format string. Use this function if
+ * @message contains text you don't have control over,
+ * that could include printf() escape sequences.
+ *
+ * Return value: a new #GError
+ **/
+GError*
+g_error_new_literal (GQuark domain,
+ gint code,
+ const gchar *message)
+{
+ GError* err;
+
+ g_return_val_if_fail (message != NULL, NULL);
+ g_return_val_if_fail (domain != 0, NULL);
+
+ err = g_slice_new (GError);
+
+ err->domain = domain;
+ err->code = code;
+ err->message = g_strdup (message);
+
+ return err;
+}
+
+/**
+ * g_error_free:
+ * @error: a #GError
+ *
+ * Frees a #GError and associated resources.
+ */
void
-g_on_error_query (const gchar *prg_name)
+g_error_free (GError *error)
{
- static const gchar *query1 = "[E]xit, [H]alt";
- static const gchar *query2 = ", show [S]tack trace";
- static const gchar *query3 = " or [P]roceed";
- gchar buf[16];
-
- if (!prg_name)
- prg_name = g_get_prgname ();
-
- retry:
-
- if (prg_name)
- fprintf (stdout,
- "%s (pid:%u): %s%s%s: ",
- prg_name,
- (guint) getpid (),
- query1,
- query2,
- query3);
- else
- fprintf (stdout,
- "(process:%u): %s%s: ",
- (guint) getpid (),
- query1,
- query3);
- fflush (stdout);
-
- fgets (buf, 8, stdin);
-
- if ((buf[0] == 'E' || buf[0] == 'e')
- && buf[1] == '\n')
- _exit (0);
- else if ((buf[0] == 'P' || buf[0] == 'p')
- && buf[1] == '\n')
+ g_return_if_fail (error != NULL);
+
+ g_free (error->message);
+
+ g_slice_free (GError, error);
+}
+
+/**
+ * g_error_copy:
+ * @error: a #GError
+ *
+ * Makes a copy of @error.
+ *
+ * Return value: a new #GError
+ */
+GError*
+g_error_copy (const GError *error)
+{
+ GError *copy;
+
+ g_return_val_if_fail (error != NULL, NULL);
+ /* See g_error_new_valist for why these don't return */
+ g_warn_if_fail (error->domain != 0);
+ g_warn_if_fail (error->message != NULL);
+
+ copy = g_slice_new (GError);
+
+ *copy = *error;
+
+ copy->message = g_strdup (error->message);
+
+ return copy;
+}
+
+/**
+ * g_error_matches:
+ * @error: (allow-none): a #GError or %NULL
+ * @domain: an error domain
+ * @code: an error code
+ *
+ * Returns %TRUE if @error matches @domain and @code, %FALSE
+ * otherwise. In particular, when @error is %NULL, %FALSE will
+ * be returned.
+ *
+ * Return value: whether @error has @domain and @code
+ */
+gboolean
+g_error_matches (const GError *error,
+ GQuark domain,
+ gint code)
+{
+ return error &&
+ error->domain == domain &&
+ error->code == code;
+}
+
+#define ERROR_OVERWRITTEN_WARNING "GError set over the top of a previous GError or uninitialized memory.\n" \
+ "This indicates a bug in someone's code. You must ensure an error is NULL before it's set.\n" \
+ "The overwriting error message was: %s"
+
+/**
+ * g_set_error:
+ * @err: (allow-none): a return location for a #GError, or %NULL
+ * @domain: error domain
+ * @code: error code
+ * @format: printf()-style format
+ * @...: args for @format
+ *
+ * Does nothing if @err is %NULL; if @err is non-%NULL, then *@err
+ * must be %NULL. A new #GError is created and assigned to *@err.
+ */
+void
+g_set_error (GError **err,
+ GQuark domain,
+ gint code,
+ const gchar *format,
+ ...)
+{
+ GError *new;
+
+ va_list args;
+
+ if (err == NULL)
return;
- else if (prg_name
- && (buf[0] == 'S' || buf[0] == 's')
- && buf[1] == '\n')
- {
- g_on_error_stack_trace (prg_name);
- goto retry;
- }
- else if ((buf[0] == 'H' || buf[0] == 'h')
- && buf[1] == '\n')
- {
- while (glib_on_error_halt)
- ;
- glib_on_error_halt = TRUE;
- return;
- }
+
+ va_start (args, format);
+ new = g_error_new_valist (domain, code, format, args);
+ va_end (args);
+
+ if (*err == NULL)
+ *err = new;
else
- goto retry;
+ g_warning (ERROR_OVERWRITTEN_WARNING, new->message);
}
+/**
+ * g_set_error_literal:
+ * @err: (allow-none): a return location for a #GError, or %NULL
+ * @domain: error domain
+ * @code: error code
+ * @message: error message
+ *
+ * Does nothing if @err is %NULL; if @err is non-%NULL, then *@err
+ * must be %NULL. A new #GError is created and assigned to *@err.
+ * Unlike g_set_error(), @message is not a printf()-style format string.
+ * Use this function if @message contains text you don't have control over,
+ * that could include printf() escape sequences.
+ *
+ * Since: 2.18
+ */
void
-g_on_error_stack_trace (const gchar *prg_name)
+g_set_error_literal (GError **err,
+ GQuark domain,
+ gint code,
+ const gchar *message)
{
-#ifndef NATIVE_WIN32
- pid_t pid;
- gchar buf[16];
- gchar *args[4] = { "gdb", NULL, NULL, NULL };
+ GError *new;
- if (!prg_name)
+ if (err == NULL)
return;
- sprintf (buf, "%u", (guint) getpid ());
-
- args[1] = (gchar*) prg_name;
- args[2] = buf;
+ new = g_error_new_literal (domain, code, message);
+ if (*err == NULL)
+ *err = new;
+ else
+ g_warning (ERROR_OVERWRITTEN_WARNING, new->message);
+}
- pid = fork ();
- if (pid == 0)
+/**
+ * g_propagate_error:
+ * @dest: error return location
+ * @src: error to move into the return location
+ *
+ * If @dest is %NULL, free @src; otherwise, moves @src into *@dest.
+ * The error variable @dest points to must be %NULL.
+ */
+void
+g_propagate_error (GError **dest,
+ GError *src)
+{
+ g_return_if_fail (src != NULL);
+
+ if (dest == NULL)
{
- stack_trace (args);
- _exit (0);
+ if (src)
+ g_error_free (src);
+ return;
}
- else if (pid == (pid_t) -1)
+ else
{
- perror ("unable to fork gdb");
- return;
+ if (*dest != NULL)
+ g_warning (ERROR_OVERWRITTEN_WARNING, src->message);
+ else
+ *dest = src;
}
-
- while (glib_on_error_halt)
- ;
- glib_on_error_halt = TRUE;
-#else
- abort ();
-#endif
}
-static gboolean stack_trace_done = FALSE;
-
-static void
-stack_trace_sigchld (int signum)
+/**
+ * g_clear_error:
+ * @err: a #GError return location
+ *
+ * If @err is %NULL, does nothing. If @err is non-%NULL,
+ * calls g_error_free() on *@err and sets *@err to %NULL.
+ */
+void
+g_clear_error (GError **err)
{
- stack_trace_done = TRUE;
+ if (err && *err)
+ {
+ g_error_free (*err);
+ *err = NULL;
+ }
}
static void
-stack_trace (char **args)
+g_error_add_prefix (gchar **string,
+ const gchar *format,
+ va_list ap)
{
-#ifndef NATIVE_WIN32
- pid_t pid;
- int in_fd[2];
- int out_fd[2];
- SELECT_MASK fdset;
- SELECT_MASK readset;
- struct timeval tv;
- int sel, index, state;
- char buffer[256];
- char c;
-
- stack_trace_done = FALSE;
- signal (SIGCHLD, stack_trace_sigchld);
-
- if ((pipe (in_fd) == -1) || (pipe (out_fd) == -1))
- {
- perror ("unable to open pipe");
- _exit (0);
- }
+ gchar *oldstring;
+ gchar *prefix;
+
+ prefix = g_strdup_vprintf (format, ap);
+ oldstring = *string;
+ *string = g_strconcat (prefix, oldstring, NULL);
+ g_free (oldstring);
+ g_free (prefix);
+}
- pid = fork ();
- if (pid == 0)
+/**
+ * g_prefix_error:
+ * @err: (allow-none): a return location for a #GError, or %NULL
+ * @format: printf()-style format string
+ * @...: arguments to @format
+ *
+ * Formats a string according to @format and
+ * prefix it to an existing error message. If
+ * @err is %NULL (ie: no error variable) then do
+ * nothing.
+ *
+ * If *@err is %NULL (ie: an error variable is
+ * present but there is no error condition) then
+ * also do nothing. Whether or not it makes
+ * sense to take advantage of this feature is up
+ * to you.
+ *
+ * Since: 2.16
+ */
+void
+g_prefix_error (GError **err,
+ const gchar *format,
+ ...)
+{
+ if (err && *err)
{
- close (0); dup (in_fd[0]); /* set the stdin to the in pipe */
- close (1); dup (out_fd[1]); /* set the stdout to the out pipe */
- close (2); dup (out_fd[1]); /* set the stderr to the out pipe */
+ va_list ap;
- execvp (args[0], args); /* exec gdb */
- perror ("exec failed");
- _exit (0);
- }
- else if (pid == (pid_t) -1)
- {
- perror ("unable to fork");
- _exit (0);
+ va_start (ap, format);
+ g_error_add_prefix (&(*err)->message, format, ap);
+ va_end (ap);
}
+}
- FD_ZERO (&fdset);
- FD_SET (out_fd[0], &fdset);
-
- write (in_fd[1], "backtrace\n", 10);
- write (in_fd[1], "p x = 0\n", 8);
- write (in_fd[1], "quit\n", 5);
-
- index = 0;
- state = 0;
+/**
+ * g_propagate_prefixed_error:
+ * @dest: error return location
+ * @src: error to move into the return location
+ * @format: printf()-style format string
+ * @...: arguments to @format
+ *
+ * If @dest is %NULL, free @src; otherwise,
+ * moves @src into *@dest. *@dest must be %NULL.
+ * After the move, add a prefix as with
+ * g_prefix_error().
+ *
+ * Since: 2.16
+ **/
+void
+g_propagate_prefixed_error (GError **dest,
+ GError *src,
+ const gchar *format,
+ ...)
+{
+ g_propagate_error (dest, src);
- while (1)
+ if (dest && *dest)
{
- readset = fdset;
- tv.tv_sec = 1;
- tv.tv_usec = 0;
-
- sel = select (FD_SETSIZE, &readset, NULL, NULL, &tv);
- if (sel == -1)
- break;
-
- if ((sel > 0) && (FD_ISSET (out_fd[0], &readset)))
- {
- if (read (out_fd[0], &c, 1))
- {
- switch (state)
- {
- case 0:
- if (c == '#')
- {
- state = 1;
- index = 0;
- buffer[index++] = c;
- }
- break;
- case 1:
- buffer[index++] = c;
- if ((c == '\n') || (c == '\r'))
- {
- buffer[index] = 0;
- fprintf (stdout, "%s", buffer);
- state = 0;
- index = 0;
- }
- break;
- default:
- break;
- }
- }
- }
- else if (stack_trace_done)
- break;
- }
+ va_list ap;
- close (in_fd[0]);
- close (in_fd[1]);
- close (out_fd[0]);
- close (out_fd[1]);
- _exit (0);
-#else
- abort ();
-#endif
+ va_start (ap, format);
+ g_error_add_prefix (&(*dest)->message, format, ap);
+ va_end (ap);
+ }
}