Of course, strerror_r() may still fail with ERANGE.
Although the POSIX specification said this could fail with EINVAL and
doing this likely indicates invalid use of errno, most other
implementations permitted it, various POSIX testsuites require it to
work (matching the older sys_errlist array) and apparently some
applications depend on it.
PR: standards/151316
MFC after: 1 week
technique) so that we don't wind up calling into an application's
version if the application defines them.
Inspired by: qpopper's interfering and buggy version of strlcpy
As a side effect, it makes the code easier to read and requires less
pointer arithmetic.
Test by: strerror regression test
Submitted by: Tim Kientzle <kientzle@acm.org>
o Fix an English error (comma splice) and poorly worded sentence.
o Fix KNF ordering of variables (pointers come before arithmetic types).
o Restore hand-optimization of sizeof()-1, instead of strlen().
o Remove unneeded local variables in strerror_r().
Test by: strerror regression test
Requested by: bde
Reviewed by: bde
strerror_r(). Doing this allows us to ensure that strerror_r() always
fills the supplied buffer regardless of EINVAL or ERANGE errors.
strerror()'s semantics have changed slightly such that an argument of
0 is now considered invalid and errno is set to EINVAL.
Remove internal regression test for strerror() and strerror_r(). This
will be reincarnated in src/tools/regression/lib/libc/string.
In strerror(3), add a comment about strerror()'s bogus return type.
PR: 44356
more careful about reporting truncation with ERANGE in strerror_r.
Set errno to EINVAL for "unknown" errnum in strerror as required
by P1003.1-200x Draft June 14, 2001.
More carefully document the handling of strerrbuf when errors
(ERANGE, EINVAL) are encountered in strerror_r.
Reviewed by: bde (ongoing discussion)