cpython/Python/errors.c

236 lines
5.9 KiB
C

/***********************************************************
Copyright 1991-1995 by Stichting Mathematisch Centrum, Amsterdam,
The Netherlands.
All Rights Reserved
Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software and its
documentation for any purpose and without fee is hereby granted,
provided that the above copyright notice appear in all copies and that
both that copyright notice and this permission notice appear in
supporting documentation, and that the names of Stichting Mathematisch
Centrum or CWI or Corporation for National Research Initiatives or
CNRI not be used in advertising or publicity pertaining to
distribution of the software without specific, written prior
permission.
While CWI is the initial source for this software, a modified version
is made available by the Corporation for National Research Initiatives
(CNRI) at the Internet address ftp://ftp.python.org.
STICHTING MATHEMATISCH CENTRUM AND CNRI DISCLAIM ALL WARRANTIES WITH
REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE, INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS, IN NO EVENT SHALL STICHTING MATHEMATISCH
CENTRUM OR CNRI BE LIABLE FOR ANY SPECIAL, INDIRECT OR CONSEQUENTIAL
DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR
PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER
TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR
PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE.
******************************************************************/
/* Error handling -- see also run.c */
/* New error handling interface.
The following problem exists (existed): methods of built-in modules
are called with 'self' and 'args' arguments, but without a context
argument, so they have no way to raise a specific exception.
The same is true for the object implementations: no context argument.
The old convention was to set 'errno' and to return NULL.
The caller (usually call_function() in eval.c) detects the NULL
return value and then calls puterrno(ctx) to turn the errno value
into a true exception. Problems with this approach are:
- it used standard errno values to indicate Python-specific errors,
but this means that when such an error code is reported by a system
call (e.g., in module posix), the user gets a confusing message
- errno is a global variable, which makes extensions to a multi-
threading environment difficult; e.g., in IRIX, multi-threaded
programs must use the function oserror() instead of looking in errno
- there is no portable way to add new error numbers for specic
situations -- the value space for errno is reserved to the OS, yet
the way to turn module-specific errors into a module-specific
exception requires module-specific values for errno
- there is no way to add a more situation-specific message to an
error.
The new interface solves all these problems. To return an error, a
built-in function calls err_set(exception), err_setval(exception,
value) or err_setstr(exception, string), and returns NULL. These
functions save the value for later use by puterrno(). To adapt this
scheme to a multi-threaded environment, only the implementation of
err_setval() has to be changed.
*/
#include "allobjects.h"
#include "traceback.h"
#include <errno.h>
#ifdef SYMANTEC__CFM68K__
#pragma lib_export on
#endif
#ifdef macintosh
#ifndef __MSL__
/* Replace strerror with a Mac specific routine.
XXX PROBLEM: some positive errors have a meaning for MacOS,
but some library routines set Unix error numbers...
*/
extern char *PyMac_StrError PROTO((int));
#undef strerror
#define strerror PyMac_StrError
#endif
#endif /* macintosh */
#ifndef __STDC__
#ifndef MS_WINDOWS
extern char *strerror PROTO((int));
#endif
#endif
/* Last exception stored by err_setval() */
static object *last_exception;
static object *last_exc_val;
void
err_restore(exception, value, traceback)
object *exception;
object *value;
object *traceback;
{
err_clear();
last_exception = exception;
last_exc_val = value;
(void) tb_store(traceback);
XDECREF(traceback);
}
void
err_setval(exception, value)
object *exception;
object *value;
{
XINCREF(exception);
XINCREF(value);
err_restore(exception, value, (object *)NULL);
}
void
err_set(exception)
object *exception;
{
err_setval(exception, (object *)NULL);
}
void
err_setstr(exception, string)
object *exception;
const char *string;
{
object *value = newstringobject(string);
err_setval(exception, value);
XDECREF(value);
}
object *
err_occurred()
{
return last_exception;
}
void
err_fetch(p_exc, p_val, p_tb)
object **p_exc;
object **p_val;
object **p_tb;
{
*p_exc = last_exception;
last_exception = NULL;
*p_val = last_exc_val;
last_exc_val = NULL;
*p_tb = tb_fetch();
}
void
err_clear()
{
object *tb;
XDECREF(last_exception);
last_exception = NULL;
XDECREF(last_exc_val);
last_exc_val = NULL;
/* Also clear interpreter stack trace */
tb = tb_fetch();
XDECREF(tb);
}
/* Convenience functions to set a type error exception and return 0 */
int
err_badarg()
{
err_setstr(TypeError, "illegal argument type for built-in operation");
return 0;
}
object *
err_nomem()
{
err_set(MemoryError);
return NULL;
}
object *
err_errno(exc)
object *exc;
{
object *v;
int i = errno;
#ifdef EINTR
if (i == EINTR && sigcheck())
return NULL;
#endif
v = mkvalue("(is)", i, strerror(i));
if (v != NULL) {
err_setval(exc, v);
DECREF(v);
}
return NULL;
}
void
err_badcall()
{
err_setstr(SystemError, "bad argument to internal function");
}
#ifdef HAVE_STDARG_PROTOTYPES
PyObject *
PyErr_Format(PyObject *exception, const char *format, ...)
#else
PyObject *
PyErr_Format(exception, format, va_alist)
PyObject *exception;
const char *format;
va_dcl
#endif
{
va_list vargs;
char buffer[500]; /* Caller is responsible for limiting the format */
#ifdef HAVE_STDARG_PROTOTYPES
va_start(vargs, format);
#else
va_start(vargs);
#endif
vsprintf(buffer, format, vargs);
PyErr_SetString(exception, buffer);
return NULL;
}