NAME
xo_err
, xo_errc
,
xo_errx
xo_warn
,
xo_warnx
, xo_warn_c
,
xo_warn_hc
—
emit errors and warnings in multiple
output styles
LIBRARY
library “libxo”
SYNOPSIS
#include
<libxo/xo.h>
void
xo_warn
(const
char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_warnx
(const
char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_warn_c
(int
code, const char
*fmt, ...);
void
xo_warn_hc
(xo_handle_t
*xop, int code, const
char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_err
(int
eval, const char
*fmt, ...);
void
xo_errc
(int
eval, int code,
const char *fmt,
...);
void
xo_errx
(int
eval, const char
*fmt, ...);
DESCRIPTION
Many programs make use of the standard library functions err(3) and warn(3) to generate errors and warnings for the user.libxo
wants to pass that information via the current
output style, and provides compatible functions to allow this.
The fmt argument is one compatible with printf(3) rather than xo_emit(3) to aid in simple conversion. This means these functions make unstructured data. To generate structured data, use the xo_emit_err(3) functions.
These functions display the program name, a colon, a formatted message based on the arguments, and then optionally a colon and an error message associated with either errno or the code parameter.
EXAMPLE: if (open(filename, O_RDONLY) < 0) xo_err(1, "cannot open file '%s'", filename);
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The libxo
library first appeared in
FreeBSD 11.0.
AUTHORS
libxo
was written by Phil
Shafer
<phil@freebsd.org>.