/* Detect write error on a stream. Copyright (C) 2003-2006, 2008-2024 Free Software Foundation, Inc. Written by Bruno Haible , 2003. This program is free software: you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the Free Software Foundation, either version 3 of the License, or (at your option) any later version. This program 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 General Public License for more details. You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along with this program. If not, see . */ #include /* Specification. */ #include "fwriteerror.h" #include static int do_fwriteerror (FILE *fp, bool ignore_ebadf) { /* State to allow multiple calls to fwriteerror (stdout). */ static bool stdout_closed = false; if (fp == stdout) { if (stdout_closed) return 0; /* If we are closing stdout, don't attempt to do it later again. */ stdout_closed = true; } /* This function returns an error indication if there was a previous failure or if fclose failed, with two exceptions: - Ignore an fclose failure if there was no previous error, no data remains to be flushed, and fclose failed with EBADF. That can happen when a program like cp is invoked like this 'cp a b >&-' (i.e., with standard output closed) and doesn't generate any output (hence no previous error and nothing to be flushed). - Ignore an fclose failure due to EPIPE. That can happen when a program blocks or ignores SIGPIPE, and the output pipe or socket has no readers now. The EPIPE tells us that we should stop writing to this output. That's what we are doing anyway here. Need to 1. test the error indicator of the stream, 2. flush the buffers both in userland and in the kernel, through fclose, testing for error again. */ /* Clear errno, so that on non-POSIX systems the caller doesn't see a wrong value of errno when we return -1. */ errno = 0; if (ferror (fp)) { if (fflush (fp)) goto close_preserving_errno; /* errno is set here */ /* The stream had an error earlier, but its errno was lost. If the error was not temporary, we can get the same errno by writing and flushing one more byte. We can do so because at this point the stream's contents is garbage anyway. */ if (fputc ('\0', fp) == EOF) goto close_preserving_errno; /* errno is set here */ if (fflush (fp)) goto close_preserving_errno; /* errno is set here */ /* Give up on errno. */ errno = 0; goto close_preserving_errno; } if (ignore_ebadf) { /* We need an explicit fflush to tell whether some output was already done on FP. */ if (fflush (fp)) goto close_preserving_errno; /* errno is set here */ if (fclose (fp) && errno != EBADF) goto got_errno; /* errno is set here */ } else { if (fclose (fp)) goto got_errno; /* errno is set here */ } return 0; close_preserving_errno: /* There's an error. Nevertheless call fclose(fp), for consistency with the other cases. */ { int saved_errno = errno; fclose (fp); errno = saved_errno; } got_errno: /* There's an error. Ignore EPIPE. */ if (errno == EPIPE) return 0; else return -1; } int fwriteerror (FILE *fp) { return do_fwriteerror (fp, false); } int fwriteerror_no_ebadf (FILE *fp) { return do_fwriteerror (fp, true); } #if TEST /* Name of a file on which writing fails. On systems without /dev/full, you can choose a filename on a full file system. */ #define UNWRITABLE_FILE "/dev/full" int main () { static int sizes[] = { 511, 512, 513, 1023, 1024, 1025, 2047, 2048, 2049, 4095, 4096, 4097, 8191, 8192, 8193 }; static char dummy[8193]; unsigned int i, j; for (i = 0; i < sizeof (sizes) / sizeof (sizes[0]); i++) { size_t size = sizes[i]; for (j = 0; j < 2; j++) { /* Run a test depending on i and j: Write size bytes and then calls fflush if j==1. */ FILE *stream = fopen (UNWRITABLE_FILE, "w"); if (stream == NULL) { fprintf (stderr, "Test %u:%u: could not open file\n", i, j); continue; } fwrite (dummy, 347, 1, stream); fwrite (dummy, size - 347, 1, stream); if (j) fflush (stream); if (fwriteerror (stream) == -1) { if (errno != ENOSPC) fprintf (stderr, "Test %u:%u: fwriteerror ok, errno = %d\n", i, j, errno); } else fprintf (stderr, "Test %u:%u: fwriteerror found no error!\n", i, j); } } return 0; } #endif