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t_error(3) [hpux man page]

t_error(3)						     Library Functions Manual							t_error(3)

NAME
t_error() - produce error message SYNOPSIS
DESCRIPTION
The function produces a language-dependent message on the standard error output which describes the last error encountered during a call to a transport function. The argument string errmsg is a user-supplied error message that gives context to the error. The error message is written as follows: First if errmsg is not a null pointer and the character pointed to be errmsg is not the null character, the string pointed to by errmsg is written followed by a colon and a space. Then a standard error message string for the current error defined in is written. If has a value different from [TSYSERR], the standard error message string is followed by a newline character. If, however, is equal to [TSYSERR], the string is followed by the standard error message string for the current error defined in followed by a newline. The language for error message strings written by is implementation-defined. If it is in English, the error message string describing the value in is identical to the comments following the codes defined in The contents of the error message strings describing the value in are the same as those returned by the function with an argument of To simplify variant formatting of messages, the array of message strings is provided; can be used as an index in this table to get the mes- sage string without the newline. The variable is the largest message number provided for in the table. The error number, is only set when an error occurs and it is not cleared on successful calls. Valid States All - apart from Fork Safety is not fork-safe. RETURN VALUE
For XTI, upon completion, a value of 0 is returned. TLI does not return a value. ERRORS
No errors are defined for the function. EXAMPLES
If a function fails on transport endpoint fd2 because a bad address was given, the following call might follow the failure: The diagnostic message to be printer would look like: where identifies the specific error that occurred, and tells the user which function failed on which transport endpoint. FILES
NLS message catalog for TLI SEE ALSO
thread_safety(5). STANDARDS CONFORMANCE
t_error(3)

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t_error(3NSL)					       Networking Services Library Functions					     t_error(3NSL)

NAME
t_error - produce error message SYNOPSIS
#include <xti.h> int t_error(const char *errmsg); DESCRIPTION
This routine is part of the XTI interfaces which evolved from the TLI interfaces. XTI represents the future evolution of these interfaces. However, TLI interfaces are supported for compatibility. When using a TLI routine that has the same name as an XTI routine, the tiuser.h header file must be used. Refer to the TLI COMPATIBILITY section for a description of differences between the two interfaces. The t_error() function produces a message on the standard error output which describes the last error encountered during a call to a trans- port function. The argument string errmsg is a user-supplied error message that gives context to the error. The error message is written as follows: first (if errmsg is not a null pointer and the character pointed to be errmsg is not the null character) the string pointed to by errmsg followed by a colon and a space; then a standard error message string for the current error defined in t_errno. If t_errno has a value different from TSYSERR, the standard error message string is followed by a newline character. If, however, t_errno is equal to TSYSERR, the t_errno string is followed by the standard error message string for the current error defined in errno followed by a newline. The language for error message strings written by t_error() is that of the current locale. If it is English, the error message string describing the value in t_errno may be derived from the comments following the t_errno codes defined in xti.h. The contents of the error message strings describing the value in errno are the same as those returned by the strerror(3C) function with an argument of errno. The error number, t_errno, is only set when an error occurs and it is not cleared on successful calls. EXAMPLES
If a t_connect(3NSL) function fails on transport endpoint fd2 because a bad address was given, the following call might follow the failure: t_error("t_connect failed on fd2"); The diagnostic message to be printed would look like: t_connect failed on fd2: incorrect addr format where incorrect addr format identifies the specific error that occurred, and t_connect failed on fd2 tells the user which function failed on which transport endpoint. RETURN VALUES
Upon completion, a value of 0 is returned. VALID STATES
All - apart from T_UNINIT ERRORS
No errors are defined for the t_error() function. TLI COMPATIBILITY
The XTI and TLI interface definitions have common names but use different header files. This, and other semantic differences between the two interfaces are described in the subsections below. Interface Header The XTI interfaces use the header file, xti.h. TLI interfaces should not use this header. They should use the header: #include <tiuser.h> Error Description Values The t_errno value that can be set by the XTI interface and cannot be set by the TLI interface is: TPROTO ATTRIBUTES
See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes: +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ | ATTRIBUTE TYPE | ATTRIBUTE VALUE | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ |MT Level |Safe | +-----------------------------+-----------------------------+ SEE ALSO
t_errno(3NSL)strerror(3C), attributes(5) SunOS 5.10 7 May 1998 t_error(3NSL)
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