errno
ERRNO(3) Library functions ERRNO(3)
NAME
errno - number of last error
SYNOPSIS
#include <errno.h>
extern int errno;
DESCRIPTION
The integer errno is set by system calls (and some library functions)
to indicate what went wrong. Its value is significant only when the
call returned an error (usually -1), and a library function that does
succeed is allowed to change errno.
Sometimes, when -1 is also a legal return value one has to zero errno
before the call in order to detect possible errors.
errno is defined by the ISO C standard to be a modifiable lvalue of
type int, and must not be explicitly declared; errno may be a macro.
errno is thread-local; setting it in one thread does not affect its
value in any other thread.
Valid error numbers are all non-zero; errno is never set to zero by any
library function. All the error names specified by POSIX.1 must have
distinct values.
POSIX.1 (1996 edition) lists the following symbolic error names. Of
these, EDOM and ERANGE are in the ISO C standard. ISO C Amendment 1
defines the additional error number EILSEQ for coding errors in multi-
byte or wide characters.
E2BIG Arg list too long
EACCES Permission denied
EAGAIN Resource temporarily unavailable
EBADF Bad file descriptor
EBADMSG
Bad message
EBUSY Resource busy
ECANCELED
Operation canceled
ECHILD No child processes
EDEADLK
Resource deadlock avoided
EDOM Domain error
EEXIST File exists
EFAULT Bad address
EFBIG File too large
EINPROGRESS
Operation in progress
EINTR Interrupted function call
EINVAL Invalid argument
EIO Input/output error
EISDIR Is a directory
EMFILE Too many open files
EMLINK Too many links
EMSGSIZE
Inappropriate message buffer length
ENAMETOOLONG
Filename too long
ENFILE Too many open files in system
ENODEV No such device
ENOENT No such file or directory
ENOEXEC
Exec format error
ENOLCK No locks available
ENOMEM Not enough space
ENOSPC No space left on device
ENOSYS Function not implemented
ENOTDIR
Not a directory
ENOTEMPTY
Directory not empty
ENOTSUP
Not supported
ENOTTY Inappropriate I/O control operation
ENXIO No such device or address
EPERM Operation not permitted
EPIPE Broken pipe
ERANGE Result too large
EROFS Read-only file system
ESPIPE Invalid seek
ESRCH No such process
ETIMEDOUT
Operation timed out
EXDEV Improper link
Many other error numbers are returned by various Unix implementations.
System V returns ETXTBSY (Text file busy) if one tries to exec() a file
that is currently open for writing. Linux also returns this error if
one tries to have a file both memory mapped with VM_DENYWRITE and open
for writing.
SEE ALSO
perror(3), strerror(3)
1998-03-30 ERRNO(3)