assert_perror — test errnum and abort
#define _GNU_SOURCE #include <assert.h>
void
assert_perror( |
int | errnum) ; |
If the macro NDEBUG
was
defined at the moment <assert.h>
was last
included, the macro assert_perror
() generates no code, and
hence does nothing at all. Otherwise, the macro assert_perror
() prints an error message to
standard error and terminates the program by calling abort(3) if errnum
is non-zero. The message
contains the filename, function name and line number of the
macro call, and the output of strerror(errnum)
.
The purpose of the assert macros is to help the programmer find bugs in his program, things that cannot happen unless there was a coding mistake. However, with system or library calls the situation is rather different, and error returns can happen, and will happen, and should be tested for. Not by an assert, where the test goes away when NDEBUG is defined, but by proper error handling code. Never use this macro.
abort(3), assert(3), exit(3), strerror(3), feature_test_macros(7)
|