die
, usage
, error
, and warning
report errors of various
kinds.
-
die
is for fatal application errors. It prints a message to the user and exits with status 128. -
usage
is for errors in command line usage. After printing its message, it exits with status 129. (See alsousage_with_options
in the parse-options API.) -
error
is for non-fatal library errors. It prints a message to the user and returns -1 for convenience in signaling the error to the caller. -
warning
is for reporting situations that probably should not occur but which the user (and Git) can continue to work around without running into too many problems. Likeerror
, it returns -1 after reporting the situation to the caller.
Customizable error handlers
The default behavior of die
and error
is to write a message to
stderr and then exit or return as appropriate. This behavior can be
overridden using set_die_routine
and set_error_routine
. For
example, "git daemon" uses set_die_routine to write the reason die
was called to syslog before exiting.
Library errors
Functions return a negative integer on error. Details beyond that vary from function to function:
-
Some functions return -1 for all errors. Others return a more specific value depending on how the caller might want to react to the error.
-
Some functions report the error to stderr with
error
, while others leave that for the caller to do. -
errno is not meaningful on return from most functions (except for thin wrappers for system calls).
Check the function’s API documentation to be sure.
Caller-handled errors
An increasing number of functions take a parameter struct strbuf *err.
On error, such functions append a message about what went wrong to the
err strbuf. The message is meant to be complete enough to be passed
to die
or error
as-is. For example:
if (ref_transaction_commit(transaction, &err))
die("%s", err.buf);
The err parameter will be untouched if no error occurred, so multiple function calls can be chained:
t = ref_transaction_begin(&err);
if (!t ||
ref_transaction_update(t, "HEAD", ..., &err) ||
ret_transaction_commit(t, &err))
die("%s", err.buf);
The err parameter must be a pointer to a valid strbuf. To silence a message, pass a strbuf that is explicitly ignored:
if (thing_that_can_fail_in_an_ignorable_way(..., &err))
/* This failure is okay. */
strbuf_reset(&err);