1errno(3) Library Functions Manual errno(3)
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3
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6 errno - number of last error
7
9 Standard C library (libc, -lc)
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12 #include <errno.h>
13
15 The <errno.h> header file defines the integer variable errno, which is
16 set by system calls and some library functions in the event of an error
17 to indicate what went wrong.
18
19 errno
20 The value in errno is significant only when the return value of the
21 call indicated an error (i.e., -1 from most system calls; -1 or NULL
22 from most library functions); a function that succeeds is allowed to
23 change errno. The value of errno is never set to zero by any system
24 call or library function.
25
26 For some system calls and library functions (e.g., getpriority(2)), -1
27 is a valid return on success. In such cases, a successful return can
28 be distinguished from an error return by setting errno to zero before
29 the call, and then, if the call returns a status that indicates that an
30 error may have occurred, checking to see if errno has a nonzero value.
31
32 errno is defined by the ISO C standard to be a modifiable lvalue of
33 type int, and must not be explicitly declared; errno may be a macro.
34 errno is thread-local; setting it in one thread does not affect its
35 value in any other thread.
36
37 Error numbers and names
38 Valid error numbers are all positive numbers. The <errno.h> header
39 file defines symbolic names for each of the possible error numbers that
40 may appear in errno.
41
42 All the error names specified by POSIX.1 must have distinct values,
43 with the exception of EAGAIN and EWOULDBLOCK, which may be the same.
44 On Linux, these two have the same value on all architectures.
45
46 The error numbers that correspond to each symbolic name vary across
47 UNIX systems, and even across different architectures on Linux. There‐
48 fore, numeric values are not included as part of the list of error
49 names below. The perror(3) and strerror(3) functions can be used to
50 convert these names to corresponding textual error messages.
51
52 On any particular Linux system, one can obtain a list of all symbolic
53 error names and the corresponding error numbers using the errno(1) com‐
54 mand (part of the moreutils package):
55
56 $ errno -l
57 EPERM 1 Operation not permitted
58 ENOENT 2 No such file or directory
59 ESRCH 3 No such process
60 EINTR 4 Interrupted system call
61 EIO 5 Input/output error
62 ...
63
64 The errno(1) command can also be used to look up individual error num‐
65 bers and names, and to search for errors using strings from the error
66 description, as in the following examples:
67
68 $ errno 2
69 ENOENT 2 No such file or directory
70 $ errno ESRCH
71 ESRCH 3 No such process
72 $ errno -s permission
73 EACCES 13 Permission denied
74
75 List of error names
76 In the list of the symbolic error names below, various names are marked
77 as follows:
78
79 POSIX.1-2001
80 The name is defined by POSIX.1-2001, and is defined in later
81 POSIX.1 versions, unless otherwise indicated.
82
83 POSIX.1-2008
84 The name is defined in POSIX.1-2008, but was not present in ear‐
85 lier POSIX.1 standards.
86
87 C99 The name is defined by C99.
88
89 Below is a list of the symbolic error names that are defined on Linux:
90
91 E2BIG Argument list too long (POSIX.1-2001).
92
93 EACCES Permission denied (POSIX.1-2001).
94
95 EADDRINUSE Address already in use (POSIX.1-2001).
96
97 EADDRNOTAVAIL Address not available (POSIX.1-2001).
98
99 EAFNOSUPPORT Address family not supported (POSIX.1-2001).
100
101 EAGAIN Resource temporarily unavailable (may be the same value
102 as EWOULDBLOCK) (POSIX.1-2001).
103
104 EALREADY Connection already in progress (POSIX.1-2001).
105
106 EBADE Invalid exchange.
107
108 EBADF Bad file descriptor (POSIX.1-2001).
109
110 EBADFD File descriptor in bad state.
111
112 EBADMSG Bad message (POSIX.1-2001).
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114 EBADR Invalid request descriptor.
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116 EBADRQC Invalid request code.
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118 EBADSLT Invalid slot.
119
120 EBUSY Device or resource busy (POSIX.1-2001).
121
122 ECANCELED Operation canceled (POSIX.1-2001).
123
124 ECHILD No child processes (POSIX.1-2001).
125
126 ECHRNG Channel number out of range.
127
128 ECOMM Communication error on send.
129
130 ECONNABORTED Connection aborted (POSIX.1-2001).
131
132 ECONNREFUSED Connection refused (POSIX.1-2001).
133
134 ECONNRESET Connection reset (POSIX.1-2001).
135
136 EDEADLK Resource deadlock avoided (POSIX.1-2001).
137
138 EDEADLOCK On most architectures, a synonym for EDEADLK. On some
139 architectures (e.g., Linux MIPS, PowerPC, SPARC), it is
140 a separate error code "File locking deadlock error".
141
142 EDESTADDRREQ Destination address required (POSIX.1-2001).
143
144 EDOM Mathematics argument out of domain of function
145 (POSIX.1, C99).
146
147 EDQUOT Disk quota exceeded (POSIX.1-2001).
148
149 EEXIST File exists (POSIX.1-2001).
150
151 EFAULT Bad address (POSIX.1-2001).
152
153 EFBIG File too large (POSIX.1-2001).
154
155 EHOSTDOWN Host is down.
156
157 EHOSTUNREACH Host is unreachable (POSIX.1-2001).
158
159 EHWPOISON Memory page has hardware error.
160
161 EIDRM Identifier removed (POSIX.1-2001).
162
163 EILSEQ Invalid or incomplete multibyte or wide character
164 (POSIX.1, C99).
165
166 The text shown here is the glibc error description; in
167 POSIX.1, this error is described as "Illegal byte se‐
168 quence".
169
170 EINPROGRESS Operation in progress (POSIX.1-2001).
171
172 EINTR Interrupted function call (POSIX.1-2001); see sig‐
173 nal(7).
174
175 EINVAL Invalid argument (POSIX.1-2001).
176
177 EIO Input/output error (POSIX.1-2001).
178
179 EISCONN Socket is connected (POSIX.1-2001).
180
181 EISDIR Is a directory (POSIX.1-2001).
182
183 EISNAM Is a named type file.
184
185 EKEYEXPIRED Key has expired.
186
187 EKEYREJECTED Key was rejected by service.
188
189 EKEYREVOKED Key has been revoked.
190
191 EL2HLT Level 2 halted.
192
193 EL2NSYNC Level 2 not synchronized.
194
195 EL3HLT Level 3 halted.
196
197 EL3RST Level 3 reset.
198
199 ELIBACC Cannot access a needed shared library.
200
201 ELIBBAD Accessing a corrupted shared library.
202
203 ELIBMAX Attempting to link in too many shared libraries.
204
205 ELIBSCN .lib section in a.out corrupted
206
207 ELIBEXEC Cannot exec a shared library directly.
208
209 ELNRNG Link number out of range.
210
211 ELOOP Too many levels of symbolic links (POSIX.1-2001).
212
213 EMEDIUMTYPE Wrong medium type.
214
215 EMFILE Too many open files (POSIX.1-2001). Commonly caused by
216 exceeding the RLIMIT_NOFILE resource limit described in
217 getrlimit(2). Can also be caused by exceeding the
218 limit specified in /proc/sys/fs/nr_open.
219
220 EMLINK Too many links (POSIX.1-2001).
221
222 EMSGSIZE Message too long (POSIX.1-2001).
223
224 EMULTIHOP Multihop attempted (POSIX.1-2001).
225
226 ENAMETOOLONG Filename too long (POSIX.1-2001).
227
228 ENETDOWN Network is down (POSIX.1-2001).
229
230 ENETRESET Connection aborted by network (POSIX.1-2001).
231
232 ENETUNREACH Network unreachable (POSIX.1-2001).
233
234 ENFILE Too many open files in system (POSIX.1-2001). On
235 Linux, this is probably a result of encountering the
236 /proc/sys/fs/file-max limit (see proc(5)).
237
238 ENOANO No anode.
239
240 ENOBUFS No buffer space available (POSIX.1 (XSI STREAMS op‐
241 tion)).
242
243 ENODATA The named attribute does not exist, or the process has
244 no access to this attribute; see xattr(7).
245
246 In POSIX.1-2001 (XSI STREAMS option), this error was
247 described as "No message is available on the STREAM
248 head read queue".
249
250 ENODEV No such device (POSIX.1-2001).
251
252 ENOENT No such file or directory (POSIX.1-2001).
253
254 Typically, this error results when a specified pathname
255 does not exist, or one of the components in the direc‐
256 tory prefix of a pathname does not exist, or the speci‐
257 fied pathname is a dangling symbolic link.
258
259 ENOEXEC Exec format error (POSIX.1-2001).
260
261 ENOKEY Required key not available.
262
263 ENOLCK No locks available (POSIX.1-2001).
264
265 ENOLINK Link has been severed (POSIX.1-2001).
266
267 ENOMEDIUM No medium found.
268
269 ENOMEM Not enough space/cannot allocate memory (POSIX.1-2001).
270
271 ENOMSG No message of the desired type (POSIX.1-2001).
272
273 ENONET Machine is not on the network.
274
275 ENOPKG Package not installed.
276
277 ENOPROTOOPT Protocol not available (POSIX.1-2001).
278
279 ENOSPC No space left on device (POSIX.1-2001).
280
281 ENOSR No STREAM resources (POSIX.1 (XSI STREAMS option)).
282
283 ENOSTR Not a STREAM (POSIX.1 (XSI STREAMS option)).
284
285 ENOSYS Function not implemented (POSIX.1-2001).
286
287 ENOTBLK Block device required.
288
289 ENOTCONN The socket is not connected (POSIX.1-2001).
290
291 ENOTDIR Not a directory (POSIX.1-2001).
292
293 ENOTEMPTY Directory not empty (POSIX.1-2001).
294
295 ENOTRECOVERABLE State not recoverable (POSIX.1-2008).
296
297 ENOTSOCK Not a socket (POSIX.1-2001).
298
299 ENOTSUP Operation not supported (POSIX.1-2001).
300
301 ENOTTY Inappropriate I/O control operation (POSIX.1-2001).
302
303 ENOTUNIQ Name not unique on network.
304
305 ENXIO No such device or address (POSIX.1-2001).
306
307 EOPNOTSUPP Operation not supported on socket (POSIX.1-2001).
308
309 (ENOTSUP and EOPNOTSUPP have the same value on Linux,
310 but according to POSIX.1 these error values should be
311 distinct.)
312
313 EOVERFLOW Value too large to be stored in data type
314 (POSIX.1-2001).
315
316 EOWNERDEAD Owner died (POSIX.1-2008).
317
318 EPERM Operation not permitted (POSIX.1-2001).
319
320 EPFNOSUPPORT Protocol family not supported.
321
322 EPIPE Broken pipe (POSIX.1-2001).
323
324 EPROTO Protocol error (POSIX.1-2001).
325
326 EPROTONOSUPPORT Protocol not supported (POSIX.1-2001).
327
328 EPROTOTYPE Protocol wrong type for socket (POSIX.1-2001).
329
330 ERANGE Result too large (POSIX.1, C99).
331
332 EREMCHG Remote address changed.
333
334 EREMOTE Object is remote.
335
336 EREMOTEIO Remote I/O error.
337
338 ERESTART Interrupted system call should be restarted.
339
340 ERFKILL Operation not possible due to RF-kill.
341
342 EROFS Read-only filesystem (POSIX.1-2001).
343
344 ESHUTDOWN Cannot send after transport endpoint shutdown.
345
346 ESPIPE Invalid seek (POSIX.1-2001).
347
348 ESOCKTNOSUPPORT Socket type not supported.
349
350 ESRCH No such process (POSIX.1-2001).
351
352 ESTALE Stale file handle (POSIX.1-2001).
353
354 This error can occur for NFS and for other filesystems.
355
356 ESTRPIPE Streams pipe error.
357
358 ETIME Timer expired (POSIX.1 (XSI STREAMS option)).
359
360 (POSIX.1 says "STREAM ioctl(2) timeout".)
361
362 ETIMEDOUT Connection timed out (POSIX.1-2001).
363
364 ETOOMANYREFS Too many references: cannot splice.
365
366 ETXTBSY Text file busy (POSIX.1-2001).
367
368 EUCLEAN Structure needs cleaning.
369
370 EUNATCH Protocol driver not attached.
371
372 EUSERS Too many users.
373
374 EWOULDBLOCK Operation would block (may be same value as EAGAIN)
375 (POSIX.1-2001).
376
377 EXDEV Invalid cross-device link (POSIX.1-2001).
378
379 EXFULL Exchange full.
380
382 A common mistake is to do
383
384 if (somecall() == -1) {
385 printf("somecall() failed\n");
386 if (errno == ...) { ... }
387 }
388
389 where errno no longer needs to have the value it had upon return from
390 somecall() (i.e., it may have been changed by the printf(3)). If the
391 value of errno should be preserved across a library call, it must be
392 saved:
393
394 if (somecall() == -1) {
395 int errsv = errno;
396 printf("somecall() failed\n");
397 if (errsv == ...) { ... }
398 }
399
400 Note that the POSIX threads APIs do not set errno on error. Instead,
401 on failure they return an error number as the function result. These
402 error numbers have the same meanings as the error numbers returned in
403 errno by other APIs.
404
405 On some ancient systems, <errno.h> was not present or did not declare
406 errno, so that it was necessary to declare errno manually (i.e., extern
407 int errno). Do not do this. It long ago ceased to be necessary, and
408 it will cause problems with modern versions of the C library.
409
411 errno(1), err(3), error(3), perror(3), strerror(3)
412
413
414
415Linux man-pages 6.05 2022-12-04 errno(3)