1 | _S(0, N_("Success" )) |
2 | #ifdef EPERM |
3 | /* |
4 | TRANS Only the owner of the file (or other resource) |
5 | TRANS or processes with special privileges can perform the operation. */ |
6 | _S(EPERM, N_("Operation not permitted" )) |
7 | #endif |
8 | #ifdef ENOENT |
9 | /* |
10 | TRANS This is a ``file doesn't exist'' error |
11 | TRANS for ordinary files that are referenced in contexts where they are |
12 | TRANS expected to already exist. */ |
13 | _S(ENOENT, N_("No such file or directory" )) |
14 | #endif |
15 | #ifdef ESRCH |
16 | /* |
17 | TRANS No process matches the specified process ID. */ |
18 | _S(ESRCH, N_("No such process" )) |
19 | #endif |
20 | #ifdef EINTR |
21 | /* |
22 | TRANS An asynchronous signal occurred and prevented |
23 | TRANS completion of the call. When this happens, you should try the call |
24 | TRANS again. |
25 | TRANS |
26 | TRANS You can choose to have functions resume after a signal that is handled, |
27 | TRANS rather than failing with @code{EINTR}; see @ref{Interrupted |
28 | TRANS Primitives}. */ |
29 | _S(EINTR, N_("Interrupted system call" )) |
30 | #endif |
31 | #ifdef EIO |
32 | /* |
33 | TRANS Usually used for physical read or write errors. */ |
34 | _S(EIO, N_("Input/output error" )) |
35 | #endif |
36 | #ifdef ENXIO |
37 | /* |
38 | TRANS The system tried to use the device |
39 | TRANS represented by a file you specified, and it couldn't find the device. |
40 | TRANS This can mean that the device file was installed incorrectly, or that |
41 | TRANS the physical device is missing or not correctly attached to the |
42 | TRANS computer. */ |
43 | _S(ENXIO, N_("No such device or address" )) |
44 | #endif |
45 | #ifdef E2BIG |
46 | /* |
47 | TRANS Used when the arguments passed to a new program |
48 | TRANS being executed with one of the @code{exec} functions (@pxref{Executing a |
49 | TRANS File}) occupy too much memory space. This condition never arises on |
50 | TRANS @gnuhurdsystems{}. */ |
51 | _S(E2BIG, N_("Argument list too long" )) |
52 | #endif |
53 | #ifdef ENOEXEC |
54 | /* |
55 | TRANS Invalid executable file format. This condition is detected by the |
56 | TRANS @code{exec} functions; see @ref{Executing a File}. */ |
57 | _S(ENOEXEC, N_("Exec format error" )) |
58 | #endif |
59 | #ifdef EBADF |
60 | /* |
61 | TRANS For example, I/O on a descriptor that has been |
62 | TRANS closed or reading from a descriptor open only for writing (or vice |
63 | TRANS versa). */ |
64 | _S(EBADF, N_("Bad file descriptor" )) |
65 | #endif |
66 | #ifdef ECHILD |
67 | /* |
68 | TRANS This error happens on operations that are |
69 | TRANS supposed to manipulate child processes, when there aren't any processes |
70 | TRANS to manipulate. */ |
71 | _S(ECHILD, N_("No child processes" )) |
72 | #endif |
73 | #ifdef EDEADLK |
74 | /* |
75 | TRANS Allocating a system resource would have resulted in a |
76 | TRANS deadlock situation. The system does not guarantee that it will notice |
77 | TRANS all such situations. This error means you got lucky and the system |
78 | TRANS noticed; it might just hang. @xref{File Locks}, for an example. */ |
79 | _S(EDEADLK, N_("Resource deadlock avoided" )) |
80 | #endif |
81 | #ifdef ENOMEM |
82 | /* |
83 | TRANS The system cannot allocate more virtual memory |
84 | TRANS because its capacity is full. */ |
85 | _S(ENOMEM, N_("Cannot allocate memory" )) |
86 | #endif |
87 | #ifdef EACCES |
88 | /* |
89 | TRANS The file permissions do not allow the attempted operation. */ |
90 | _S(EACCES, N_("Permission denied" )) |
91 | #endif |
92 | #ifdef EFAULT |
93 | /* |
94 | TRANS An invalid pointer was detected. |
95 | TRANS On @gnuhurdsystems{}, this error never happens; you get a signal instead. */ |
96 | _S(EFAULT, N_("Bad address" )) |
97 | #endif |
98 | #ifdef ENOTBLK |
99 | /* |
100 | TRANS A file that isn't a block special file was given in a situation that |
101 | TRANS requires one. For example, trying to mount an ordinary file as a file |
102 | TRANS system in Unix gives this error. */ |
103 | _S(ENOTBLK, N_("Block device required" )) |
104 | #endif |
105 | #ifdef EBUSY |
106 | /* |
107 | TRANS A system resource that can't be shared is already in use. |
108 | TRANS For example, if you try to delete a file that is the root of a currently |
109 | TRANS mounted filesystem, you get this error. */ |
110 | _S(EBUSY, N_("Device or resource busy" )) |
111 | #endif |
112 | #ifdef EEXIST |
113 | /* |
114 | TRANS An existing file was specified in a context where it only |
115 | TRANS makes sense to specify a new file. */ |
116 | _S(EEXIST, N_("File exists" )) |
117 | #endif |
118 | #ifdef EXDEV |
119 | /* |
120 | TRANS An attempt to make an improper link across file systems was detected. |
121 | TRANS This happens not only when you use @code{link} (@pxref{Hard Links}) but |
122 | TRANS also when you rename a file with @code{rename} (@pxref{Renaming Files}). */ |
123 | _S(EXDEV, N_("Invalid cross-device link" )) |
124 | #endif |
125 | #ifdef ENODEV |
126 | /* |
127 | TRANS The wrong type of device was given to a function that expects a |
128 | TRANS particular sort of device. */ |
129 | _S(ENODEV, N_("No such device" )) |
130 | #endif |
131 | #ifdef ENOTDIR |
132 | /* |
133 | TRANS A file that isn't a directory was specified when a directory is required. */ |
134 | _S(ENOTDIR, N_("Not a directory" )) |
135 | #endif |
136 | #ifdef EISDIR |
137 | /* |
138 | TRANS You cannot open a directory for writing, |
139 | TRANS or create or remove hard links to it. */ |
140 | _S(EISDIR, N_("Is a directory" )) |
141 | #endif |
142 | #ifdef EINVAL |
143 | /* |
144 | TRANS This is used to indicate various kinds of problems |
145 | TRANS with passing the wrong argument to a library function. */ |
146 | _S(EINVAL, N_("Invalid argument" )) |
147 | #endif |
148 | #ifdef EMFILE |
149 | /* |
150 | TRANS The current process has too many files open and can't open any more. |
151 | TRANS Duplicate descriptors do count toward this limit. |
152 | TRANS |
153 | TRANS In BSD and GNU, the number of open files is controlled by a resource |
154 | TRANS limit that can usually be increased. If you get this error, you might |
155 | TRANS want to increase the @code{RLIMIT_NOFILE} limit or make it unlimited; |
156 | TRANS @pxref{Limits on Resources}. */ |
157 | _S(EMFILE, N_("Too many open files" )) |
158 | #endif |
159 | #ifdef ENFILE |
160 | /* |
161 | TRANS There are too many distinct file openings in the entire system. Note |
162 | TRANS that any number of linked channels count as just one file opening; see |
163 | TRANS @ref{Linked Channels}. This error never occurs on @gnuhurdsystems{}. */ |
164 | _S(ENFILE, N_("Too many open files in system" )) |
165 | #endif |
166 | #ifdef ENOTTY |
167 | /* |
168 | TRANS Inappropriate I/O control operation, such as trying to set terminal |
169 | TRANS modes on an ordinary file. */ |
170 | _S(ENOTTY, N_("Inappropriate ioctl for device" )) |
171 | #endif |
172 | #ifdef ETXTBSY |
173 | /* |
174 | TRANS An attempt to execute a file that is currently open for writing, or |
175 | TRANS write to a file that is currently being executed. Often using a |
176 | TRANS debugger to run a program is considered having it open for writing and |
177 | TRANS will cause this error. (The name stands for ``text file busy''.) This |
178 | TRANS is not an error on @gnuhurdsystems{}; the text is copied as necessary. */ |
179 | _S(ETXTBSY, N_("Text file busy" )) |
180 | #endif |
181 | #ifdef EFBIG |
182 | /* |
183 | TRANS The size of a file would be larger than allowed by the system. */ |
184 | _S(EFBIG, N_("File too large" )) |
185 | #endif |
186 | #ifdef ENOSPC |
187 | /* |
188 | TRANS Write operation on a file failed because the |
189 | TRANS disk is full. */ |
190 | _S(ENOSPC, N_("No space left on device" )) |
191 | #endif |
192 | #ifdef ESPIPE |
193 | /* |
194 | TRANS Invalid seek operation (such as on a pipe). */ |
195 | _S(ESPIPE, N_("Illegal seek" )) |
196 | #endif |
197 | #ifdef EROFS |
198 | /* |
199 | TRANS An attempt was made to modify something on a read-only file system. */ |
200 | _S(EROFS, N_("Read-only file system" )) |
201 | #endif |
202 | #ifdef EMLINK |
203 | /* |
204 | TRANS The link count of a single file would become too large. |
205 | TRANS @code{rename} can cause this error if the file being renamed already has |
206 | TRANS as many links as it can take (@pxref{Renaming Files}). */ |
207 | _S(EMLINK, N_("Too many links" )) |
208 | #endif |
209 | #ifdef EPIPE |
210 | /* |
211 | TRANS There is no process reading from the other end of a pipe. |
212 | TRANS Every library function that returns this error code also generates a |
213 | TRANS @code{SIGPIPE} signal; this signal terminates the program if not handled |
214 | TRANS or blocked. Thus, your program will never actually see @code{EPIPE} |
215 | TRANS unless it has handled or blocked @code{SIGPIPE}. */ |
216 | _S(EPIPE, N_("Broken pipe" )) |
217 | #endif |
218 | #ifdef EDOM |
219 | /* |
220 | TRANS Used by mathematical functions when an argument value does |
221 | TRANS not fall into the domain over which the function is defined. */ |
222 | _S(EDOM, N_("Numerical argument out of domain" )) |
223 | #endif |
224 | #ifdef ERANGE |
225 | /* |
226 | TRANS Used by mathematical functions when the result value is |
227 | TRANS not representable because of overflow or underflow. */ |
228 | _S(ERANGE, N_("Numerical result out of range" )) |
229 | #endif |
230 | #ifdef EAGAIN |
231 | /* |
232 | TRANS The call might work if you try again |
233 | TRANS later. The macro @code{EWOULDBLOCK} is another name for @code{EAGAIN}; |
234 | TRANS they are always the same in @theglibc{}. |
235 | TRANS |
236 | TRANS This error can happen in a few different situations: |
237 | TRANS |
238 | TRANS @itemize @bullet |
239 | TRANS @item |
240 | TRANS An operation that would block was attempted on an object that has |
241 | TRANS non-blocking mode selected. Trying the same operation again will block |
242 | TRANS until some external condition makes it possible to read, write, or |
243 | TRANS connect (whatever the operation). You can use @code{select} to find out |
244 | TRANS when the operation will be possible; @pxref{Waiting for I/O}. |
245 | TRANS |
246 | TRANS @strong{Portability Note:} In many older Unix systems, this condition |
247 | TRANS was indicated by @code{EWOULDBLOCK}, which was a distinct error code |
248 | TRANS different from @code{EAGAIN}. To make your program portable, you should |
249 | TRANS check for both codes and treat them the same. |
250 | TRANS |
251 | TRANS @item |
252 | TRANS A temporary resource shortage made an operation impossible. @code{fork} |
253 | TRANS can return this error. It indicates that the shortage is expected to |
254 | TRANS pass, so your program can try the call again later and it may succeed. |
255 | TRANS It is probably a good idea to delay for a few seconds before trying it |
256 | TRANS again, to allow time for other processes to release scarce resources. |
257 | TRANS Such shortages are usually fairly serious and affect the whole system, |
258 | TRANS so usually an interactive program should report the error to the user |
259 | TRANS and return to its command loop. |
260 | TRANS @end itemize */ |
261 | _S(EAGAIN, N_("Resource temporarily unavailable" )) |
262 | #endif |
263 | #ifdef EINPROGRESS |
264 | /* |
265 | TRANS An operation that cannot complete immediately was initiated on an object |
266 | TRANS that has non-blocking mode selected. Some functions that must always |
267 | TRANS block (such as @code{connect}; @pxref{Connecting}) never return |
268 | TRANS @code{EAGAIN}. Instead, they return @code{EINPROGRESS} to indicate that |
269 | TRANS the operation has begun and will take some time. Attempts to manipulate |
270 | TRANS the object before the call completes return @code{EALREADY}. You can |
271 | TRANS use the @code{select} function to find out when the pending operation |
272 | TRANS has completed; @pxref{Waiting for I/O}. */ |
273 | _S(EINPROGRESS, N_("Operation now in progress" )) |
274 | #endif |
275 | #ifdef EALREADY |
276 | /* |
277 | TRANS An operation is already in progress on an object that has non-blocking |
278 | TRANS mode selected. */ |
279 | _S(EALREADY, N_("Operation already in progress" )) |
280 | #endif |
281 | #ifdef ENOTSOCK |
282 | /* |
283 | TRANS A file that isn't a socket was specified when a socket is required. */ |
284 | _S(ENOTSOCK, N_("Socket operation on non-socket" )) |
285 | #endif |
286 | #ifdef EMSGSIZE |
287 | /* |
288 | TRANS The size of a message sent on a socket was larger than the supported |
289 | TRANS maximum size. */ |
290 | _S(EMSGSIZE, N_("Message too long" )) |
291 | #endif |
292 | #ifdef EPROTOTYPE |
293 | /* |
294 | TRANS The socket type does not support the requested communications protocol. */ |
295 | _S(EPROTOTYPE, N_("Protocol wrong type for socket" )) |
296 | #endif |
297 | #ifdef ENOPROTOOPT |
298 | /* |
299 | TRANS You specified a socket option that doesn't make sense for the |
300 | TRANS particular protocol being used by the socket. @xref{Socket Options}. */ |
301 | _S(ENOPROTOOPT, N_("Protocol not available" )) |
302 | #endif |
303 | #ifdef EPROTONOSUPPORT |
304 | /* |
305 | TRANS The socket domain does not support the requested communications protocol |
306 | TRANS (perhaps because the requested protocol is completely invalid). |
307 | TRANS @xref{Creating a Socket}. */ |
308 | _S(EPROTONOSUPPORT, N_("Protocol not supported" )) |
309 | #endif |
310 | #ifdef ESOCKTNOSUPPORT |
311 | /* |
312 | TRANS The socket type is not supported. */ |
313 | _S(ESOCKTNOSUPPORT, N_("Socket type not supported" )) |
314 | #endif |
315 | #ifdef EOPNOTSUPP |
316 | /* |
317 | TRANS The operation you requested is not supported. Some socket functions |
318 | TRANS don't make sense for all types of sockets, and others may not be |
319 | TRANS implemented for all communications protocols. On @gnuhurdsystems{}, this |
320 | TRANS error can happen for many calls when the object does not support the |
321 | TRANS particular operation; it is a generic indication that the server knows |
322 | TRANS nothing to do for that call. */ |
323 | _S(EOPNOTSUPP, N_("Operation not supported" )) |
324 | #endif |
325 | #ifdef EPFNOSUPPORT |
326 | /* |
327 | TRANS The socket communications protocol family you requested is not supported. */ |
328 | _S(EPFNOSUPPORT, N_("Protocol family not supported" )) |
329 | #endif |
330 | #ifdef EAFNOSUPPORT |
331 | /* |
332 | TRANS The address family specified for a socket is not supported; it is |
333 | TRANS inconsistent with the protocol being used on the socket. @xref{Sockets}. */ |
334 | _S(EAFNOSUPPORT, N_("Address family not supported by protocol" )) |
335 | #endif |
336 | #ifdef EADDRINUSE |
337 | /* |
338 | TRANS The requested socket address is already in use. @xref{Socket Addresses}. */ |
339 | _S(EADDRINUSE, N_("Address already in use" )) |
340 | #endif |
341 | #ifdef EADDRNOTAVAIL |
342 | /* |
343 | TRANS The requested socket address is not available; for example, you tried |
344 | TRANS to give a socket a name that doesn't match the local host name. |
345 | TRANS @xref{Socket Addresses}. */ |
346 | _S(EADDRNOTAVAIL, N_("Cannot assign requested address" )) |
347 | #endif |
348 | #ifdef ENETDOWN |
349 | /* |
350 | TRANS A socket operation failed because the network was down. */ |
351 | _S(ENETDOWN, N_("Network is down" )) |
352 | #endif |
353 | #ifdef ENETUNREACH |
354 | /* |
355 | TRANS A socket operation failed because the subnet containing the remote host |
356 | TRANS was unreachable. */ |
357 | _S(ENETUNREACH, N_("Network is unreachable" )) |
358 | #endif |
359 | #ifdef ENETRESET |
360 | /* |
361 | TRANS A network connection was reset because the remote host crashed. */ |
362 | _S(ENETRESET, N_("Network dropped connection on reset" )) |
363 | #endif |
364 | #ifdef ECONNABORTED |
365 | /* |
366 | TRANS A network connection was aborted locally. */ |
367 | _S(ECONNABORTED, N_("Software caused connection abort" )) |
368 | #endif |
369 | #ifdef ECONNRESET |
370 | /* |
371 | TRANS A network connection was closed for reasons outside the control of the |
372 | TRANS local host, such as by the remote machine rebooting or an unrecoverable |
373 | TRANS protocol violation. */ |
374 | _S(ECONNRESET, N_("Connection reset by peer" )) |
375 | #endif |
376 | #ifdef ENOBUFS |
377 | /* |
378 | TRANS The kernel's buffers for I/O operations are all in use. In GNU, this |
379 | TRANS error is always synonymous with @code{ENOMEM}; you may get one or the |
380 | TRANS other from network operations. */ |
381 | _S(ENOBUFS, N_("No buffer space available" )) |
382 | #endif |
383 | #ifdef EISCONN |
384 | /* |
385 | TRANS You tried to connect a socket that is already connected. |
386 | TRANS @xref{Connecting}. */ |
387 | _S(EISCONN, N_("Transport endpoint is already connected" )) |
388 | #endif |
389 | #ifdef ENOTCONN |
390 | /* |
391 | TRANS The socket is not connected to anything. You get this error when you |
392 | TRANS try to transmit data over a socket, without first specifying a |
393 | TRANS destination for the data. For a connectionless socket (for datagram |
394 | TRANS protocols, such as UDP), you get @code{EDESTADDRREQ} instead. */ |
395 | _S(ENOTCONN, N_("Transport endpoint is not connected" )) |
396 | #endif |
397 | #ifdef EDESTADDRREQ |
398 | /* |
399 | TRANS No default destination address was set for the socket. You get this |
400 | TRANS error when you try to transmit data over a connectionless socket, |
401 | TRANS without first specifying a destination for the data with @code{connect}. */ |
402 | _S(EDESTADDRREQ, N_("Destination address required" )) |
403 | #endif |
404 | #ifdef ESHUTDOWN |
405 | /* |
406 | TRANS The socket has already been shut down. */ |
407 | _S(ESHUTDOWN, N_("Cannot send after transport endpoint shutdown" )) |
408 | #endif |
409 | #ifdef ETOOMANYREFS |
410 | _S(ETOOMANYREFS, N_("Too many references: cannot splice" )) |
411 | #endif |
412 | #ifdef ETIMEDOUT |
413 | /* |
414 | TRANS A socket operation with a specified timeout received no response during |
415 | TRANS the timeout period. */ |
416 | _S(ETIMEDOUT, N_("Connection timed out" )) |
417 | #endif |
418 | #ifdef ECONNREFUSED |
419 | /* |
420 | TRANS A remote host refused to allow the network connection (typically because |
421 | TRANS it is not running the requested service). */ |
422 | _S(ECONNREFUSED, N_("Connection refused" )) |
423 | #endif |
424 | #ifdef ELOOP |
425 | /* |
426 | TRANS Too many levels of symbolic links were encountered in looking up a file name. |
427 | TRANS This often indicates a cycle of symbolic links. */ |
428 | _S(ELOOP, N_("Too many levels of symbolic links" )) |
429 | #endif |
430 | #ifdef ENAMETOOLONG |
431 | /* |
432 | TRANS Filename too long (longer than @code{PATH_MAX}; @pxref{Limits for |
433 | TRANS Files}) or host name too long (in @code{gethostname} or |
434 | TRANS @code{sethostname}; @pxref{Host Identification}). */ |
435 | _S(ENAMETOOLONG, N_("File name too long" )) |
436 | #endif |
437 | #ifdef EHOSTDOWN |
438 | /* |
439 | TRANS The remote host for a requested network connection is down. */ |
440 | _S(EHOSTDOWN, N_("Host is down" )) |
441 | #endif |
442 | /* |
443 | TRANS The remote host for a requested network connection is not reachable. */ |
444 | #ifdef EHOSTUNREACH |
445 | _S(EHOSTUNREACH, N_("No route to host" )) |
446 | #endif |
447 | #ifdef ENOTEMPTY |
448 | /* |
449 | TRANS Directory not empty, where an empty directory was expected. Typically, |
450 | TRANS this error occurs when you are trying to delete a directory. */ |
451 | _S(ENOTEMPTY, N_("Directory not empty" )) |
452 | #endif |
453 | #ifdef EUSERS |
454 | /* |
455 | TRANS The file quota system is confused because there are too many users. |
456 | TRANS @c This can probably happen in a GNU system when using NFS. */ |
457 | _S(EUSERS, N_("Too many users" )) |
458 | #endif |
459 | #ifdef EDQUOT |
460 | /* |
461 | TRANS The user's disk quota was exceeded. */ |
462 | _S(EDQUOT, N_("Disk quota exceeded" )) |
463 | #endif |
464 | #ifdef ESTALE |
465 | /* |
466 | TRANS This indicates an internal confusion in the |
467 | TRANS file system which is due to file system rearrangements on the server host |
468 | TRANS for NFS file systems or corruption in other file systems. |
469 | TRANS Repairing this condition usually requires unmounting, possibly repairing |
470 | TRANS and remounting the file system. */ |
471 | _S(ESTALE, N_("Stale file handle" )) |
472 | #endif |
473 | #ifdef EREMOTE |
474 | /* |
475 | TRANS An attempt was made to NFS-mount a remote file system with a file name that |
476 | TRANS already specifies an NFS-mounted file. |
477 | TRANS (This is an error on some operating systems, but we expect it to work |
478 | TRANS properly on @gnuhurdsystems{}, making this error code impossible.) */ |
479 | _S(EREMOTE, N_("Object is remote" )) |
480 | #endif |
481 | #ifdef ENOLCK |
482 | /* |
483 | TRANS This is used by the file locking facilities; see |
484 | TRANS @ref{File Locks}. This error is never generated by @gnuhurdsystems{}, but |
485 | TRANS it can result from an operation to an NFS server running another |
486 | TRANS operating system. */ |
487 | _S(ENOLCK, N_("No locks available" )) |
488 | #endif |
489 | #ifdef ENOSYS |
490 | /* |
491 | TRANS This indicates that the function called is |
492 | TRANS not implemented at all, either in the C library itself or in the |
493 | TRANS operating system. When you get this error, you can be sure that this |
494 | TRANS particular function will always fail with @code{ENOSYS} unless you |
495 | TRANS install a new version of the C library or the operating system. */ |
496 | _S(ENOSYS, N_("Function not implemented" )) |
497 | #endif |
498 | #ifdef EILSEQ |
499 | /* |
500 | TRANS While decoding a multibyte character the function came along an invalid |
501 | TRANS or an incomplete sequence of bytes or the given wide character is invalid. */ |
502 | _S(EILSEQ, N_("Invalid or incomplete multibyte or wide character" )) |
503 | #endif |
504 | #ifdef EBADMSG |
505 | _S(EBADMSG, N_("Bad message" )) |
506 | #endif |
507 | #ifdef EIDRM |
508 | _S(EIDRM, N_("Identifier removed" )) |
509 | #endif |
510 | #ifdef EMULTIHOP |
511 | _S(EMULTIHOP, N_("Multihop attempted" )) |
512 | #endif |
513 | #ifdef ENODATA |
514 | _S(ENODATA, N_("No data available" )) |
515 | #endif |
516 | #ifdef ENOLINK |
517 | _S(ENOLINK, N_("Link has been severed" )) |
518 | #endif |
519 | #ifdef ENOMSG |
520 | _S(ENOMSG, N_("No message of desired type" )) |
521 | #endif |
522 | #ifdef ENOSR |
523 | _S(ENOSR, N_("Out of streams resources" )) |
524 | #endif |
525 | #ifdef ENOSTR |
526 | _S(ENOSTR, N_("Device not a stream" )) |
527 | #endif |
528 | #ifdef EOVERFLOW |
529 | _S(EOVERFLOW, N_("Value too large for defined data type" )) |
530 | #endif |
531 | #ifdef EPROTO |
532 | _S(EPROTO, N_("Protocol error" )) |
533 | #endif |
534 | #ifdef ETIME |
535 | _S(ETIME, N_("Timer expired" )) |
536 | #endif |
537 | #ifdef ECANCELED |
538 | /* |
539 | TRANS An asynchronous operation was canceled before it |
540 | TRANS completed. @xref{Asynchronous I/O}. When you call @code{aio_cancel}, |
541 | TRANS the normal result is for the operations affected to complete with this |
542 | TRANS error; @pxref{Cancel AIO Operations}. */ |
543 | _S(ECANCELED, N_("Operation canceled" )) |
544 | #endif |
545 | #ifdef EOWNERDEAD |
546 | _S(EOWNERDEAD, N_("Owner died" )) |
547 | #endif |
548 | #ifdef ENOTRECOVERABLE |
549 | _S(ENOTRECOVERABLE, N_("State not recoverable" )) |
550 | #endif |
551 | #ifdef ERESTART |
552 | _S(ERESTART, N_("Interrupted system call should be restarted" )) |
553 | #endif |
554 | #ifdef ECHRNG |
555 | _S(ECHRNG, N_("Channel number out of range" )) |
556 | #endif |
557 | #ifdef EL2NSYNC |
558 | _S(EL2NSYNC, N_("Level 2 not synchronized" )) |
559 | #endif |
560 | #ifdef EL3HLT |
561 | _S(EL3HLT, N_("Level 3 halted" )) |
562 | #endif |
563 | #ifdef EL3RST |
564 | _S(EL3RST, N_("Level 3 reset" )) |
565 | #endif |
566 | #ifdef ELNRNG |
567 | _S(ELNRNG, N_("Link number out of range" )) |
568 | #endif |
569 | #ifdef EUNATCH |
570 | _S(EUNATCH, N_("Protocol driver not attached" )) |
571 | #endif |
572 | #ifdef ENOCSI |
573 | _S(ENOCSI, N_("No CSI structure available" )) |
574 | #endif |
575 | #ifdef EL2HLT |
576 | _S(EL2HLT, N_("Level 2 halted" )) |
577 | #endif |
578 | #ifdef EBADE |
579 | _S(EBADE, N_("Invalid exchange" )) |
580 | #endif |
581 | #ifdef EBADR |
582 | _S(EBADR, N_("Invalid request descriptor" )) |
583 | #endif |
584 | #ifdef EXFULL |
585 | _S(EXFULL, N_("Exchange full" )) |
586 | #endif |
587 | #ifdef ENOANO |
588 | _S(ENOANO, N_("No anode" )) |
589 | #endif |
590 | #ifdef EBADRQC |
591 | _S(EBADRQC, N_("Invalid request code" )) |
592 | #endif |
593 | #ifdef EBADSLT |
594 | _S(EBADSLT, N_("Invalid slot" )) |
595 | #endif |
596 | #if defined EDEADLOCK && EDEADLOCK != EDEADLK |
597 | _S (EDEADLOCK, N_ ("File locking deadlock error" )) |
598 | #endif |
599 | #ifdef EBFONT |
600 | _S(EBFONT, N_("Bad font file format" )) |
601 | #endif |
602 | #ifdef ENONET |
603 | _S(ENONET, N_("Machine is not on the network" )) |
604 | #endif |
605 | #ifdef ENOPKG |
606 | _S(ENOPKG, N_("Package not installed" )) |
607 | #endif |
608 | #ifdef EADV |
609 | _S(EADV, N_("Advertise error" )) |
610 | #endif |
611 | #ifdef ESRMNT |
612 | _S(ESRMNT, N_("Srmount error" )) |
613 | #endif |
614 | #ifdef ECOMM |
615 | _S(ECOMM, N_("Communication error on send" )) |
616 | #endif |
617 | #ifdef EDOTDOT |
618 | _S(EDOTDOT, N_("RFS specific error" )) |
619 | #endif |
620 | #ifdef ENOTUNIQ |
621 | _S(ENOTUNIQ, N_("Name not unique on network" )) |
622 | #endif |
623 | #ifdef EBADFD |
624 | _S(EBADFD, N_("File descriptor in bad state" )) |
625 | #endif |
626 | #ifdef EREMCHG |
627 | _S(EREMCHG, N_("Remote address changed" )) |
628 | #endif |
629 | #ifdef ELIBACC |
630 | _S(ELIBACC, N_("Can not access a needed shared library" )) |
631 | #endif |
632 | #ifdef ELIBBAD |
633 | _S(ELIBBAD, N_("Accessing a corrupted shared library" )) |
634 | #endif |
635 | #ifdef ELIBSCN |
636 | _S(ELIBSCN, N_(".lib section in a.out corrupted" )) |
637 | #endif |
638 | #ifdef ELIBMAX |
639 | _S(ELIBMAX, N_("Attempting to link in too many shared libraries" )) |
640 | #endif |
641 | #ifdef ELIBEXEC |
642 | _S(ELIBEXEC, N_("Cannot exec a shared library directly" )) |
643 | #endif |
644 | #ifdef ESTRPIPE |
645 | _S(ESTRPIPE, N_("Streams pipe error" )) |
646 | #endif |
647 | #ifdef EUCLEAN |
648 | _S(EUCLEAN, N_("Structure needs cleaning" )) |
649 | #endif |
650 | #ifdef ENOTNAM |
651 | _S(ENOTNAM, N_("Not a XENIX named type file" )) |
652 | #endif |
653 | #ifdef ENAVAIL |
654 | _S(ENAVAIL, N_("No XENIX semaphores available" )) |
655 | #endif |
656 | #ifdef EISNAM |
657 | _S(EISNAM, N_("Is a named type file" )) |
658 | #endif |
659 | #ifdef EREMOTEIO |
660 | _S(EREMOTEIO, N_("Remote I/O error" )) |
661 | #endif |
662 | #ifdef ENOMEDIUM |
663 | _S(ENOMEDIUM, N_("No medium found" )) |
664 | #endif |
665 | #ifdef EMEDIUMTYPE |
666 | _S(EMEDIUMTYPE, N_("Wrong medium type" )) |
667 | #endif |
668 | #ifdef ENOKEY |
669 | _S(ENOKEY, N_("Required key not available" )) |
670 | #endif |
671 | #ifdef EKEYEXPIRED |
672 | _S(EKEYEXPIRED, N_("Key has expired" )) |
673 | #endif |
674 | #ifdef EKEYREVOKED |
675 | _S(EKEYREVOKED, N_("Key has been revoked" )) |
676 | #endif |
677 | #ifdef EKEYREJECTED |
678 | _S(EKEYREJECTED, N_("Key was rejected by service" )) |
679 | #endif |
680 | #ifdef ERFKILL |
681 | _S(ERFKILL, N_("Operation not possible due to RF-kill" )) |
682 | #endif |
683 | #ifdef EHWPOISON |
684 | _S(EHWPOISON, N_("Memory page has hardware error" )) |
685 | #endif |
686 | #ifdef EBADRPC |
687 | _S(EBADRPC, N_("RPC struct is bad" )) |
688 | #endif |
689 | #ifdef EFTYPE |
690 | /* |
691 | TRANS The file was the wrong type for the |
692 | TRANS operation, or a data file had the wrong format. |
693 | TRANS |
694 | TRANS On some systems @code{chmod} returns this error if you try to set the |
695 | TRANS sticky bit on a non-directory file; @pxref{Setting Permissions}. */ |
696 | _S(EFTYPE, N_("Inappropriate file type or format" )) |
697 | #endif |
698 | #ifdef EPROCUNAVAIL |
699 | _S(EPROCUNAVAIL, N_("RPC bad procedure for program" )) |
700 | #endif |
701 | #ifdef EAUTH |
702 | _S(EAUTH, N_("Authentication error" )) |
703 | #endif |
704 | #ifdef EDIED |
705 | /* |
706 | TRANS On @gnuhurdsystems{}, opening a file returns this error when the file is |
707 | TRANS translated by a program and the translator program dies while starting |
708 | TRANS up, before it has connected to the file. */ |
709 | _S(EDIED, N_("Translator died" )) |
710 | #endif |
711 | #ifdef ERPCMISMATCH |
712 | _S(ERPCMISMATCH, N_("RPC version wrong" )) |
713 | #endif |
714 | #ifdef EGREGIOUS |
715 | /* |
716 | TRANS You did @strong{what}? */ |
717 | _S(EGREGIOUS, N_("You really blew it this time" )) |
718 | #endif |
719 | #ifdef EPROCLIM |
720 | /* |
721 | TRANS This means that the per-user limit on new process would be exceeded by |
722 | TRANS an attempted @code{fork}. @xref{Limits on Resources}, for details on |
723 | TRANS the @code{RLIMIT_NPROC} limit. */ |
724 | _S(EPROCLIM, N_("Too many processes" )) |
725 | #endif |
726 | #ifdef EGRATUITOUS |
727 | /* |
728 | TRANS This error code has no purpose. */ |
729 | _S(EGRATUITOUS, N_("Gratuitous error" )) |
730 | #endif |
731 | #if defined (ENOTSUP) && ENOTSUP != EOPNOTSUPP |
732 | /* |
733 | TRANS A function returns this error when certain parameter |
734 | TRANS values are valid, but the functionality they request is not available. |
735 | TRANS This can mean that the function does not implement a particular command |
736 | TRANS or option value or flag bit at all. For functions that operate on some |
737 | TRANS object given in a parameter, such as a file descriptor or a port, it |
738 | TRANS might instead mean that only @emph{that specific object} (file |
739 | TRANS descriptor, port, etc.) is unable to support the other parameters given; |
740 | TRANS different file descriptors might support different ranges of parameter |
741 | TRANS values. |
742 | TRANS |
743 | TRANS If the entire function is not available at all in the implementation, |
744 | TRANS it returns @code{ENOSYS} instead. */ |
745 | _S(ENOTSUP, N_("Not supported" )) |
746 | #endif |
747 | #ifdef EPROGMISMATCH |
748 | _S(EPROGMISMATCH, N_("RPC program version wrong" )) |
749 | #endif |
750 | #ifdef EBACKGROUND |
751 | /* |
752 | TRANS On @gnuhurdsystems{}, servers supporting the @code{term} protocol return |
753 | TRANS this error for certain operations when the caller is not in the |
754 | TRANS foreground process group of the terminal. Users do not usually see this |
755 | TRANS error because functions such as @code{read} and @code{write} translate |
756 | TRANS it into a @code{SIGTTIN} or @code{SIGTTOU} signal. @xref{Job Control}, |
757 | TRANS for information on process groups and these signals. */ |
758 | _S(EBACKGROUND, N_("Inappropriate operation for background process" )) |
759 | #endif |
760 | #ifdef EIEIO |
761 | /* |
762 | TRANS Go home and have a glass of warm, dairy-fresh milk. |
763 | TRANS @c Okay. Since you are dying to know, I'll tell you. |
764 | TRANS @c This is a joke, obviously. There is a children's song which begins, |
765 | TRANS @c "Old McDonald had a farm, e-i-e-i-o." Every time I see the (real) |
766 | TRANS @c errno macro EIO, I think about that song. Probably most of my |
767 | TRANS @c compatriots who program on Unix do, too. One of them must have stayed |
768 | TRANS @c up a little too late one night and decided to add it to Hurd or Glibc. |
769 | TRANS @c Whoever did it should be castigated, but it made me laugh. |
770 | TRANS @c --jtobey@channel1.com |
771 | TRANS @c |
772 | TRANS @c "bought the farm" means "died". -jtobey |
773 | TRANS @c |
774 | TRANS @c Translators, please do not translate this litteraly, translate it into |
775 | TRANS @c an idiomatic funny way of saying that the computer died. */ |
776 | _S(EIEIO, N_("Computer bought the farm" )) |
777 | #endif |
778 | #if defined (EWOULDBLOCK) && EWOULDBLOCK != EAGAIN |
779 | /* |
780 | TRANS In @theglibc{}, this is another name for @code{EAGAIN} (above). |
781 | TRANS The values are always the same, on every operating system. |
782 | TRANS |
783 | TRANS C libraries in many older Unix systems have @code{EWOULDBLOCK} as a |
784 | TRANS separate error code. */ |
785 | _S(EWOULDBLOCK, N_("Operation would block" )) |
786 | #endif |
787 | #ifdef ENEEDAUTH |
788 | _S(ENEEDAUTH, N_("Need authenticator" )) |
789 | #endif |
790 | #ifdef ED |
791 | /* |
792 | TRANS The experienced user will know what is wrong. |
793 | TRANS @c This error code is a joke. Its perror text is part of the joke. |
794 | TRANS @c Don't change it. */ |
795 | _S(ED, N_("?" )) |
796 | #endif |
797 | #ifdef EPROGUNAVAIL |
798 | _S(EPROGUNAVAIL, N_("RPC program not available" )) |
799 | #endif |
800 | |