
From the files under "shared/nm-utils" we build an internal library
that provides glib-based helper utilities.
Move the files of that basic library to a new subdirectory
"shared/nm-glib-aux" and rename the helper library "libnm-core-base.la"
to "libnm-glib-aux.la".
Reasons:
- the name "utils" is overused in our code-base. Everything's an
"utils". Give this thing a more distinct name.
- there were additional files under "shared/nm-utils", which are not
part of this internal library "libnm-utils-base.la". All the files
that are part of this library should be together in the same
directory, but files that are not, should not be there.
- the new name should better convey what this library is and what is isn't:
it's a set of utilities and helper functions that extend glib with
funcitonality that we commonly need.
There are still some files left under "shared/nm-utils". They have less
a unifying propose to be in their own directory, so I leave them there
for now. But at least they are separate from "shared/nm-glib-aux",
which has a very clear purpose.
(cherry picked from commit 80db06f768
)
199 lines
6.2 KiB
C
199 lines
6.2 KiB
C
/* NetworkManager -- Network link manager
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*
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* This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or
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* modify it under the terms of the GNU Lesser General Public
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* License as published by the Free Software Foundation; either
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* version 2 of the License, or (at your option) any later version.
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*
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* This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
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* but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
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* MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the GNU
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* Lesser General Public License for more details.
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*
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* You should have received a copy of the GNU Lesser General Public
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* License along with this library; if not, write to the
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* Free Software Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor,
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* Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA.
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*
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* Copyright 2018 Red Hat, Inc.
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*/
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#include "nm-default.h"
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#include "nm-errno.h"
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#include <pthread.h>
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/*****************************************************************************/
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_DEFINE_STATIC (_geterror,
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#if 0
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enum _NMErrno,
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#else
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int,
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#endif
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_DEFAULT (NULL),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_ERRNO_SUCCESS, "NME_ERRNO_SUCCESS"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_ERRNO_OUT_OF_RANGE, "NME_ERRNO_OUT_OF_RANGE"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_UNSPEC, "NME_UNSPEC"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_BUG, "NME_BUG"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NATIVE_ERRNO, "NME_NATIVE_ERRNO"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_ATTRSIZE, "NME_NL_ATTRSIZE"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_BAD_SOCK, "NME_NL_BAD_SOCK"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_DUMP_INTR, "NME_NL_DUMP_INTR"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_MSG_OVERFLOW, "NME_NL_MSG_OVERFLOW"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_MSG_TOOSHORT, "NME_NL_MSG_TOOSHORT"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_MSG_TRUNC, "NME_NL_MSG_TRUNC"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_SEQ_MISMATCH, "NME_NL_SEQ_MISMATCH"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_NL_NOADDR, "NME_NL_NOADDR"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_NOT_FOUND, "not-found"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_EXISTS, "exists"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_WRONG_TYPE, "wrong-type"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_NOT_SLAVE, "not-slave"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_NO_FIRMWARE, "no-firmware"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_OPNOTSUPP, "not-supported"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_NETLINK, "netlink"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_STR_ITEM (NME_PL_CANT_SET_MTU, "cant-set-mtu"),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_ITEM_IGNORE (_NM_ERRNO_MININT),
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NM_UTILS_LOOKUP_ITEM_IGNORE (_NM_ERRNO_RESERVED_LAST_PLUS_1),
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);
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/**
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* nm_strerror():
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* @nmerr: the NetworkManager specific errno to be converted
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* to string.
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*
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* NetworkManager specific error numbers reserve a range in "errno.h" with
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* our own defines. For numbers that don't fall into this range, the numbers
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* are identical to the common error numbers.
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*
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* Idential to strerror(), g_strerror(), nm_strerror_native() for error numbers
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* that are not in the reserved range of NetworkManager specific errors.
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*
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* Returns: (transfer none): the string representation of the error number.
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*/
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const char *
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nm_strerror (int nmerr)
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{
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const char *s;
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nmerr = nm_errno (nmerr);
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if (nmerr >= _NM_ERRNO_RESERVED_FIRST) {
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s = _geterror (nmerr);
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if (s)
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return s;
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}
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return nm_strerror_native (nmerr);
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}
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/*****************************************************************************/
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/**
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* nm_strerror_native_r:
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* @errsv: the errno to convert to string.
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* @buf: the output buffer where to write the string to.
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* @buf_size: the length of buffer.
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*
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* This is like strerror_r(), with one difference: depending on the
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* locale, the returned string is guaranteed to be valid UTF-8.
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* Also, there is some confusion as to whether to use glibc's
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* strerror_r() or the POXIX/XSI variant. This is abstracted
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* by the function.
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*
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* Note that the returned buffer may also be a statically allocated
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* buffer, and not the input buffer @buf. Consequently, the returned
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* string may be longer than @buf_size.
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*
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* Returns: (transfer none): a NUL terminated error message. This is either a static
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* string (that is never freed), or the provided @buf argumnt.
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*/
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const char *
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nm_strerror_native_r (int errsv, char *buf, gsize buf_size)
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{
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char *buf2;
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nm_assert (buf);
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nm_assert (buf_size > 0);
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#if (_POSIX_C_SOURCE >= 200112L) && ! _GNU_SOURCE
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/* XSI-compliant */
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{
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int errno_saved = errno;
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if (strerror_r (errsv, buf, buf_size) != 0) {
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g_snprintf (buf, buf_size, "Unspecified errno %d", errsv);
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errno = errno_saved;
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}
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buf2 = buf;
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}
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#else
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/* GNU-specific */
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buf2 = strerror_r (errsv, buf, buf_size);
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#endif
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/* like g_strerror(), ensure that the error message is UTF-8. */
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if ( !g_get_charset (NULL)
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&& !g_utf8_validate (buf2, -1, NULL)) {
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gs_free char *msg = NULL;
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msg = g_locale_to_utf8 (buf2, -1, NULL, NULL, NULL);
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if (msg) {
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g_strlcpy (buf, msg, buf_size);
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buf2 = buf;
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}
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}
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return buf2;
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}
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/**
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* nm_strerror_native:
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* @errsv: the errno integer from <errno.h>
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*
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* Like strerror(), but strerror() is not thread-safe and not guaranteed
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* to be UTF-8.
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*
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* g_strerror() is a thread-safe variant of strerror(), however it caches
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* all returned strings in a dictionary. That means, using this on untrusted
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* error numbers can result in this cache to grow without limits.
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*
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* Instead, return a tread-local buffer. This way, it's thread-safe.
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*
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* There is a downside to this: subsequent calls of nm_strerror_native()
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* overwrite the error message.
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*
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* Returns: (transfer none): the text representation of the error number.
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*/
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const char *
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nm_strerror_native (int errsv)
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{
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static _nm_thread_local char *buf_static = NULL;
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char *buf;
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buf = buf_static;
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if (G_UNLIKELY (!buf)) {
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int errno_saved = errno;
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pthread_key_t key;
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buf = g_malloc (NM_STRERROR_BUFSIZE);
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buf_static = buf;
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if ( pthread_key_create (&key, g_free) != 0
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|| pthread_setspecific (key, buf) != 0) {
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/* Failure. We will leak the buffer when the thread exits.
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*
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* Nothing we can do about it really. For Debug builds we fail with an assertion. */
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nm_assert_not_reached ();
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}
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errno = errno_saved;
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}
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return nm_strerror_native_r (errsv, buf, NM_STRERROR_BUFSIZE);
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}
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