Crate exitcode [−] [src]
Preferred system exit codes as defined by sysexits.h
Exit code constants intended to be passed to
std::process::exit()
Example:
extern crate exitcode; ::std::process::exit(exitcode::OK);
Constants
CANTCREAT |
A (user specified) output file cannot be created. |
CONFIG |
Something was found in an unconfigured or misconfigured state. |
DATAERR |
The input data was incorrect in some way. This should only be used for user's data and not system files. |
IOERR |
An error occurred while doing I/O on some file. |
NOHOST |
The host specified did not exist. This is used in mail addresses or network requests. |
NOINPUT |
An input file (not a system file) did not exist or was not readable. This could also include errors like "No message" to a mailer (if it cared to catch it). |
NOPERM |
You did not have sufficient permission to perform
the operation. This is not intended for file system
problems, which should use |
NOUSER |
The user specified did not exist. This might be used for mail addresses or remote logins. |
OK |
Successful exit |
OSERR |
An operating system error has been detected. This is intended to be used for such things as "cannot fork", "cannot create pipe", or the like. It includes things like getuid returning a user that does not exist in the passwd file. |
OSFILE |
Some system file (e.g., /etc/passwd, /var/run/utmp, etc.) does not exist, cannot be opened, or has some sort of error (e.g., syntax error). |
PROTOCOL |
The remote system returned something that was "not possible" during a protocol exchange. |
SOFTWARE |
An internal software error has been detected. This should be limited to non-operating system related errors as possible. |
TEMPFAIL |
Temporary failure, indicating something that is not really an error. In sendmail, this means that a mailer (e.g.) could not create a connection, and the request should be reattempted later. |
UNAVAILABLE |
A service is unavailable. This can occur if a support program or file does not exist. This can also be used as a catchall message when something you wanted to do doesn't work, but you don't know why. |
USAGE |
The command was used incorrectly, e.g., with the wrong number of arguments, a bad flag, a bad syntax in a parameter, etc. |
Functions
is_error |
Check if exit code given by |
is_success |
Check if exit code given by |
Type Definitions
ExitCode |
Alias for the numeric type that holds system exit codes. |