| Perl-RPM documentation | view source | Contained in the Perl-RPM distribution. |
RPM::Error - Functions to supplement the internal error management of RPM
use RPM::Error;
use RPM::Constants ':rpmerr';
set_error_callback(sub { ... });
rpm_error(RPMERR_DBOPEN, "Error opening RPM DB: $!");
The RPM::Error package provides access to some functions that work with
(but do not replace) the special $RPM::err variable. These routines allow
for reporting errors through the RPM facility, clearing the error variable,
and registering a callback function to be invoked whenever a new error is
raised.
None of these routines are required for normal use of the special variable
$RPM::err (see RPM).
The following routines are exported by RPM::Error:
Report an error through the internal facility used by rpm. By using this
function, the special error variable is set up to have a dual-nature: When
evaluated in a numeric context, it returns the numerical code $code. When
evaluated as a string, it will return $message. The value of $code
should be (but is not required to be) one of the values exported from the
RPM::Constants package via the :rpmerr tag. $message may be any
string value.
Clears both the numeric and string values of $RPM::err.
Set a (new) callback to be invoked whenever a new error is flagged. Returns
the old (existing) callback value if there was one, undef otherwise.
The parameter to this call should be either a subroutine reference or a
closure. A subroutine name may be passed; if so, it should either be given
a package qualification or exist in the main:: namespace. The routine,
when invoked, will be passed the numeric code and the message string being
raised as the error. Note that the callback may be invoked by internal error
flagging in the core rpm library, as well as by calls to rpm_error
above.
Before any user-provided callback is invoked, the $RPM::err variable is
set. While accessing it in a callback would be redundant, users should not
be concerned about interrupting other internal processes (in theory, that is).
If the value passed to set_error_callback is not valid, the current callback is set to a null value.
The code value passed to rpm_error is not checked against the list of valid constants before assignment.
RPM, perl, rpm
Randy J. Ray <rjray@blackperl.com>, Alexey Tourbin <at@altlinux.org>.
| Perl-RPM documentation | view source | Contained in the Perl-RPM distribution. |