1 /* 2 * Copyright 2012-2023 the Pacemaker project contributors 3 * 4 * The version control history for this file may have further details. 5 * 6 * This source code is licensed under the GNU Lesser General Public License 7 * version 2.1 or later (LGPLv2.1+) WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY. 8 */ 9 #ifndef PCMK__CRM_COMMON_RESULTS__H 10 # define PCMK__CRM_COMMON_RESULTS__H 11 12 #ifdef __cplusplus 13 extern "C" { 14 #endif 15 16 /*! 17 * \file 18 * \brief Function and executable result codes 19 * \ingroup core 20 */ 21 22 // Lifted from config.h 23 /* The _Noreturn keyword of C11. */ 24 #ifndef _Noreturn 25 # if (defined __cplusplus \ 26 && ((201103 <= __cplusplus && !(__GNUC__ == 4 && __GNUC_MINOR__ == 7)) \ 27 || (defined _MSC_VER && 1900 <= _MSC_VER))) 28 # define _Noreturn [[noreturn]] 29 # elif ((!defined __cplusplus || defined __clang__) \ 30 && (201112 <= (defined __STDC_VERSION__ ? __STDC_VERSION__ : 0) \ 31 || 4 < __GNUC__ + (7 <= __GNUC_MINOR__))) 32 /* _Noreturn works as-is. */ 33 # elif 2 < __GNUC__ + (8 <= __GNUC_MINOR__) || 0x5110 <= __SUNPRO_C 34 # define _Noreturn __attribute__ ((__noreturn__)) 35 # elif 1200 <= (defined _MSC_VER ? _MSC_VER : 0) 36 # define _Noreturn __declspec (noreturn) 37 # else 38 # define _Noreturn 39 # endif 40 #endif 41 42 # define CRM_ASSERT(expr) do { \ 43 if (!(expr)) { \ 44 crm_abort(__FILE__, __func__, __LINE__, #expr, TRUE, FALSE); \ 45 abort(); /* crm_abort() doesn't always abort! */ \ 46 } \ 47 } while(0) 48 49 /* 50 * Function return codes 51 * 52 * Most Pacemaker API functions return an integer return code. There are two 53 * alternative interpretations. The legacy interpration is that the absolute 54 * value of the return code is either a system error number or a custom 55 * pcmk_err_* number. This is less than ideal because system error numbers are 56 * constrained only to the positive int range, so there's the possibility that 57 * system errors and custom errors could collide (which did in fact happen 58 * already on one architecture). The new intepretation is that negative values 59 * are from the pcmk_rc_e enum, and positive values are system error numbers. 60 * Both use 0 for success. 61 * 62 * For system error codes, see: 63 * - /usr/include/asm-generic/errno.h 64 * - /usr/include/asm-generic/errno-base.h 65 */ 66 67 // Legacy custom return codes for Pacemaker API functions (deprecated) 68 # define pcmk_ok 0 69 # define PCMK_ERROR_OFFSET 190 /* Replacements on non-linux systems, see include/portability.h */ 70 # define PCMK_CUSTOM_OFFSET 200 /* Purely custom codes */ 71 # define pcmk_err_generic 201 72 # define pcmk_err_no_quorum 202 73 # define pcmk_err_schema_validation 203 74 # define pcmk_err_transform_failed 204 75 # define pcmk_err_old_data 205 76 # define pcmk_err_diff_failed 206 77 # define pcmk_err_diff_resync 207 78 # define pcmk_err_cib_modified 208 79 # define pcmk_err_cib_backup 209 80 # define pcmk_err_cib_save 210 81 # define pcmk_err_schema_unchanged 211 82 # define pcmk_err_cib_corrupt 212 83 # define pcmk_err_multiple 213 84 # define pcmk_err_node_unknown 214 85 # define pcmk_err_already 215 86 /* On HPPA 215 is ENOSYM (Unknown error 215), which hopefully never happens. */ 87 #ifdef __hppa__ 88 # define pcmk_err_bad_nvpair 250 /* 216 is ENOTSOCK */ 89 # define pcmk_err_unknown_format 252 /* 217 is EDESTADDRREQ */ 90 #else 91 # define pcmk_err_bad_nvpair 216 92 # define pcmk_err_unknown_format 217 93 #endif 94 95 /*! 96 * \enum pcmk_rc_e 97 * \brief Return codes for Pacemaker API functions 98 * 99 * Any Pacemaker API function documented as returning a "standard Pacemaker 100 * return code" will return pcmk_rc_ok (0) on success, and one of this 101 * enumeration's other (negative) values or a (positive) system error number 102 * otherwise. The custom codes are at -1001 and lower, so that the caller may 103 * use -1 through -1000 for their own custom values if desired. While generally 104 * referred to as "errors", nonzero values simply indicate a result, which might 105 * or might not be an error depending on the calling context. 106 */ 107 enum pcmk_rc_e { 108 /* When adding new values, use consecutively lower numbers, update the array 109 * in lib/common/results.c, and test with crm_error. 110 */ 111 pcmk_rc_compression = -1039, 112 pcmk_rc_ns_resolution = -1038, 113 pcmk_rc_no_transaction = -1037, 114 pcmk_rc_bad_xml_patch = -1036, 115 pcmk_rc_bad_input = -1035, 116 pcmk_rc_disabled = -1034, 117 pcmk_rc_duplicate_id = -1033, 118 pcmk_rc_unpack_error = -1032, 119 pcmk_rc_invalid_transition = -1031, 120 pcmk_rc_graph_error = -1030, 121 pcmk_rc_dot_error = -1029, 122 pcmk_rc_underflow = -1028, 123 pcmk_rc_no_input = -1027, 124 pcmk_rc_no_output = -1026, 125 pcmk_rc_after_range = -1025, 126 pcmk_rc_within_range = -1024, 127 pcmk_rc_before_range = -1023, 128 pcmk_rc_undetermined = -1022, 129 pcmk_rc_op_unsatisfied = -1021, 130 pcmk_rc_ipc_pid_only = -1020, 131 pcmk_rc_ipc_unresponsive = -1019, 132 pcmk_rc_ipc_unauthorized = -1018, 133 pcmk_rc_no_quorum = -1017, 134 pcmk_rc_schema_validation = -1016, 135 pcmk_rc_schema_unchanged = -1015, 136 pcmk_rc_transform_failed = -1014, 137 pcmk_rc_old_data = -1013, 138 pcmk_rc_diff_failed = -1012, 139 pcmk_rc_diff_resync = -1011, 140 pcmk_rc_cib_modified = -1010, 141 pcmk_rc_cib_backup = -1009, 142 pcmk_rc_cib_save = -1008, 143 pcmk_rc_cib_corrupt = -1007, 144 pcmk_rc_multiple = -1006, 145 pcmk_rc_node_unknown = -1005, 146 pcmk_rc_already = -1004, 147 pcmk_rc_bad_nvpair = -1003, 148 pcmk_rc_unknown_format = -1002, 149 // Developers: Use a more specific code than pcmk_rc_error whenever possible 150 pcmk_rc_error = -1001, 151 152 // Values -1 through -1000 reserved for caller use 153 154 pcmk_rc_ok = 0 155 156 // Positive values reserved for system error numbers 157 }; 158 159 160 /*! 161 * \enum ocf_exitcode 162 * \brief Exit status codes for resource agents 163 * 164 * The OCF Resource Agent API standard enumerates the possible exit status codes 165 * that agents should return. Besides being used with OCF agents, these values 166 * are also used by the executor as a universal status for all agent standards; 167 * actual results are mapped to these before returning them to clients. 168 */ 169 enum ocf_exitcode { 170 PCMK_OCF_OK = 0, //!< Success 171 PCMK_OCF_UNKNOWN_ERROR = 1, //!< Unspecified error 172 PCMK_OCF_INVALID_PARAM = 2, //!< Parameter invalid (in local context) 173 PCMK_OCF_UNIMPLEMENT_FEATURE = 3, //!< Requested action not implemented 174 PCMK_OCF_INSUFFICIENT_PRIV = 4, //!< Insufficient privileges 175 PCMK_OCF_NOT_INSTALLED = 5, //!< Dependencies not available locally 176 PCMK_OCF_NOT_CONFIGURED = 6, //!< Parameter invalid (inherently) 177 PCMK_OCF_NOT_RUNNING = 7, //!< Service safely stopped 178 PCMK_OCF_RUNNING_PROMOTED = 8, //!< Service active and promoted 179 PCMK_OCF_FAILED_PROMOTED = 9, //!< Service failed and possibly in promoted role 180 PCMK_OCF_DEGRADED = 190, //!< Service active but more likely to fail soon 181 PCMK_OCF_DEGRADED_PROMOTED = 191, //!< Service promoted but more likely to fail soon 182 183 /* These two are Pacemaker extensions, not in the OCF standard. The 184 * controller records PCMK_OCF_UNKNOWN for pending actions. 185 * PCMK_OCF_CONNECTION_DIED is used only with older DCs that don't support 186 * PCMK_EXEC_NOT_CONNECTED. 187 */ 188 PCMK_OCF_CONNECTION_DIED = 189, //!< \deprecated See PCMK_EXEC_NOT_CONNECTED 189 PCMK_OCF_UNKNOWN = 193, //!< Action is pending 190 191 #if !defined(PCMK_ALLOW_DEPRECATED) || (PCMK_ALLOW_DEPRECATED == 1) 192 // Former Pacemaker extensions 193 PCMK_OCF_EXEC_ERROR = 192, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 194 PCMK_OCF_SIGNAL = 194, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 195 PCMK_OCF_NOT_SUPPORTED = 195, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 196 PCMK_OCF_PENDING = 196, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 197 PCMK_OCF_CANCELLED = 197, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 198 PCMK_OCF_TIMEOUT = 198, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 199 PCMK_OCF_OTHER_ERROR = 199, //!< \deprecated (Unused) 200 201 //! \deprecated Use PCMK_OCF_RUNNING_PROMOTED instead 202 PCMK_OCF_RUNNING_MASTER = PCMK_OCF_RUNNING_PROMOTED, 203 204 //! \deprecated Use PCMK_OCF_FAILED_PROMOTED instead 205 PCMK_OCF_FAILED_MASTER = PCMK_OCF_FAILED_PROMOTED, 206 207 //! \deprecated Use PCMK_OCF_DEGRADED_PROMOTED instead 208 PCMK_OCF_DEGRADED_MASTER = PCMK_OCF_DEGRADED_PROMOTED, 209 #endif 210 }; 211 212 /*! 213 * \enum crm_exit_e 214 * \brief Exit status codes for tools and daemons 215 * 216 * We want well-specified (i.e. OS-invariant) exit status codes for our daemons 217 * and applications so they can be relied on by callers. (Function return codes 218 * and errno's do not make good exit statuses.) 219 * 220 * The only hard rule is that exit statuses must be between 0 and 255; all else 221 * is convention. Universally, 0 is success, and 1 is generic error (excluding 222 * OSes we don't support -- for example, OpenVMS considers 1 success!). 223 * 224 * For init scripts, the LSB gives meaning to 0-7, and sets aside 150-199 for 225 * application use. OCF adds 8-9 and 190-191. 226 * 227 * sysexits.h was an attempt to give additional meanings, but never really 228 * caught on. It uses 0 and 64-78. 229 * 230 * Bash reserves 2 ("incorrect builtin usage") and 126-255 (126 is "command 231 * found but not executable", 127 is "command not found", 128 + n is 232 * "interrupted by signal n"). 233 * 234 * tldp.org recommends 64-113 for application use. 235 * 236 * We try to overlap with the above conventions when practical. 237 */ 238 typedef enum crm_exit_e { 239 // Common convention 240 CRM_EX_OK = 0, //!< Success 241 CRM_EX_ERROR = 1, //!< Unspecified error 242 243 // LSB + OCF 244 CRM_EX_INVALID_PARAM = 2, //!< Parameter invalid (in local context) 245 CRM_EX_UNIMPLEMENT_FEATURE = 3, //!< Requested action not implemented 246 CRM_EX_INSUFFICIENT_PRIV = 4, //!< Insufficient privileges 247 CRM_EX_NOT_INSTALLED = 5, //!< Dependencies not available locally 248 CRM_EX_NOT_CONFIGURED = 6, //!< Parameter invalid (inherently) 249 CRM_EX_NOT_RUNNING = 7, //!< Service safely stopped 250 CRM_EX_PROMOTED = 8, //!< Service active and promoted 251 CRM_EX_FAILED_PROMOTED = 9, //!< Service failed and possibly promoted 252 253 // sysexits.h 254 CRM_EX_USAGE = 64, //!< Command line usage error 255 CRM_EX_DATAERR = 65, //!< User-supplied data incorrect 256 CRM_EX_NOINPUT = 66, //!< Input file not available 257 CRM_EX_NOUSER = 67, //!< User does not exist 258 CRM_EX_NOHOST = 68, //!< Host unknown 259 CRM_EX_UNAVAILABLE = 69, //!< Needed service unavailable 260 CRM_EX_SOFTWARE = 70, //!< Internal software bug 261 CRM_EX_OSERR = 71, //!< External (OS/environmental) problem 262 CRM_EX_OSFILE = 72, //!< System file not usable 263 CRM_EX_CANTCREAT = 73, //!< File couldn't be created 264 CRM_EX_IOERR = 74, //!< File I/O error 265 CRM_EX_TEMPFAIL = 75, //!< Try again 266 CRM_EX_PROTOCOL = 76, //!< Protocol violated 267 CRM_EX_NOPERM = 77, //!< Non-file permission issue 268 CRM_EX_CONFIG = 78, //!< Misconfiguration 269 270 // Custom 271 CRM_EX_FATAL = 100, //!< Do not respawn 272 CRM_EX_PANIC = 101, //!< Panic the local host 273 CRM_EX_DISCONNECT = 102, //!< Lost connection to something 274 CRM_EX_OLD = 103, //!< Update older than existing config 275 CRM_EX_DIGEST = 104, //!< Digest comparison failed 276 CRM_EX_NOSUCH = 105, //!< Requested item does not exist 277 CRM_EX_QUORUM = 106, //!< Local partition does not have quorum 278 CRM_EX_UNSAFE = 107, //!< Requires --force or new conditions 279 CRM_EX_EXISTS = 108, //!< Requested item already exists 280 CRM_EX_MULTIPLE = 109, //!< Requested item has multiple matches 281 CRM_EX_EXPIRED = 110, //!< Requested item has expired 282 CRM_EX_NOT_YET_IN_EFFECT = 111, //!< Requested item is not in effect 283 CRM_EX_INDETERMINATE = 112, //!< Could not determine status 284 CRM_EX_UNSATISFIED = 113, //!< Requested item does not satisfy constraints 285 286 // Other 287 CRM_EX_TIMEOUT = 124, //!< Convention from timeout(1) 288 289 /* Anything above 128 overlaps with some shells' use of these values for 290 * "interrupted by signal N", and so may be unreliable when detected by 291 * shell scripts. 292 */ 293 294 // OCF Resource Agent API 1.1 295 CRM_EX_DEGRADED = 190, //!< Service active but more likely to fail soon 296 CRM_EX_DEGRADED_PROMOTED = 191, //!< Service promoted but more likely to fail soon 297 298 /* Custom 299 * 300 * This can be used to initialize exit status variables or to indicate that 301 * a command is pending (which is what the controller uses it for). 302 */ 303 CRM_EX_NONE = 193, //!< No exit status available 304 305 CRM_EX_MAX = 255, //!< Ensure crm_exit_t can hold this 306 } crm_exit_t; 307 308 /*! 309 * \enum pcmk_exec_status 310 * \brief Execution status 311 * 312 * These codes are used to specify the result of the attempt to execute an 313 * agent, rather than the agent's result itself. 314 */ 315 enum pcmk_exec_status { 316 PCMK_EXEC_UNKNOWN = -2, //!< Used only to initialize variables 317 PCMK_EXEC_PENDING = -1, //!< Action is in progress 318 PCMK_EXEC_DONE, //!< Action completed, result is known 319 PCMK_EXEC_CANCELLED, //!< Action was cancelled 320 PCMK_EXEC_TIMEOUT, //!< Action did not complete in time 321 PCMK_EXEC_NOT_SUPPORTED, //!< Agent does not implement requested action 322 PCMK_EXEC_ERROR, //!< Execution failed, may be retried 323 PCMK_EXEC_ERROR_HARD, //!< Execution failed, do not retry on node 324 PCMK_EXEC_ERROR_FATAL, //!< Execution failed, do not retry anywhere 325 PCMK_EXEC_NOT_INSTALLED, //!< Agent or dependency not available locally 326 PCMK_EXEC_NOT_CONNECTED, //!< No connection to executor 327 PCMK_EXEC_INVALID, //!< Action cannot be attempted (e.g. shutdown) 328 PCMK_EXEC_NO_FENCE_DEVICE, //!< No fence device is configured for target 329 PCMK_EXEC_NO_SECRETS, //!< Necessary CIB secrets are unavailable 330 331 // Add new values above here then update this one below 332 PCMK_EXEC_MAX = PCMK_EXEC_NO_SECRETS, //!< Maximum value for this enum 333 }; 334 335 /*! 336 * \enum pcmk_result_type 337 * \brief Types of Pacemaker result codes 338 * 339 * A particular integer can have different meanings within different Pacemaker 340 * result code families. It may be interpretable within zero, one, or multiple 341 * families. 342 * 343 * These values are useful for specifying how an integer result code should be 344 * interpreted in situations involving a generic integer value. For example, a 345 * function that can process multiple types of result codes might accept an 346 * arbitrary integer argument along with a \p pcmk_result_type argument that 347 * specifies how to interpret the integer. 348 */ 349 enum pcmk_result_type { 350 pcmk_result_legacy = 0, //!< Legacy API function return code 351 pcmk_result_rc = 1, //!< Standard Pacemaker return code 352 pcmk_result_exitcode = 2, //!< Exit status code 353 pcmk_result_exec_status = 3, //!< Execution status 354 }; 355 356 int pcmk_result_get_strings(int code, enum pcmk_result_type type, 357 const char **name, const char **desc); 358 const char *pcmk_rc_name(int rc); 359 const char *pcmk_rc_str(int rc); 360 crm_exit_t pcmk_rc2exitc(int rc); 361 enum ocf_exitcode pcmk_rc2ocf(int rc); 362 int pcmk_rc2legacy(int rc); 363 int pcmk_legacy2rc(int legacy_rc); 364 const char *pcmk_strerror(int rc); 365 const char *pcmk_errorname(int rc); 366 const char *crm_exit_name(crm_exit_t exit_code); 367 const char *crm_exit_str(crm_exit_t exit_code); 368 _Noreturn crm_exit_t crm_exit(crm_exit_t rc); 369 370 static inline const char * 371 pcmk_exec_status_str(enum pcmk_exec_status status) /* */ 372 { 373 switch (status) { 374 case PCMK_EXEC_PENDING: return "pending"; 375 case PCMK_EXEC_DONE: return "complete"; 376 case PCMK_EXEC_CANCELLED: return "Cancelled"; 377 case PCMK_EXEC_TIMEOUT: return "Timed Out"; 378 case PCMK_EXEC_NOT_SUPPORTED: return "NOT SUPPORTED"; 379 case PCMK_EXEC_ERROR: return "Error"; 380 case PCMK_EXEC_ERROR_HARD: return "Hard error"; 381 case PCMK_EXEC_ERROR_FATAL: return "Fatal error"; 382 case PCMK_EXEC_NOT_INSTALLED: return "Not installed"; 383 case PCMK_EXEC_NOT_CONNECTED: return "Internal communication failure"; 384 case PCMK_EXEC_INVALID: return "Cannot execute now"; 385 case PCMK_EXEC_NO_FENCE_DEVICE: return "No fence device"; 386 case PCMK_EXEC_NO_SECRETS: return "CIB secrets unavailable"; 387 default: return "UNKNOWN!"; 388 } 389 } 390 391 #ifdef __cplusplus 392 } 393 #endif 394 395 #endif