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SD_EVENT_SOURCE_SET_DESCRIPTION(3) | sd_event_source_set_description | SD_EVENT_SOURCE_SET_DESCRIPTION(3) |
NAME¶
sd_event_source_set_description, sd_event_source_get_description - Set or retrieve descriptive names of event sources
SYNOPSIS¶
#include <systemd/sd-event.h>
int sd_event_source_set_description(sd_event_source *source, const char *description);
int sd_event_source_get_description(sd_event_source *source, const char **description);
DESCRIPTION¶
sd_event_source_set_description() may be used to set an arbitrary descriptive name for the event source object specified as source. This name will be used in debugging messages generated by sd-event(3) for this event source, and may be queried using sd_event_source_get_description() for debugging purposes. The description parameter shall point to a NUL-terminated string or be NULL. In the latter case, the descriptive name will be unset. The string is copied internally, hence the description argument is not referenced after the function returns.
sd_event_source_get_description() may be used to query the current descriptive name assigned to the event source object source. It returns a pointer to the current name in description, stored in memory internal to the event source. The memory is invalidated when the event source is destroyed or the descriptive name is changed.
Event source objects generally have no description set when they are created, except for UNIX signal event sources created with sd_event_add_signal(3), whose descriptive name is initialized to the signal's C constant name (e.g. "SIGINT" or "SIGTERM").
RETURN VALUE¶
On success, sd_event_source_set_description() and sd_event_source_get_description() return a non-negative integer. On failure, they return a negative errno-style error code.
Errors¶
Returned errors may indicate the following problems:
-EINVAL
-ENOMEM
-ECHILD
-ENXIO
NOTES¶
Functions described here are available as a shared library, which can be compiled against and linked to with the libsystemd pkg-config(1) file.
The code described here uses getenv(3), which is declared to be not multi-thread-safe. This means that the code calling the functions described here must not call setenv(3) from a parallel thread. It is recommended to only do calls to setenv() from an early phase of the program when no other threads have been started.
SEE ALSO¶
sd-event(3), sd_event_add_io(3), sd_event_add_time(3), sd_event_add_signal(3), sd_event_add_child(3), sd_event_add_inotify(3), sd_event_add_defer(3), sd_event_source_set_userdata(3)
systemd 254 |