| /* |
| * Copyright (C) 2017 The Android Open Source Project |
| * |
| * Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); |
| * you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. |
| * You may obtain a copy of the License at |
| * |
| * http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0 |
| * |
| * Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software |
| * distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, |
| * WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. |
| * See the License for the specific language governing permissions and |
| * limitations under the License. |
| */ |
| |
| // This file contains classes for returning a successful result along with an optional |
| // arbitrarily typed return value or for returning a failure result along with an optional string |
| // indicating why the function failed. |
| |
| // There are 3 classes that implement this functionality and one additional helper type. |
| // |
| // Result<T> either contains a member of type T that can be accessed using similar semantics as |
| // std::optional<T> or it contains a ResultError describing an error, which can be accessed via |
| // Result<T>::error(). |
| // |
| // ResultError is a type that contains both a std::string describing the error and a copy of errno |
| // from when the error occurred. ResultError can be used in an ostream directly to print its |
| // string value. |
| // |
| // Success is a typedef that aids in creating Result<T> that do not contain a return value. |
| // Result<Nothing> is the correct return type for a function that either returns successfully or |
| // returns an error value. Returning Nothing() from a function that returns Result<Nothing> is the |
| // correct way to indicate that a function without a return type has completed successfully. |
| // |
| // A successful Result<T> is constructed implicitly from any type that can be implicitly converted |
| // to T or from the constructor arguments for T. This allows you to return a type T directly from |
| // a function that returns Result<T>. |
| // |
| // Error and ErrnoError are used to construct a Result<T> that has failed. The Error class takes |
| // an ostream as an input and are implicitly cast to a Result<T> containing that failure. |
| // ErrnoError() is a helper function to create an Error class that appends ": " + strerror(errno) |
| // to the end of the failure string to aid in interacting with C APIs. Alternatively, an errno |
| // value can be directly specified via the Error() constructor. |
| // |
| // ResultError can be used in the ostream when using Error to construct a Result<T>. In this case, |
| // the string that the ResultError takes is passed through the stream normally, but the errno is |
| // passed to the Result<T>. This can be used to pass errno from a failing C function up multiple |
| // callers. |
| // |
| // ResultError can also directly construct a Result<T>. This is particularly useful if you have a |
| // function that return Result<T> but you have a Result<U> and want to return its error. In this |
| // case, you can return the .error() from the Result<U> to construct the Result<T>. |
| |
| // An example of how to use these is below: |
| // Result<U> CalculateResult(const T& input) { |
| // U output; |
| // if (!SomeOtherCppFunction(input, &output)) { |
| // return Error() << "SomeOtherCppFunction(" << input << ") failed"; |
| // } |
| // if (!c_api_function(output)) { |
| // return ErrnoError() << "c_api_function(" << output << ") failed"; |
| // } |
| // return output; |
| // } |
| // |
| // auto output = CalculateResult(input); |
| // if (!output) return Error() << "CalculateResult failed: " << output.error(); |
| // UseOutput(*output); |
| |
| #pragma once |
| |
| #include <android-base/result.h> |
| |
| using android::base::ErrnoError; |
| using android::base::Error; |
| using android::base::Result; |
| using android::base::ResultError; |
| using android::base::Success; |