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/*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*
* elog.c
* error logging and reporting
*
* Some notes about recursion and errors during error processing:
*
* We need to be robust about recursive-error scenarios --- for example,
* if we run out of memory, it's important to be able to report that fact.
* There are a number of considerations that go into this.
*
* First, distinguish between re-entrant use and actual recursion. It
* is possible for an error or warning message to be emitted while the
* parameters for an error message are being computed. In this case
* errstart has been called for the outer message, and some field values
* may have already been saved, but we are not actually recursing. We handle
* this by providing a (small) stack of ErrorData records. The inner message
* can be computed and sent without disturbing the state of the outer message.
* (If the inner message is actually an error, this isn't very interesting
* because control won't come back to the outer message generator ... but
* if the inner message is only debug or log data, this is critical.)
*
* Second, actual recursion will occur if an error is reported by one of
* the elog.c routines or something they call. By far the most probable
* scenario of this sort is "out of memory"; and it's also the nastiest
* to handle because we'd likely also run out of memory while trying to
* report this error! Our escape hatch for this condition is to force any
* such messages up to ERROR level if they aren't already (so that we will
* not need to return to the outer elog.c call), and to reset the ErrorContext
* to empty before trying to process the inner message. Since ErrorContext
* is guaranteed to have at least 8K of space in it (see mcxt.c), we should
* be able to process an "out of memory" message successfully.
*
* Portions Copyright (c) 1996-2002, PostgreSQL Global Development Group
* Portions Copyright (c) 1994, Regents of the University of California
*
*
* IDENTIFICATION
* $Header: /cvsroot/pgsql/src/backend/utils/error/elog.c,v 1.115 2003/07/27 21:49:54 tgl Exp $
*
*-------------------------------------------------------------------------
*/
#include "postgres.h"
#include <time.h>
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <errno.h>
#include <unistd.h>
#include <signal.h>
#include <sys/time.h>
#include <ctype.h>
#include <syslog.h>
#include "libpq/libpq.h"
#include "libpq/pqformat.h"
#include "mb/pg_wchar.h"
#include "miscadmin.h"
#include "storage/ipc.h"
#include "tcop/tcopprot.h"
#include "utils/memutils.h"
#include "utils/guc.h"
/* Global variables */
ErrorContextCallback *error_context_stack = NULL;
/* GUC parameters */
PGErrorVerbosity Log_error_verbosity = PGERROR_VERBOSE;
bool Log_timestamp = false; /* show timestamps in stderr output */
bool Log_pid = false; /* show PIDs in stderr output */
* 0 = only stdout/stderr
* 1 = stdout+stderr and syslog
* 2 = syslog only
* ... in theory anyway
char *Syslog_facility; /* openlog() parameters */
static void write_syslog(int level, const char *line);
#else
#endif /* HAVE_SYSLOG */
/*
* ErrorData holds the data accumulated during any one ereport() cycle.
* Any non-NULL pointers must point to palloc'd data in ErrorContext.
* (The const pointers are an exception; we assume they point at non-freeable
* constant strings.)
*/
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typedef struct ErrorData
{
int elevel; /* error level */
bool output_to_server; /* will report to server log? */
bool output_to_client; /* will report to client? */
bool show_funcname; /* true to force funcname inclusion */
const char *filename; /* __FILE__ of ereport() call */
int lineno; /* __LINE__ of ereport() call */
const char *funcname; /* __func__ of ereport() call */
int sqlerrcode; /* encoded ERRSTATE */
char *message; /* primary error message */
char *detail; /* detail error message */
char *hint; /* hint message */
char *context; /* context message */
int cursorpos; /* cursor index into query string */
int saved_errno; /* errno at entry */
} ErrorData;
/* We provide a small stack of ErrorData records for re-entrant cases */
#define ERRORDATA_STACK_SIZE 5
static ErrorData errordata[ERRORDATA_STACK_SIZE];
static int errordata_stack_depth = -1; /* index of topmost active frame */
static int recursion_depth = 0; /* to detect actual recursion */
/* Macro for checking errordata_stack_depth is reasonable */
#define CHECK_STACK_DEPTH() \
do { \
if (errordata_stack_depth < 0) \
{ \
errordata_stack_depth = -1; \
ereport(ERROR, (errmsg_internal("errstart was not called"))); \
} \
} while (0)
static void send_message_to_server_log(ErrorData *edata);
static void send_message_to_frontend(ErrorData *edata);
static char *expand_fmt_string(const char *fmt, ErrorData *edata);
static const char *useful_strerror(int errnum);
static const char *error_severity(int elevel);
static const char *print_timestamp(void);
static const char *print_pid(void);
/*
* errstart --- begin an error-reporting cycle
* Create a stack entry and store the given parameters in it. Subsequently,
* errmsg() and perhaps other routines will be called to further populate
* the stack entry. Finally, errfinish() will be called to actually process
* the error report.
* Returns TRUE in normal case. Returns FALSE to short-circuit the error
* report (if it's a warning or lower and not to be reported anywhere).
bool
errstart(int elevel, const char *filename, int lineno,
const char *funcname)
ErrorData *edata;
bool output_to_server = false;
bool output_to_client = false;
/*
* First decide whether we need to process this report at all;
* if it's warning or less and not enabled for logging, just
* return FALSE without starting up any error logging machinery.
*/
* Convert initialization errors into fatal errors. This is probably
* redundant, because Warn_restart_ready won't be set anyway.
if (elevel == ERROR && IsInitProcessingMode())
elevel = FATAL;
/*
* If we are inside a critical section, all errors become PANIC
* errors. See miscadmin.h.
*/
if (elevel >= ERROR)
{
if (CritSectionCount > 0)
elevel = PANIC;
/* Determine whether message is enabled for server log output */
if (IsPostmasterEnvironment)
/* Complicated because LOG is sorted out-of-order for this purpose */
if (elevel == LOG || elevel == COMMERROR)
if (log_min_messages == LOG)
output_to_server = true;
else if (log_min_messages < FATAL)
output_to_server = true;
}
else
{
/* elevel != LOG */
if (log_min_messages == LOG)
{
if (elevel >= FATAL)
output_to_server = true;
}
/* Neither is LOG */
else if (elevel >= log_min_messages)
output_to_server = true;
}
}
else
{
/* In bootstrap/standalone case, do not sort LOG out-of-order */
output_to_server = (elevel >= log_min_messages);
}
/* Determine whether message is enabled for client output */
if (whereToSendOutput == Remote && elevel != COMMERROR)
{
/*
* client_min_messages is honored only after we complete the
* authentication handshake. This is required both for security
* reasons and because many clients can't handle NOTICE messages
* during authentication.
*/
if (ClientAuthInProgress)
output_to_client = (elevel >= ERROR);
output_to_client = (elevel >= client_min_messages ||
elevel == INFO);
}
/* Skip processing effort if non-error message will not be output */
if (elevel < ERROR && !output_to_server && !output_to_client)
return false;
* Okay, crank up a stack entry to store the info in.
if (recursion_depth++ > 0)
{
* Ooops, error during error processing. Clear ErrorContext and force
* level up to ERROR or greater, as discussed at top of file. Adjust
* output decisions too.
*/
MemoryContextReset(ErrorContext);
output_to_server = true;
if (whereToSendOutput == Remote && elevel != COMMERROR)
output_to_client = true;
elevel = Max(elevel, ERROR);
/*
* If we recurse more than once, the problem might be something
* broken in a context traceback routine. Abandon them too.
if (recursion_depth > 2)
error_context_stack = NULL;
}
if (++errordata_stack_depth >= ERRORDATA_STACK_SIZE)
/* Wups, stack not big enough */
int i;
elevel = Max(elevel, ERROR);
/*
* Don't forget any FATAL/PANIC status on the stack (see comments
* in errfinish)
*/
for (i = 0; i < errordata_stack_depth; i++)
elevel = Max(elevel, errordata[i].elevel);
/* Clear the stack and try again */
errordata_stack_depth = -1;
ereport(elevel, (errmsg_internal("ERRORDATA_STACK_SIZE exceeded")));
/* Initialize data for this error frame */
edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemSet(edata, 0, sizeof(ErrorData));
edata->elevel = elevel;
edata->output_to_server = output_to_server;
edata->output_to_client = output_to_client;
edata->filename = filename;
edata->lineno = lineno;
edata->funcname = funcname;
/* Select default errcode based on elevel */
if (elevel >= ERROR)
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_INTERNAL_ERROR;
else if (elevel == WARNING)
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_WARNING;
else
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_SUCCESSFUL_COMPLETION;
/* errno is saved here so that error parameter eval can't change it */
edata->saved_errno = errno;
recursion_depth--;
return true;
}
/*
* errfinish --- end an error-reporting cycle
*
* Produce the appropriate error report(s) and pop the error stack.
*
* If elevel is ERROR or worse, control does not return to the caller.
* See elog.h for the error level definitions.
*/
void
errfinish(int dummy, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
int elevel = edata->elevel;
MemoryContext oldcontext;
ErrorContextCallback *econtext;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
/*
* Call any context callback functions. We can treat ereports occuring
* in callback functions as re-entrant rather than recursive case, so
* don't increment recursion_depth yet.
*/
for (econtext = error_context_stack;
econtext != NULL;
econtext = econtext->previous)
(*econtext->callback) (econtext->arg);
/* Now we are ready to process the error. */
recursion_depth++;
* Do processing in ErrorContext, which we hope has enough reserved space
* to report an error.
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
/* Send to server log, if enabled */
if (edata->output_to_server)
send_message_to_server_log(edata);
* Abort any old-style COPY OUT in progress when an error is detected.
* This hack is necessary because of poor design of old-style copy
* protocol. Note we must do this even if client is fool enough to
* have set client_min_messages above ERROR, so don't look at
* output_to_client.
if (elevel >= ERROR && whereToSendOutput == Remote)
pq_endcopyout(true);
/* Send to client, if enabled */
if (edata->output_to_client)
send_message_to_frontend(edata);
/* Now free up subsidiary data attached to stack entry, and release it */
if (edata->message)
pfree(edata->message);
if (edata->detail)
pfree(edata->detail);
if (edata->hint)
pfree(edata->hint);
if (edata->context)
pfree(edata->context);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
errordata_stack_depth--;
recursion_depth--;
/*
* If the error level is ERROR or more, we are not going to return to
* caller; therefore, if there is any stacked error already in progress
* it will be lost. This is more or less okay, except we do not want
* to have a FATAL or PANIC error downgraded because the reporting process
* was interrupted by a lower-grade error. So check the stack and make
* sure we panic if panic is warranted.
*/
if (elevel >= ERROR)
int i;
for (i = 0; i <= errordata_stack_depth; i++)
elevel = Max(elevel, errordata[i].elevel);
* Also, be sure to reset the stack to empty. We do not clear
* ErrorContext here, though; PostgresMain does that later on.
errordata_stack_depth = -1;
recursion_depth = 0;
error_context_stack = NULL;
* Perform error recovery action as specified by elevel.
if (elevel == ERROR || elevel == FATAL)
/* Prevent immediate interrupt while entering error recovery */
ImmediateInterruptOK = false;
/*
* If we just reported a startup failure, the client will
* disconnect on receiving it, so don't send any more to the
* client.
*/
if (!Warn_restart_ready && whereToSendOutput == Remote)
whereToSendOutput = None;
* For a FATAL error, we let proc_exit clean up and exit.
*
* There are several other cases in which we treat ERROR as FATAL
* and go directly to proc_exit:
*
* 1. ExitOnAnyError mode switch is set (initdb uses this).
*
* 2. we have not yet entered the main backend loop (ie, we are in
* the postmaster or in backend startup); we have noplace to recover.
*
* 3. the error occurred after proc_exit has begun to run. (It's
* proc_exit's responsibility to see that this doesn't turn into
* infinite recursion!)
*
* In the last case, we exit with nonzero exit code to indicate that
* something's pretty wrong. We also want to exit with nonzero exit
* code if not running under the postmaster (for example, if we are
* being run from the initdb script, we'd better return an error
* status).
if (elevel == FATAL ||
ExitOnAnyError ||
!Warn_restart_ready ||
proc_exit_inprogress)
/*
* fflush here is just to improve the odds that we get to see
* the error message, in case things are so hosed that
* proc_exit crashes. Any other code you might be tempted to
* add here should probably be in an on_proc_exit callback
* instead.
fflush(stdout);
fflush(stderr);
proc_exit(proc_exit_inprogress || !IsUnderPostmaster);
* Guard against infinite loop from errors during error recovery.
*/
if (InError)
ereport(PANIC, (errmsg("error during error recovery, giving up")));
InError = true;
* Otherwise we can return to the main loop in postgres.c.
siglongjmp(Warn_restart, 1);
if (elevel >= PANIC)
* Serious crash time. Postmaster will observe nonzero process
* exit status and kill the other backends too.
* XXX: what if we are *in* the postmaster? abort() won't kill
ImmediateInterruptOK = false;
fflush(stdout);
fflush(stderr);
/* We reach here if elevel <= WARNING. OK to return to caller. */
}
/*
* errcode --- add SQLSTATE error code to the current error
*
* The code is expected to be represented as per MAKE_SQLSTATE().
*/
int
errcode(int sqlerrcode)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
/* we don't bother incrementing recursion_depth */
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
edata->sqlerrcode = sqlerrcode;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
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/*
* errcode_for_file_access --- add SQLSTATE error code to the current error
*
* The SQLSTATE code is chosen based on the saved errno value. We assume
* that the failing operation was some type of disk file access.
*
* NOTE: the primary error message string should generally include %m
* when this is used.
*/
int
errcode_for_file_access(void)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
/* we don't bother incrementing recursion_depth */
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
switch (edata->saved_errno)
{
/* Permission-denied failures */
case EPERM: /* Not super-user */
case EACCES: /* Permission denied */
#ifdef EROFS
case EROFS: /* Read only file system */
#endif
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_INSUFFICIENT_PRIVILEGE;
break;
/* Object not found */
case ENOENT: /* No such file or directory */
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_UNDEFINED_OBJECT;
break;
/* Duplicate object */
case EEXIST: /* File exists */
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_DUPLICATE_OBJECT;
break;
/* Wrong object type or state */
case ENOTDIR: /* Not a directory */
case EISDIR: /* Is a directory */
case ENOTEMPTY: /* Directory not empty */
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_WRONG_OBJECT_TYPE;
break;
/* Insufficient resources */
case ENOSPC: /* No space left on device */
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_DISK_FULL;
break;
case ENFILE: /* File table overflow */
case EMFILE: /* Too many open files */
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_INSUFFICIENT_RESOURCES;
break;
/* Hardware failure */
case EIO: /* I/O error */
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_IO_ERROR;
break;
/* All else is classified as internal errors */
default:
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_INTERNAL_ERROR;
break;
}
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
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/*
* errcode_for_socket_access --- add SQLSTATE error code to the current error
*
* The SQLSTATE code is chosen based on the saved errno value. We assume
* that the failing operation was some type of socket access.
*
* NOTE: the primary error message string should generally include %m
* when this is used.
*/
int
errcode_for_socket_access(void)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
/* we don't bother incrementing recursion_depth */
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
switch (edata->saved_errno)
{
/* Loss of connection */
case EPIPE:
#ifdef ECONNRESET
case ECONNRESET:
#endif
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_CONNECTION_FAILURE;
break;
/* All else is classified as internal errors */
default:
edata->sqlerrcode = ERRCODE_INTERNAL_ERROR;
break;
}
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
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/*
* This macro handles expansion of a format string and associated parameters;
* it's common code for errmsg(), errdetail(), etc. Must be called inside
* a routine that is declared like "const char *fmt, ..." and has an edata
* pointer set up. The message is assigned to edata->targetfield, or
* appended to it if appendval is true.
*
* Note: we pstrdup the buffer rather than just transferring its storage
* to the edata field because the buffer might be considerably larger than
* really necessary.
*/
#define EVALUATE_MESSAGE(targetfield, appendval) \
{ \
char *fmtbuf; \
StringInfoData buf; \
/* Internationalize the error format string */ \
fmt = gettext(fmt); \
/* Expand %m in format string */ \
fmtbuf = expand_fmt_string(fmt, edata); \
initStringInfo(&buf); \
if ((appendval) && edata->targetfield) \
appendStringInfo(&buf, "%s\n", edata->targetfield); \
/* Generate actual output --- have to use appendStringInfoVA */ \
for (;;) \
{ \
va_list args; \
bool success; \
va_start(args, fmt); \
success = appendStringInfoVA(&buf, fmtbuf, args); \
va_end(args); \
if (success) \
break; \
enlargeStringInfo(&buf, buf.maxlen); \
} \
/* Done with expanded fmt */ \
pfree(fmtbuf); \
/* Save the completed message into the stack item */ \
if (edata->targetfield) \
pfree(edata->targetfield); \
edata->targetfield = pstrdup(buf.data); \
pfree(buf.data); \
}
/*
* errmsg --- add a primary error message text to the current error
*
* In addition to the usual %-escapes recognized by printf, "%m" in
* fmt is replaced by the error message for the caller's value of errno.
*
* Note: no newline is needed at the end of the fmt string, since
* ereport will provide one for the output methods that need it.
*/
int
errmsg(const char *fmt, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemoryContext oldcontext;
recursion_depth++;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
EVALUATE_MESSAGE(message, false);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
recursion_depth--;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
/*
* errmsg_internal --- add a primary error message text to the current error
*
* This is exactly like errmsg() except that strings passed to errmsg_internal
* are customarily left out of the internationalization message dictionary.
* This should be used for "can't happen" cases that are probably not worth
* spending translation effort on.
*/
int
errmsg_internal(const char *fmt, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemoryContext oldcontext;
recursion_depth++;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
EVALUATE_MESSAGE(message, false);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
recursion_depth--;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
/*
* errdetail --- add a detail error message text to the current error
*/
int
errdetail(const char *fmt, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemoryContext oldcontext;
recursion_depth++;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
EVALUATE_MESSAGE(detail, false);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
recursion_depth--;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
/*
* errhint --- add a hint error message text to the current error
*/
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errhint(const char *fmt, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemoryContext oldcontext;
recursion_depth++;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
EVALUATE_MESSAGE(hint, false);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
recursion_depth--;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
/*
* errcontext --- add a context error message text to the current error
*
* Unlike other cases, multiple calls are allowed to build up a stack of
* context information. We assume earlier calls represent more-closely-nested
* states.
*/
int
errcontext(const char *fmt, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemoryContext oldcontext;
recursion_depth++;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
EVALUATE_MESSAGE(context, true);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
recursion_depth--;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
/*
* errfunction --- add reporting function name to the current error
*
* This is used when backwards compatibility demands that the function
* name appear in messages sent to old-protocol clients. Note that the
* passed string is expected to be a non-freeable constant string.
*/
int
errfunction(const char *funcname)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
/* we don't bother incrementing recursion_depth */
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
edata->funcname = funcname;
edata->show_funcname = true;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
/*
* errposition --- add cursor position to the current error
*/
int
errposition(int cursorpos)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
/* we don't bother incrementing recursion_depth */
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
edata->cursorpos = cursorpos;
return 0; /* return value does not matter */
}
/*
* elog_finish --- finish up for old-style API
*
* The elog() macro already called errstart, but with ERROR rather than
* the true elevel.
*/
void
elog_finish(int elevel, const char *fmt, ...)
{
ErrorData *edata = &errordata[errordata_stack_depth];
MemoryContext oldcontext;
CHECK_STACK_DEPTH();
/*
* We need to redo errstart() because the elog macro had to call it
* with bogus elevel.
*/
errordata_stack_depth--;
errno = edata->saved_errno;
if (!errstart(elevel, edata->filename, edata->lineno, edata->funcname))
return; /* nothing to do */
/*
* Format error message just like errmsg().
*/
recursion_depth++;
oldcontext = MemoryContextSwitchTo(ErrorContext);
EVALUATE_MESSAGE(message, false);
MemoryContextSwitchTo(oldcontext);
recursion_depth--;
/*
* And let errfinish() finish up.
*/
errfinish(0);
}
/*
* Initialization of error output file
*/
void
DebugFileOpen(void)
Bruce Momjian
committed
int fd,
istty;
if (OutputFileName[0])
{
/*
* A debug-output file name was given.
*
* Make sure we can write the file, and find out if it's a tty.
*/
if ((fd = open(OutputFileName, O_CREAT | O_APPEND | O_WRONLY,
0666)) < 0)
ereport(FATAL,
(errcode_for_file_access(),
errmsg("failed to open \"%s\": %m", OutputFileName)));
istty = isatty(fd);
close(fd);
/*
* Redirect our stderr to the debug output file.
*/
if (!freopen(OutputFileName, "a", stderr))
ereport(FATAL,
(errcode_for_file_access(),
errmsg("failed to reopen \"%s\" as stderr: %m",
OutputFileName)));
/*
* If the file is a tty and we're running under the postmaster,
* try to send stdout there as well (if it isn't a tty then stderr
* will block out stdout, so we may as well let stdout go wherever
* it was going before).
*/
if (istty && IsUnderPostmaster)
if (!freopen(OutputFileName, "a", stdout))
ereport(FATAL,
(errcode_for_file_access(),
errmsg("failed to reopen \"%s\" as stdout: %m",
OutputFileName)));
#ifndef PG_SYSLOG_LIMIT
#endif
/*
* Write a message line to syslog if the syslog option is set.
*
* Our problem here is that many syslog implementations don't handle
* long messages in an acceptable manner. While this function doesn't
* help that fact, it does work around by splitting up messages into
* smaller pieces.
*/
static void
write_syslog(int level, const char *line)
{
static unsigned long seq = 0;
static int syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL0;
if (Use_syslog == 0)
return;
if (!openlog_done)
{
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL0") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL0;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL1") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL1;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL2") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL2;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL3") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL3;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL4") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL4;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL5") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL5;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL6") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL6;
if (strcasecmp(Syslog_facility, "LOCAL7") == 0)
syslog_fac = LOG_LOCAL7;
Peter Eisentraut
committed
openlog(Syslog_ident, LOG_PID | LOG_NDELAY, syslog_fac);
openlog_done = true;
}
/*
* We add a sequence number to each log message to suppress "same"
* messages.
*/
seq++;
/* divide into multiple syslog() calls if message is too long */
/* or if the message contains embedded NewLine(s) '\n' */
if (len > PG_SYSLOG_LIMIT || strchr(line, '\n') != NULL)
while (len > 0)
{
char buf[PG_SYSLOG_LIMIT + 1];
int buflen;
int i;
/* if we start at a newline, move ahead one char */
if (line[0] == '\n')
{
line++;
len--;
continue;
strncpy(buf, line, PG_SYSLOG_LIMIT);
buf[PG_SYSLOG_LIMIT] = '\0';
if (strchr(buf, '\n') != NULL)
*strchr(buf, '\n') = '\0';
buflen = strlen(buf);
/* trim to multibyte letter boundary */
buflen = pg_mbcliplen(buf, buflen, buflen);
if (buflen <= 0)
buf[buflen] = '\0';
/* already word boundary? */
if (!isspace((unsigned char) line[buflen]) &&
line[buflen] != '\0')
/* try to divide at word boundary */
i = buflen - 1;
while (i > 0 && !isspace((unsigned char) buf[i]))