I am trying to use the system_error
facility to handle errors in a library of mine. I am going to briefly discuss the structure of the library in case you find it helpful: The namespace of the library is called commons
and under this I have another namespace called dynlib
. dynlib
contains classes that are responsible for loading .so/.dll files:
namespace commons {
namespace dynlib {
class DynLibLoader {
};
}
}
The errors that may occur in the DynLibLoader are LibraryFailedToLoad
, LibraryFailedToUnload
and SymbolNotFound
. So my thoughts for handling the errors are the following: I will add a namespace error
under the namespace dynlib
. Then, under that namespace I will define one enum for std::error_codes
and one enum for std::error_conditions
. From my understanding the std::error_codes
have to correspond to the value of errno
(Linux) or GetLastError
(Win32), and the std::error_conditions
to values like LibraryFailedToLoad
, SymbolNotFound
etc. So, here are my questions:
- Is my understanding about
std::error_code
andstd::error_condition
correct? - How I am supposed to know all the possible values of
errno
andGetLastError()
in order to define them under mystd::error_codes
enum? What if Microsoft adds extra error values to the API in the future? Will I have to go back to the source code and define them under the enum I have for thestd::error_codes
? - What if we are on another platform and there is no way to figure out the exact system error code when an error occurs?
- What if I want to have the same
std::error_codes
for the entire commons namespace and only define a differentstd::error_condition
for each sub-namespace likedynlib
. Is this a good practice? I would say yes because this will avoid duplicate code. But is there a catch behind this? - At the moment I am using a single
std::error_category
for each sub-namespace of commons. Is this a good practice? Do you think I should use thestd::error_category
differently?