sasl_seterror - set the error string¶
Synopsis¶
#include <sasl/sasl.h>
void sasl_seterror(sasl_conn_t *conn,
unsigned flags,
const char *fmt,
...);
Description¶
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void sasl_seterror(sasl_conn_t *conn,
-
unsigned flags,
-
const char *fmt,
-
...);
The sasl_seterror() interface sets the error string that will be returned by sasl_errdetail(3). Use syslog(3) style formatting; that is, use printf()—style with %m as the most recent errno error.
The sasl_seterror() interface is primarily used by server callback functions and internal plugins, for example, with the sasl_authorize_t(3) callback. The sasl_seterror() interface triggers a call to the SASL logging callback, if any, with a level of SASL_LOG_FAIL, unless the SASL_NOLOG flag is set.
Make the message string sensitive to the current language setting. If there is no SASL_CB_LANGUAGE callback, message strings must be i‐default. Otherwise, UTF‐8 is used. Use of RFC 2482 for mixed‐language text is encouraged.
If the value of conn is NULL, the sasl_seterror() interface fails.
Parameters: - conn – The sasl_conn_t for which the call to sasl_seterror() applies.
- flags – If set to SASL_NOLOG, the call to sasl_seterror() is not logged.
- fmt – A syslog(3) style format string.
Return Value¶
No return values.
See also¶
sasl_errdetail(3), syslog(3), RFC 2482