Alien-FreeImage
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src/Source/LibJPEG/jerror.c view on Meta::CPAN
* jerror.c
*
* Copyright (C) 1991-1998, Thomas G. Lane.
* Modified 2012 by Guido Vollbeding.
* This file is part of the Independent JPEG Group's software.
* For conditions of distribution and use, see the accompanying README file.
*
* This file contains simple error-reporting and trace-message routines.
* These are suitable for Unix-like systems and others where writing to
* stderr is the right thing to do. Many applications will want to replace
* some or all of these routines.
*
* If you define USE_WINDOWS_MESSAGEBOX in jconfig.h or in the makefile,
* you get a Windows-specific hack to display error messages in a dialog box.
* It ain't much, but it beats dropping error messages into the bit bucket,
* which is what happens to output to stderr under most Windows C compilers.
*
* These routines are used by both the compression and decompression code.
*/
/* this is not a core library module, so it doesn't define JPEG_INTERNALS */
#include "jinclude.h"
#include "jpeglib.h"
#include "jversion.h"
#include "jerror.h"
#ifdef USE_WINDOWS_MESSAGEBOX
#include <windows.h>
#endif
#ifndef EXIT_FAILURE /* define exit() codes if not provided */
#define EXIT_FAILURE 1
#endif
/*
* Create the message string table.
* We do this from the master message list in jerror.h by re-reading
* jerror.h with a suitable definition for macro JMESSAGE.
* The message table is made an external symbol just in case any applications
* want to refer to it directly.
*/
#ifdef NEED_SHORT_EXTERNAL_NAMES
#define jpeg_std_message_table jMsgTable
#endif
#define JMESSAGE(code,string) string ,
const char * const jpeg_std_message_table[] = {
#include "jerror.h"
NULL
};
/*
* Error exit handler: must not return to caller.
*
* Applications may override this if they want to get control back after
* an error. Typically one would longjmp somewhere instead of exiting.
* The setjmp buffer can be made a private field within an expanded error
* handler object. Note that the info needed to generate an error message
* is stored in the error object, so you can generate the message now or
* later, at your convenience.
* You should make sure that the JPEG object is cleaned up (with jpeg_abort
* or jpeg_destroy) at some point.
*/
METHODDEF(noreturn_t)
error_exit (j_common_ptr cinfo)
{
/* Always display the message */
(*cinfo->err->output_message) (cinfo);
/* Let the memory manager delete any temp files before we die */
jpeg_destroy(cinfo);
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/*
* Actual output of an error or trace message.
* Applications may override this method to send JPEG messages somewhere
* other than stderr.
*
* On Windows, printing to stderr is generally completely useless,
* so we provide optional code to produce an error-dialog popup.
* Most Windows applications will still prefer to override this routine,
* but if they don't, it'll do something at least marginally useful.
*
* NOTE: to use the library in an environment that doesn't support the
* C stdio library, you may have to delete the call to fprintf() entirely,
* not just not use this routine.
*/
METHODDEF(void)
output_message (j_common_ptr cinfo)
{
char buffer[JMSG_LENGTH_MAX];
/* Create the message */
(*cinfo->err->format_message) (cinfo, buffer);
#ifdef USE_WINDOWS_MESSAGEBOX
/* Display it in a message dialog box */
MessageBox(GetActiveWindow(), buffer, "JPEG Library Error",
MB_OK | MB_ICONERROR);
#else
/* Send it to stderr, adding a newline */
fprintf(stderr, "%s\n", buffer);
#endif
}
/*
* Decide whether to emit a trace or warning message.
* msg_level is one of:
* -1: recoverable corrupt-data warning, may want to abort.
* 0: important advisory messages (always display to user).
* 1: first level of tracing detail.
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