// raw_fd_ostream
//===----------------------------------------------------------------------===//
-/// raw_fd_ostream - Open the specified file for writing. If an error
-/// occurs, information about the error is put into ErrorInfo, and the
-/// stream should be immediately destroyed; the string will be empty
-/// if no error occurred.
-raw_fd_ostream::raw_fd_ostream(const char *Filename, std::string &ErrorInfo,
+raw_fd_ostream::raw_fd_ostream(StringRef Filename, std::error_code &EC,
sys::fs::OpenFlags Flags)
: Error(false), UseAtomicWrites(false), pos(0) {
- assert(Filename && "Filename is null");
- ErrorInfo.clear();
-
+ EC = std::error_code();
// Handle "-" as stdout. Note that when we do this, we consider ourself
// the owner of stdout. This means that we can do things like close the
// file descriptor when we're done and set the "binary" flag globally.
- if (Filename[0] == '-' && Filename[1] == 0) {
+ if (Filename == "-") {
FD = STDOUT_FILENO;
// If user requested binary then put stdout into binary mode if
// possible.
return;
}
- std::error_code EC = sys::fs::openFileForWrite(Filename, FD, Flags);
+ EC = sys::fs::openFileForWrite(Filename, FD, Flags);
if (EC) {
- ErrorInfo = "Error opening output file '" + std::string(Filename) + "': " +
- EC.message();
ShouldClose = false;
return;
}
/// Use it like: outs() << "foo" << "bar";
raw_ostream &llvm::outs() {
// Set buffer settings to model stdout behavior.
- // Delete the file descriptor when the program exists, forcing error
+ // Delete the file descriptor when the program exits, forcing error
// detection. If you don't want this behavior, don't use outs().
static raw_fd_ostream S(STDOUT_FILENO, true);
return S;