Replace use of strerror() with %s by %m in pg_waldump

Since d6c55de1, src/port/snprintf.c is able to use %m instead of
strerror().  A couple of utilities in src/bin/ have already done the
switch, and do it now for pg_waldump as this reduces the workload for
translators.

Note that more could be done, particularly with pgbench.  Thanks to
Kyotaro Horiguchi for the discussion.

Discussion: https://postgr.es/m/20191129065115.GM2505@paquier.xyz
This commit is contained in:
Michael Paquier 2019-12-24 12:14:08 +09:00
parent e69d644547
commit cce64a51ca
1 changed files with 6 additions and 9 deletions

View File

@ -142,8 +142,7 @@ open_file_in_directory(const char *directory, const char *fname)
fd = open(fpath, O_RDONLY | PG_BINARY, 0);
if (fd < 0 && errno != ENOENT)
fatal_error("could not open file \"%s\": %s",
fname, strerror(errno));
fatal_error("could not open file \"%s\": %m", fname);
return fd;
}
@ -207,8 +206,8 @@ search_directory(const char *directory, const char *fname)
else
{
if (errno != 0)
fatal_error("could not read file \"%s\": %s",
fname, strerror(errno));
fatal_error("could not read file \"%s\": %m",
fname);
else
fatal_error("could not read file \"%s\": read %d of %zu",
fname, r, (Size) XLOG_BLCKSZ);
@ -316,7 +315,7 @@ WALDumpOpenSegment(XLogSegNo nextSegNo, WALSegmentContext *segcxt,
break;
}
fatal_error("could not find file \"%s\": %s", fname, strerror(errno));
fatal_error("could not find file \"%s\": %m", fname);
return -1; /* keep compiler quiet */
}
@ -925,8 +924,7 @@ main(int argc, char **argv)
/* validate path points to directory */
if (!verify_directory(waldir))
{
pg_log_error("path \"%s\" could not be opened: %s",
waldir, strerror(errno));
pg_log_error("could not open directory \"%s\": %m", waldir);
goto bad_argument;
}
}
@ -946,8 +944,7 @@ main(int argc, char **argv)
waldir = directory;
if (!verify_directory(waldir))
fatal_error("could not open directory \"%s\": %s",
waldir, strerror(errno));
fatal_error("could not open directory \"%s\": %m", waldir);
}
waldir = identify_target_directory(waldir, fname);