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These interfaces provide access to operating system facilities. They provide a simple wrapping around the underlying C interfaces to make usage from Scheme more convenient. They are also used to implement the Guile port of scsh (see The Scheme shell (scsh)).
Generally there is a single procedure for each corresponding Unix
facility. There are some exceptions, such as procedures implemented for
speed and convenience in Scheme with no primitive Unix equivalent,
e.g. copy-file.
The interfaces are intended as far as possible to be portable across different versions of Unix. In some cases procedures which can’t be implemented on particular systems may become no-ops, or perform limited actions. In other cases they may throw errors.
General naming conventions are as follows:
recv!.
#t or #f) have question marks
appended, e.g., access?.
primitive-fork.
EPERM or R_OK are converted
to Scheme variables of the same name (underscores are not replaced
with hyphens).
Unexpected conditions are generally handled by raising exceptions.
There are a few procedures which return a special value if they don’t
succeed, e.g., getenv returns #f if it the requested
string is not found in the environment. These cases are noted in
the documentation.
For ways to deal with exceptions, see Exceptions.
Errors which the C library would report by returning a null pointer or
through some other means are reported by raising a system-error
exception with scm-error (see Error Reporting). The
data parameter is a list containing the Unix errno value
(an integer). For example,
(define (my-handler key func fmt fmtargs data) (display key) (newline) (display func) (newline) (apply format #t fmt fmtargs) (newline) (display data) (newline)) (catch 'system-error (lambda () (dup2 -123 -456)) my-handler) -| system-error dup2 Bad file descriptor (9)
Return the errno value from a list which is the arguments to an
exception handler. If the exception is not a system-error,
then the return is #f. For example,
(catch
'system-error
(lambda ()
(mkdir "/this-ought-to-fail-if-I'm-not-root"))
(lambda stuff
(let ((errno (system-error-errno stuff)))
(cond
((= errno EACCES)
(display "You're not allowed to do that."))
((= errno EEXIST)
(display "Already exists."))
(#t
(display (strerror errno))))
(newline))))
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