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NAME

     abort2 ā€” abort process with diagnostics

LIBRARY

     Standard C Library (libc, -lc)

SYNOPSIS

     #include <stdlib.h>

     void
     abort2(const char *why, int nargs, void **args);

DESCRIPTION

     The abort2() system call causes the process to be killed and the specified diagnostic
     message (with arguments) to be delivered by the kernel to the syslogd(8) daemon.

     The why argument points to a NUL-terminated string specifying a reason of the program's
     termination (maximum 128 characters long).  The args array contains pointers which will be
     logged numerically (with the kernel's ā€˜%pā€™ printf(9) format).  The nargs argument specifies
     the number of pointers in args (maximum 16).

     The abort2() system call is intended for use in situations where continuation of a process
     is impossible or for other definitive reasons is unwanted, and normal diagnostic channels
     cannot be trusted to deliver the message.

RETURN VALUES

     The abort2() function never returns.

     The process is killed with SIGABRT unless the arguments to abort2() are invalid, in which
     case SIGKILL is used.

EXAMPLES

     #include <stdlib.h>

     if (weight_kg > max_load) {
             void *ptrs[3];

             ptrs[0] = (void *)(intptr_t)weight_kg;
             ptrs[1] = (void *)(intptr_t)max_load;
             ptrs[2] = haystack;
             abort2("Camel overloaded", 3, ptrs);
     }

SEE ALSO

     abort(3), exit(3)

HISTORY

     The abort2() system call first appeared in FreeBSD 7.0.

AUTHORS

     The abort2() system call was designed by Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@FreeBSD.org>.  It was
     implemented by Wojciech A. Koszek <dunstan@freebsd.czest.pl>.