1failures(3) User Contributed Perl Documentation failures(3)
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6 failures - Minimalist exception hierarchy generator
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9 version 0.004
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12 use failures qw/io::file io::network/;
13 use Try::Tiny;
14 use Safe::Isa; # for $_isa
15
16 try {
17 process_file or
18 failure::io::file->throw("oops, something bad happened: $!");
19 }
20 catch {
21 if ( $_->$_isa("failure::io::file") ) {
22 ...
23 }
24 elsif( $_->$_isa("failure::io") ) {
25 ...
26 }
27 elsif( $_->$_isa("failure") ) {
28 ...
29 }
30 else {
31 ...
32 }
33 }
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36 This module lets you define an exception hierarchy quickly and simply.
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38 Here were my design goals:
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40 · minimalist interface
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42 · 80% of features in 20% of lines of code
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44 · depend only on core modules (nearly achieved)
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46 · support hierarchical error types
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48 · identify errors types by name (class) not by parsing strings
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50 · leave (possibly expensive) trace decisions to the thrower
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52 Currently, "failures" is implemented in under 70 lines of code.
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54 Failure objects are implemented with Class::Tiny to allow easy
55 subclassing (see custom::failures), but "Class::Tiny" only requires
56 core modules, so other than that exception, the 'core only' goal is
57 achieved.
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60 Defining failure categories
61 use failures qw/foo::bar foo::baz/;
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63 This will define the following classes in the "failure" namespace:
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65 · "failure"
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67 · "failure::foo"
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69 · "failure::foo::bar"
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71 · "failure::foo::baz"
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73 Subclasses inherit, so "failure::foo::bar" is-a "failure::foo" and
74 "failure::foo" is-a "failure".
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76 Attributes
77 A failure class has three attributes: "msg", "payload", and "trace".
78 Their usage is described below. Accessors exist for all three.
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80 Throwing failures
81 The "throw" method of a failure class takes a single, optional argument
82 that modifies how failure objects are stringified.
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84 If no argument is given, a default message is generated if the object
85 is stringified:
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87 say failure::foo::bar->throw;
88 # Caught failure::foo::bar
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90 With a single, non-hash-reference argument, the argument is used for
91 the "msg" attribute and is appended if the object is stringified.
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93 say failure::foo::bar->throw("Ouch!");
94 # Caught failure::foo::bar: Ouch!
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96 With a hash reference argument, the "msg" key provides the string to
97 append to the default error. If you have extra data to attach to the
98 exception, use the "payload" key:
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100 failure::foo::bar->throw({
101 msg => "Ouch!",
102 payload => $extra_data,
103 });
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105 If an optional "trace" key is provided, it is appended if the object is
106 stringified. To loosely emulate "die" and provide a simple filename
107 and line number, use the "failure->line_trace" class method:
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109 failure::foo::bar->throw({
110 msg => "Ouch!",
111 trace => failure->line_trace,
112 });
113
114 # Caught failure::foo::bar: Ouch!
115 #
116 # Failure caught at <FILENAME> line <NUMBER>
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118 To provide a trace just like the Carp module (including respecting
119 @CARP_NOT) use the "croak_trace" or "confess_trace" class methods:
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121 failure::foo::bar->throw({
122 msg => "Ouch!",
123 trace => failure->croak_trace,
124 });
125
126 # Caught failure::foo::bar: Ouch!
127 #
128 # Failure caught at <CALLING-FILENAME> line <NUMBER>
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130 failure::foo::bar->throw({
131 msg => "Ouch!",
132 trace => failure->confess_trace,
133 });
134
135 # Caught failure::foo::bar: Ouch!
136 #
137 # Failure caught at <FILENAME> line <NUMBER>
138 # [confess stack trace continues]
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140 You can provide a "trace" key with any object that overrides
141 stringification, like Devel::StackTrace:
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143 failure::foo::bar->throw({
144 msg => "Ouch!",
145 trace => Devel::StackTrace->new,
146 });
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148 # Caught failure::foo::bar: Ouch!
149 #
150 # [stringified Devel::StackTrace object]
151
152 Catching failures
153 Use Try::Tiny, of course. Within a catch block, you know that $_ is
154 defined, but it still might be an unblessed reference or something that
155 is risky to call "isa" on. If you load Safe::Isa, you get a code
156 reference in $_isa that calls "isa" only on objects.
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158 So catching looks like this:
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160 use Try::Tiny;
161 use Safe::Isa;
162
163 try { ... }
164 catch {
165 if ( $_->$_isa("failure::foo") ) {
166 # handle it
167 }
168 };
169
170 If you need to rethrow the exception, just use "die":
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172 elsif ( $_->$_isa("failure") ) {
173 die $_;
174 }
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176 Overriding failure class behavior
177 See custom::failures.
178
180 There are many error/exception systems on CPAN. This one is designed
181 to be minimalist.
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183 If you have more complex or substantial needs, people I know and trust
184 seem to be recommending:
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186 · Throwable — exceptions as a Moo/Moose role
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188 · Throwable::X — Throwable extended with extra goodies
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190 Here are other modules I found that weren't appropriate for my needs or
191 didn't suit my taste:
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193 · Class::Throwable — no hierarchy and always builds a full stack
194 trace
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196 · Error::Tiny — blends Try::Tiny and a trivial exception base class
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198 · Exception::Base — complexity on par with Exception::Class, but
199 highly optimized for speed
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201 · Exception::Class — once highly recommended, but even the author now
202 suggests Throwable
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204 · Exception::Simple — very simple, but always uses "caller" and has
205 no hierarchy
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207 · Exception::Tiny — not bad, but always uses "caller" and setting up
208 a hierarchy requires extra work
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210 · Ouch — simple, well-thought out, but no hierarchy; also cutesy
211 function names
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213 Here are some that I'm very dubious about:
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215 · Err — alpha since 2012
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217 · Error — no longer recommended by maintainer
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219 · errors — "still under design" since 2009
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221 · Exception — dates back to 1996 and undocumented
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224 Bugs / Feature Requests
225 Please report any bugs or feature requests through the issue tracker at
226 <https://github.com/dagolden/failures/issues>. You will be notified
227 automatically of any progress on your issue.
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229 Source Code
230 This is open source software. The code repository is available for
231 public review and contribution under the terms of the license.
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233 <https://github.com/dagolden/failures>
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235 git clone https://github.com/dagolden/failures.git
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238 David Golden <dagolden@cpan.org>
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241 Michael Jemmeson <mjemmeson@cpan.org>
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244 This software is Copyright (c) 2013 by David Golden.
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246 This is free software, licensed under:
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248 The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004
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252perl v5.28.1 2014-07-14 failures(3)