| # Error.pm |
| # |
| # Copyright (c) 1997-8 Graham Barr <gbarr@ti.com>. All rights reserved. |
| # This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or |
| # modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. |
| # |
| # Based on my original Error.pm, and Exceptions.pm by Peter Seibel |
| # <peter@weblogic.com> and adapted by Jesse Glick <jglick@sig.bsh.com>. |
| # |
| # but modified ***significantly*** |
| |
| package Error; |
| |
| use strict; |
| use warnings; |
| |
| use vars qw($VERSION); |
| use 5.004; |
| |
| $VERSION = "0.17025"; |
| |
| use overload ( |
| '""' => 'stringify', |
| '0+' => 'value', |
| 'bool' => sub { return 1; }, |
| 'fallback' => 1 |
| ); |
| |
| $Error::Depth = 0; # Depth to pass to caller() |
| $Error::Debug = 0; # Generate verbose stack traces |
| @Error::STACK = (); # Clause stack for try |
| $Error::THROWN = undef; # last error thrown, a workaround until die $ref works |
| |
| my $LAST; # Last error created |
| my %ERROR; # Last error associated with package |
| |
| sub _throw_Error_Simple |
| { |
| my $args = shift; |
| return Error::Simple->new($args->{'text'}); |
| } |
| |
| $Error::ObjectifyCallback = \&_throw_Error_Simple; |
| |
| |
| # Exported subs are defined in Error::subs |
| |
| use Scalar::Util (); |
| |
| sub import { |
| shift; |
| my @tags = @_; |
| local $Exporter::ExportLevel = $Exporter::ExportLevel + 1; |
| |
| @tags = grep { |
| if( $_ eq ':warndie' ) { |
| Error::WarnDie->import(); |
| 0; |
| } |
| else { |
| 1; |
| } |
| } @tags; |
| |
| Error::subs->import(@tags); |
| } |
| |
| # I really want to use last for the name of this method, but it is a keyword |
| # which prevent the syntax last Error |
| |
| sub prior { |
| shift; # ignore |
| |
| return $LAST unless @_; |
| |
| my $pkg = shift; |
| return exists $ERROR{$pkg} ? $ERROR{$pkg} : undef |
| unless ref($pkg); |
| |
| my $obj = $pkg; |
| my $err = undef; |
| if($obj->isa('HASH')) { |
| $err = $obj->{'__Error__'} |
| if exists $obj->{'__Error__'}; |
| } |
| elsif($obj->isa('GLOB')) { |
| $err = ${*$obj}{'__Error__'} |
| if exists ${*$obj}{'__Error__'}; |
| } |
| |
| $err; |
| } |
| |
| sub flush { |
| shift; #ignore |
| |
| unless (@_) { |
| $LAST = undef; |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| my $pkg = shift; |
| return unless ref($pkg); |
| |
| undef $ERROR{$pkg} if defined $ERROR{$pkg}; |
| } |
| |
| # Return as much information as possible about where the error |
| # happened. The -stacktrace element only exists if $Error::DEBUG |
| # was set when the error was created |
| |
| sub stacktrace { |
| my $self = shift; |
| |
| return $self->{'-stacktrace'} |
| if exists $self->{'-stacktrace'}; |
| |
| my $text = exists $self->{'-text'} ? $self->{'-text'} : "Died"; |
| |
| $text .= sprintf(" at %s line %d.\n", $self->file, $self->line) |
| unless($text =~ /\n$/s); |
| |
| $text; |
| } |
| |
| |
| sub associate { |
| my $err = shift; |
| my $obj = shift; |
| |
| return unless ref($obj); |
| |
| if($obj->isa('HASH')) { |
| $obj->{'__Error__'} = $err; |
| } |
| elsif($obj->isa('GLOB')) { |
| ${*$obj}{'__Error__'} = $err; |
| } |
| $obj = ref($obj); |
| $ERROR{ ref($obj) } = $err; |
| |
| return; |
| } |
| |
| |
| sub new { |
| my $self = shift; |
| my($pkg,$file,$line) = caller($Error::Depth); |
| |
| my $err = bless { |
| '-package' => $pkg, |
| '-file' => $file, |
| '-line' => $line, |
| @_ |
| }, $self; |
| |
| $err->associate($err->{'-object'}) |
| if(exists $err->{'-object'}); |
| |
| # To always create a stacktrace would be very inefficient, so |
| # we only do it if $Error::Debug is set |
| |
| if($Error::Debug) { |
| require Carp; |
| local $Carp::CarpLevel = $Error::Depth; |
| my $text = defined($err->{'-text'}) ? $err->{'-text'} : "Error"; |
| my $trace = Carp::longmess($text); |
| # Remove try calls from the trace |
| $trace =~ s/(\n\s+\S+__ANON__[^\n]+)?\n\s+eval[^\n]+\n\s+Error::subs::try[^\n]+(?=\n)//sog; |
| $trace =~ s/(\n\s+\S+__ANON__[^\n]+)?\n\s+eval[^\n]+\n\s+Error::subs::run_clauses[^\n]+\n\s+Error::subs::try[^\n]+(?=\n)//sog; |
| $err->{'-stacktrace'} = $trace |
| } |
| |
| $@ = $LAST = $ERROR{$pkg} = $err; |
| } |
| |
| # Throw an error. this contains some very gory code. |
| |
| sub throw { |
| my $self = shift; |
| local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1; |
| |
| # if we are not rethrow-ing then create the object to throw |
| $self = $self->new(@_) unless ref($self); |
| |
| die $Error::THROWN = $self; |
| } |
| |
| # syntactic sugar for |
| # |
| # die with Error( ... ); |
| |
| sub with { |
| my $self = shift; |
| local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1; |
| |
| $self->new(@_); |
| } |
| |
| # syntactic sugar for |
| # |
| # record Error( ... ) and return; |
| |
| sub record { |
| my $self = shift; |
| local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1; |
| |
| $self->new(@_); |
| } |
| |
| # catch clause for |
| # |
| # try { ... } catch CLASS with { ... } |
| |
| sub catch { |
| my $pkg = shift; |
| my $code = shift; |
| my $clauses = shift || {}; |
| my $catch = $clauses->{'catch'} ||= []; |
| |
| unshift @$catch, $pkg, $code; |
| |
| $clauses; |
| } |
| |
| # Object query methods |
| |
| sub object { |
| my $self = shift; |
| exists $self->{'-object'} ? $self->{'-object'} : undef; |
| } |
| |
| sub file { |
| my $self = shift; |
| exists $self->{'-file'} ? $self->{'-file'} : undef; |
| } |
| |
| sub line { |
| my $self = shift; |
| exists $self->{'-line'} ? $self->{'-line'} : undef; |
| } |
| |
| sub text { |
| my $self = shift; |
| exists $self->{'-text'} ? $self->{'-text'} : undef; |
| } |
| |
| # overload methods |
| |
| sub stringify { |
| my $self = shift; |
| defined $self->{'-text'} ? $self->{'-text'} : "Died"; |
| } |
| |
| sub value { |
| my $self = shift; |
| exists $self->{'-value'} ? $self->{'-value'} : undef; |
| } |
| |
| package Error::Simple; |
| |
| use vars qw($VERSION); |
| |
| $VERSION = "0.17025"; |
| |
| @Error::Simple::ISA = qw(Error); |
| |
| sub new { |
| my $self = shift; |
| my $text = "" . shift; |
| my $value = shift; |
| my(@args) = (); |
| |
| local $Error::Depth = $Error::Depth + 1; |
| |
| @args = ( -file => $1, -line => $2) |
| if($text =~ s/\s+at\s+(\S+)\s+line\s+(\d+)(?:,\s*<[^>]*>\s+line\s+\d+)?\.?\n?$//s); |
| push(@args, '-value', 0 + $value) |
| if defined($value); |
| |
| $self->SUPER::new(-text => $text, @args); |
| } |
| |
| sub stringify { |
| my $self = shift; |
| my $text = $self->SUPER::stringify; |
| $text .= sprintf(" at %s line %d.\n", $self->file, $self->line) |
| unless($text =~ /\n$/s); |
| $text; |
| } |
| |
| ########################################################################## |
| ########################################################################## |
| |
| # Inspired by code from Jesse Glick <jglick@sig.bsh.com> and |
| # Peter Seibel <peter@weblogic.com> |
| |
| package Error::subs; |
| |
| use Exporter (); |
| use vars qw(@EXPORT_OK @ISA %EXPORT_TAGS); |
| |
| @EXPORT_OK = qw(try with finally except otherwise); |
| %EXPORT_TAGS = (try => \@EXPORT_OK); |
| |
| @ISA = qw(Exporter); |
| |
| sub run_clauses ($$$\@) { |
| my($clauses,$err,$wantarray,$result) = @_; |
| my $code = undef; |
| |
| $err = $Error::ObjectifyCallback->({'text' =>$err}) unless ref($err); |
| |
| CATCH: { |
| |
| # catch |
| my $catch; |
| if(defined($catch = $clauses->{'catch'})) { |
| my $i = 0; |
| |
| CATCHLOOP: |
| for( ; $i < @$catch ; $i += 2) { |
| my $pkg = $catch->[$i]; |
| unless(defined $pkg) { |
| #except |
| splice(@$catch,$i,2,$catch->[$i+1]->($err)); |
| $i -= 2; |
| next CATCHLOOP; |
| } |
| elsif(Scalar::Util::blessed($err) && $err->isa($pkg)) { |
| $code = $catch->[$i+1]; |
| while(1) { |
| my $more = 0; |
| local($Error::THROWN, $@); |
| my $ok = eval { |
| $@ = $err; |
| if($wantarray) { |
| @{$result} = $code->($err,\$more); |
| } |
| elsif(defined($wantarray)) { |
| @{$result} = (); |
| $result->[0] = $code->($err,\$more); |
| } |
| else { |
| $code->($err,\$more); |
| } |
| 1; |
| }; |
| if( $ok ) { |
| next CATCHLOOP if $more; |
| undef $err; |
| } |
| else { |
| $err = $@ || $Error::THROWN; |
| $err = $Error::ObjectifyCallback->({'text' =>$err}) |
| unless ref($err); |
| } |
| last CATCH; |
| }; |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| |
| # otherwise |
| my $owise; |
| if(defined($owise = $clauses->{'otherwise'})) { |
| my $code = $clauses->{'otherwise'}; |
| my $more = 0; |
| local($Error::THROWN, $@); |
| my $ok = eval { |
| $@ = $err; |
| if($wantarray) { |
| @{$result} = $code->($err,\$more); |
| } |
| elsif(defined($wantarray)) { |
| @{$result} = (); |
| $result->[0] = $code->($err,\$more); |
| } |
| else { |
| $code->($err,\$more); |
| } |
| 1; |
| }; |
| if( $ok ) { |
| undef $err; |
| } |
| else { |
| $err = $@ || $Error::THROWN; |
| |
| $err = $Error::ObjectifyCallback->({'text' =>$err}) |
| unless ref($err); |
| } |
| } |
| } |
| $err; |
| } |
| |
| sub try (&;$) { |
| my $try = shift; |
| my $clauses = @_ ? shift : {}; |
| my $ok = 0; |
| my $err = undef; |
| my @result = (); |
| |
| unshift @Error::STACK, $clauses; |
| |
| my $wantarray = wantarray(); |
| |
| do { |
| local $Error::THROWN = undef; |
| local $@ = undef; |
| |
| $ok = eval { |
| if($wantarray) { |
| @result = $try->(); |
| } |
| elsif(defined $wantarray) { |
| $result[0] = $try->(); |
| } |
| else { |
| $try->(); |
| } |
| 1; |
| }; |
| |
| $err = $@ || $Error::THROWN |
| unless $ok; |
| }; |
| |
| shift @Error::STACK; |
| |
| $err = run_clauses($clauses,$err,wantarray,@result) |
| unless($ok); |
| |
| $clauses->{'finally'}->() |
| if(defined($clauses->{'finally'})); |
| |
| if (defined($err)) |
| { |
| if (Scalar::Util::blessed($err) && $err->can('throw')) |
| { |
| throw $err; |
| } |
| else |
| { |
| die $err; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| wantarray ? @result : $result[0]; |
| } |
| |
| # Each clause adds a sub to the list of clauses. The finally clause is |
| # always the last, and the otherwise clause is always added just before |
| # the finally clause. |
| # |
| # All clauses, except the finally clause, add a sub which takes one argument |
| # this argument will be the error being thrown. The sub will return a code ref |
| # if that clause can handle that error, otherwise undef is returned. |
| # |
| # The otherwise clause adds a sub which unconditionally returns the users |
| # code reference, this is why it is forced to be last. |
| # |
| # The catch clause is defined in Error.pm, as the syntax causes it to |
| # be called as a method |
| |
| sub with (&;$) { |
| @_ |
| } |
| |
| sub finally (&) { |
| my $code = shift; |
| my $clauses = { 'finally' => $code }; |
| $clauses; |
| } |
| |
| # The except clause is a block which returns a hashref or a list of |
| # key-value pairs, where the keys are the classes and the values are subs. |
| |
| sub except (&;$) { |
| my $code = shift; |
| my $clauses = shift || {}; |
| my $catch = $clauses->{'catch'} ||= []; |
| |
| my $sub = sub { |
| my $ref; |
| my(@array) = $code->($_[0]); |
| if(@array == 1 && ref($array[0])) { |
| $ref = $array[0]; |
| $ref = [ %$ref ] |
| if(UNIVERSAL::isa($ref,'HASH')); |
| } |
| else { |
| $ref = \@array; |
| } |
| @$ref |
| }; |
| |
| unshift @{$catch}, undef, $sub; |
| |
| $clauses; |
| } |
| |
| sub otherwise (&;$) { |
| my $code = shift; |
| my $clauses = shift || {}; |
| |
| if(exists $clauses->{'otherwise'}) { |
| require Carp; |
| Carp::croak("Multiple otherwise clauses"); |
| } |
| |
| $clauses->{'otherwise'} = $code; |
| |
| $clauses; |
| } |
| |
| 1; |
| |
| package Error::WarnDie; |
| |
| sub gen_callstack($) |
| { |
| my ( $start ) = @_; |
| |
| require Carp; |
| local $Carp::CarpLevel = $start; |
| my $trace = Carp::longmess(""); |
| # Remove try calls from the trace |
| $trace =~ s/(\n\s+\S+__ANON__[^\n]+)?\n\s+eval[^\n]+\n\s+Error::subs::try[^\n]+(?=\n)//sog; |
| $trace =~ s/(\n\s+\S+__ANON__[^\n]+)?\n\s+eval[^\n]+\n\s+Error::subs::run_clauses[^\n]+\n\s+Error::subs::try[^\n]+(?=\n)//sog; |
| my @callstack = split( m/\n/, $trace ); |
| return @callstack; |
| } |
| |
| my $old_DIE; |
| my $old_WARN; |
| |
| sub DEATH |
| { |
| my ( $e ) = @_; |
| |
| local $SIG{__DIE__} = $old_DIE if( defined $old_DIE ); |
| |
| die @_ if $^S; |
| |
| my ( $etype, $message, $location, @callstack ); |
| if ( ref($e) && $e->isa( "Error" ) ) { |
| $etype = "exception of type " . ref( $e ); |
| $message = $e->text; |
| $location = $e->file . ":" . $e->line; |
| @callstack = split( m/\n/, $e->stacktrace ); |
| } |
| else { |
| # Don't apply subsequent layer of message formatting |
| die $e if( $e =~ m/^\nUnhandled perl error caught at toplevel:\n\n/ ); |
| $etype = "perl error"; |
| my $stackdepth = 0; |
| while( caller( $stackdepth ) =~ m/^Error(?:$|::)/ ) { |
| $stackdepth++ |
| } |
| |
| @callstack = gen_callstack( $stackdepth + 1 ); |
| |
| $message = "$e"; |
| chomp $message; |
| |
| if ( $message =~ s/ at (.*?) line (\d+)\.$// ) { |
| $location = $1 . ":" . $2; |
| } |
| else { |
| my @caller = caller( $stackdepth ); |
| $location = $caller[1] . ":" . $caller[2]; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| shift @callstack; |
| # Do it this way in case there are no elements; we don't print a spurious \n |
| my $callstack = join( "", map { "$_\n"} @callstack ); |
| |
| die "\nUnhandled $etype caught at toplevel:\n\n $message\n\nThrown from: $location\n\nFull stack trace:\n\n$callstack\n"; |
| } |
| |
| sub TAXES |
| { |
| my ( $message ) = @_; |
| |
| local $SIG{__WARN__} = $old_WARN if( defined $old_WARN ); |
| |
| $message =~ s/ at .*? line \d+\.$//; |
| chomp $message; |
| |
| my @callstack = gen_callstack( 1 ); |
| my $location = shift @callstack; |
| |
| # $location already starts in a leading space |
| $message .= $location; |
| |
| # Do it this way in case there are no elements; we don't print a spurious \n |
| my $callstack = join( "", map { "$_\n"} @callstack ); |
| |
| warn "$message:\n$callstack"; |
| } |
| |
| sub import |
| { |
| $old_DIE = $SIG{__DIE__}; |
| $old_WARN = $SIG{__WARN__}; |
| |
| $SIG{__DIE__} = \&DEATH; |
| $SIG{__WARN__} = \&TAXES; |
| } |
| |
| 1; |
| |
| __END__ |
| |
| =head1 NAME |
| |
| Error - Error/exception handling in an OO-ish way |
| |
| =head1 WARNING |
| |
| Using the "Error" module is B<no longer recommended> due to the black-magical |
| nature of its syntactic sugar, which often tends to break. Its maintainers |
| have stopped actively writing code that uses it, and discourage people |
| from doing so. See the "SEE ALSO" section below for better recommendations. |
| |
| =head1 SYNOPSIS |
| |
| use Error qw(:try); |
| |
| throw Error::Simple( "A simple error"); |
| |
| sub xyz { |
| ... |
| record Error::Simple("A simple error") |
| and return; |
| } |
| |
| unlink($file) or throw Error::Simple("$file: $!",$!); |
| |
| try { |
| do_some_stuff(); |
| die "error!" if $condition; |
| throw Error::Simple "Oops!" if $other_condition; |
| } |
| catch Error::IO with { |
| my $E = shift; |
| print STDERR "File ", $E->{'-file'}, " had a problem\n"; |
| } |
| except { |
| my $E = shift; |
| my $general_handler=sub {send_message $E->{-description}}; |
| return { |
| UserException1 => $general_handler, |
| UserException2 => $general_handler |
| }; |
| } |
| otherwise { |
| print STDERR "Well I don't know what to say\n"; |
| } |
| finally { |
| close_the_garage_door_already(); # Should be reliable |
| }; # Don't forget the trailing ; or you might be surprised |
| |
| =head1 DESCRIPTION |
| |
| The C<Error> package provides two interfaces. Firstly C<Error> provides |
| a procedural interface to exception handling. Secondly C<Error> is a |
| base class for errors/exceptions that can either be thrown, for |
| subsequent catch, or can simply be recorded. |
| |
| Errors in the class C<Error> should not be thrown directly, but the |
| user should throw errors from a sub-class of C<Error>. |
| |
| =head1 PROCEDURAL INTERFACE |
| |
| C<Error> exports subroutines to perform exception handling. These will |
| be exported if the C<:try> tag is used in the C<use> line. |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item try BLOCK CLAUSES |
| |
| C<try> is the main subroutine called by the user. All other subroutines |
| exported are clauses to the try subroutine. |
| |
| The BLOCK will be evaluated and, if no error is throw, try will return |
| the result of the block. |
| |
| C<CLAUSES> are the subroutines below, which describe what to do in the |
| event of an error being thrown within BLOCK. |
| |
| =item catch CLASS with BLOCK |
| |
| This clauses will cause all errors that satisfy C<$err-E<gt>isa(CLASS)> |
| to be caught and handled by evaluating C<BLOCK>. |
| |
| C<BLOCK> will be passed two arguments. The first will be the error |
| being thrown. The second is a reference to a scalar variable. If this |
| variable is set by the catch block then, on return from the catch |
| block, try will continue processing as if the catch block was never |
| found. The error will also be available in C<$@>. |
| |
| To propagate the error the catch block may call C<$err-E<gt>throw> |
| |
| If the scalar reference by the second argument is not set, and the |
| error is not thrown. Then the current try block will return with the |
| result from the catch block. |
| |
| =item except BLOCK |
| |
| When C<try> is looking for a handler, if an except clause is found |
| C<BLOCK> is evaluated. The return value from this block should be a |
| HASHREF or a list of key-value pairs, where the keys are class names |
| and the values are CODE references for the handler of errors of that |
| type. |
| |
| =item otherwise BLOCK |
| |
| Catch any error by executing the code in C<BLOCK> |
| |
| When evaluated C<BLOCK> will be passed one argument, which will be the |
| error being processed. The error will also be available in C<$@>. |
| |
| Only one otherwise block may be specified per try block |
| |
| =item finally BLOCK |
| |
| Execute the code in C<BLOCK> either after the code in the try block has |
| successfully completed, or if the try block throws an error then |
| C<BLOCK> will be executed after the handler has completed. |
| |
| If the handler throws an error then the error will be caught, the |
| finally block will be executed and the error will be re-thrown. |
| |
| Only one finally block may be specified per try block |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 COMPATIBILITY |
| |
| L<Moose> exports a keyword called C<with> which clashes with Error's. This |
| example returns a prototype mismatch error: |
| |
| package MyTest; |
| |
| use warnings; |
| use Moose; |
| use Error qw(:try); |
| |
| (Thanks to C<maik.hentsche@amd.com> for the report.). |
| |
| =head1 CLASS INTERFACE |
| |
| =head2 CONSTRUCTORS |
| |
| The C<Error> object is implemented as a HASH. This HASH is initialized |
| with the arguments that are passed to it's constructor. The elements |
| that are used by, or are retrievable by the C<Error> class are listed |
| below, other classes may add to these. |
| |
| -file |
| -line |
| -text |
| -value |
| -object |
| |
| If C<-file> or C<-line> are not specified in the constructor arguments |
| then these will be initialized with the file name and line number where |
| the constructor was called from. |
| |
| If the error is associated with an object then the object should be |
| passed as the C<-object> argument. This will allow the C<Error> package |
| to associate the error with the object. |
| |
| The C<Error> package remembers the last error created, and also the |
| last error associated with a package. This could either be the last |
| error created by a sub in that package, or the last error which passed |
| an object blessed into that package as the C<-object> argument. |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item Error->new() |
| |
| See the Error::Simple documentation. |
| |
| =item throw ( [ ARGS ] ) |
| |
| Create a new C<Error> object and throw an error, which will be caught |
| by a surrounding C<try> block, if there is one. Otherwise it will cause |
| the program to exit. |
| |
| C<throw> may also be called on an existing error to re-throw it. |
| |
| =item with ( [ ARGS ] ) |
| |
| Create a new C<Error> object and returns it. This is defined for |
| syntactic sugar, eg |
| |
| die with Some::Error ( ... ); |
| |
| =item record ( [ ARGS ] ) |
| |
| Create a new C<Error> object and returns it. This is defined for |
| syntactic sugar, eg |
| |
| record Some::Error ( ... ) |
| and return; |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head2 STATIC METHODS |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item prior ( [ PACKAGE ] ) |
| |
| Return the last error created, or the last error associated with |
| C<PACKAGE> |
| |
| =item flush ( [ PACKAGE ] ) |
| |
| Flush the last error created, or the last error associated with |
| C<PACKAGE>.It is necessary to clear the error stack before exiting the |
| package or uncaught errors generated using C<record> will be reported. |
| |
| $Error->flush; |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head2 OBJECT METHODS |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item stacktrace |
| |
| If the variable C<$Error::Debug> was non-zero when the error was |
| created, then C<stacktrace> returns a string created by calling |
| C<Carp::longmess>. If the variable was zero the C<stacktrace> returns |
| the text of the error appended with the filename and line number of |
| where the error was created, providing the text does not end with a |
| newline. |
| |
| =item object |
| |
| The object this error was associated with |
| |
| =item file |
| |
| The file where the constructor of this error was called from |
| |
| =item line |
| |
| The line where the constructor of this error was called from |
| |
| =item text |
| |
| The text of the error |
| |
| =item $err->associate($obj) |
| |
| Associates an error with an object to allow error propagation. I.e: |
| |
| $ber->encode(...) or |
| return Error->prior($ber)->associate($ldap); |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head2 OVERLOAD METHODS |
| |
| =over 4 |
| |
| =item stringify |
| |
| A method that converts the object into a string. This method may simply |
| return the same as the C<text> method, or it may append more |
| information. For example the file name and line number. |
| |
| By default this method returns the C<-text> argument that was passed to |
| the constructor, or the string C<"Died"> if none was given. |
| |
| =item value |
| |
| A method that will return a value that can be associated with the |
| error. For example if an error was created due to the failure of a |
| system call, then this may return the numeric value of C<$!> at the |
| time. |
| |
| By default this method returns the C<-value> argument that was passed |
| to the constructor. |
| |
| =back |
| |
| =head1 PRE-DEFINED ERROR CLASSES |
| |
| =head2 Error::Simple |
| |
| This class can be used to hold simple error strings and values. It's |
| constructor takes two arguments. The first is a text value, the second |
| is a numeric value. These values are what will be returned by the |
| overload methods. |
| |
| If the text value ends with C<at file line 1> as $@ strings do, then |
| this information will be used to set the C<-file> and C<-line> arguments |
| of the error object. |
| |
| This class is used internally if an eval'd block die's with an error |
| that is a plain string. (Unless C<$Error::ObjectifyCallback> is modified) |
| |
| |
| =head1 $Error::ObjectifyCallback |
| |
| This variable holds a reference to a subroutine that converts errors that |
| are plain strings to objects. It is used by Error.pm to convert textual |
| errors to objects, and can be overridden by the user. |
| |
| It accepts a single argument which is a hash reference to named parameters. |
| Currently the only named parameter passed is C<'text'> which is the text |
| of the error, but others may be available in the future. |
| |
| For example the following code will cause Error.pm to throw objects of the |
| class MyError::Bar by default: |
| |
| sub throw_MyError_Bar |
| { |
| my $args = shift; |
| my $err = MyError::Bar->new(); |
| $err->{'MyBarText'} = $args->{'text'}; |
| return $err; |
| } |
| |
| { |
| local $Error::ObjectifyCallback = \&throw_MyError_Bar; |
| |
| # Error handling here. |
| } |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| =head1 MESSAGE HANDLERS |
| |
| C<Error> also provides handlers to extend the output of the C<warn()> perl |
| function, and to handle the printing of a thrown C<Error> that is not caught |
| or otherwise handled. These are not installed by default, but are requested |
| using the C<:warndie> tag in the C<use> line. |
| |
| use Error qw( :warndie ); |
| |
| These new error handlers are installed in C<$SIG{__WARN__}> and |
| C<$SIG{__DIE__}>. If these handlers are already defined when the tag is |
| imported, the old values are stored, and used during the new code. Thus, to |
| arrange for custom handling of warnings and errors, you will need to perform |
| something like the following: |
| |
| BEGIN { |
| $SIG{__WARN__} = sub { |
| print STDERR "My special warning handler: $_[0]" |
| }; |
| } |
| |
| use Error qw( :warndie ); |
| |
| Note that setting C<$SIG{__WARN__}> after the C<:warndie> tag has been |
| imported will overwrite the handler that C<Error> provides. If this cannot be |
| avoided, then the tag can be explicitly C<import>ed later |
| |
| use Error; |
| |
| $SIG{__WARN__} = ...; |
| |
| import Error qw( :warndie ); |
| |
| =head2 EXAMPLE |
| |
| The C<__DIE__> handler turns messages such as |
| |
| Can't call method "foo" on an undefined value at examples/warndie.pl line 16. |
| |
| into |
| |
| Unhandled perl error caught at toplevel: |
| |
| Can't call method "foo" on an undefined value |
| |
| Thrown from: examples/warndie.pl:16 |
| |
| Full stack trace: |
| |
| main::inner('undef') called at examples/warndie.pl line 20 |
| main::outer('undef') called at examples/warndie.pl line 23 |
| |
| =cut |
| |
| =head1 SEE ALSO |
| |
| See L<Exception::Class> for a different module providing Object-Oriented |
| exception handling, along with a convenient syntax for declaring hierarchies |
| for them. It doesn't provide Error's syntactic sugar of C<try { ... }>, |
| C<catch { ... }>, etc. which may be a good thing or a bad thing based |
| on what you want. (Because Error's syntactic sugar tends to break.) |
| |
| L<Error::Exception> aims to combine L<Error> and L<Exception::Class> |
| "with correct stringification". |
| |
| L<TryCatch> and L<Try::Tiny> are similar in concept to Error.pm only providing |
| a syntax that hopefully breaks less. |
| |
| =head1 KNOWN BUGS |
| |
| None, but that does not mean there are not any. |
| |
| =head1 AUTHORS |
| |
| Graham Barr <gbarr@pobox.com> |
| |
| The code that inspired me to write this was originally written by |
| Peter Seibel <peter@weblogic.com> and adapted by Jesse Glick |
| <jglick@sig.bsh.com>. |
| |
| C<:warndie> handlers added by Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk> |
| |
| =head1 MAINTAINER |
| |
| Shlomi Fish, L<http://www.shlomifish.org/> . |
| |
| =head1 PAST MAINTAINERS |
| |
| Arun Kumar U <u_arunkumar@yahoo.com> |
| |
| =head1 COPYRIGHT |
| |
| Copyright (c) 1997-8 Graham Barr. All rights reserved. |
| This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it |
| under the same terms as Perl itself. |
| |
| =cut |