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package autodie::exception; use 5.008; use strict; use warnings; use Carp qw(croak); use Scalar::Util qw(blessed); our $VERSION = '2.34'; # VERSION: Generated by DZP::OurPkg:Version # ABSTRACT: Exceptions from autodying functions. our $DEBUG = 0; use overload q{""} => "stringify", # Overload smart-match only if we're using 5.10 or up ($] >= 5.010 ? ('~~' => "matches") : ()), fallback => 1 ; my $PACKAGE = __PACKAGE__; # Useful to have a scalar for hash keys. =head1 NAME autodie::exception - Exceptions from autodying functions. =head1 SYNOPSIS eval { use autodie; open(my $fh, '<', 'some_file.txt'); ... }; if (my $E = $@) { say "Ooops! ",$E->caller," had problems: $@"; } =head1 DESCRIPTION When an L<autodie> enabled function fails, it generates an C<autodie::exception> object. This can be interrogated to determine further information about the error that occurred. This document is broken into two sections; those methods that are most useful to the end-developer, and those methods for anyone wishing to subclass or get very familiar with C<autodie::exception>. =head2 Common Methods These methods are intended to be used in the everyday dealing of exceptions. The following assume that the error has been copied into a separate scalar: if ($E = $@) { ... } This is not required, but is recommended in case any code is called which may reset or alter C<$@>. =cut =head3 args my $array_ref = $E->args; Provides a reference to the arguments passed to the subroutine that died. =cut sub args { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{args}; } =head3 function my $sub = $E->function; The subroutine (including package) that threw the exception. =cut sub function { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{function}; } =head3 file my $file = $E->file; The file in which the error occurred (eg, C<myscript.pl> or C<MyTest.pm>). =cut sub file { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{file}; } =head3 package my $package = $E->package; The package from which the exceptional subroutine was called. =cut sub package { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{package}; } =head3 caller my $caller = $E->caller; The subroutine that I<called> the exceptional code. =cut sub caller { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{caller}; } =head3 line my $line = $E->line; The line in C<< $E->file >> where the exceptional code was called. =cut sub line { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{line}; } =head3 context my $context = $E->context; The context in which the subroutine was called by autodie; usually the same as the context in which you called the autodying subroutine. This can be 'list', 'scalar', or undefined (unknown). It will never be 'void', as C<autodie> always captures the return value in one way or another. For some core functions that always return a scalar value regardless of their context (eg, C<chown>), this may be 'scalar', even if you used a list context. =cut # TODO: The comments above say this can be undefined. Is that actually # the case? (With 'system', perhaps?) sub context { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{context} } =head3 return my $return_value = $E->return; The value(s) returned by the failed subroutine. When the subroutine was called in a list context, this will always be a reference to an array containing the results. When the subroutine was called in a scalar context, this will be the actual scalar returned. =cut sub return { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{return} } =head3 errno my $errno = $E->errno; The value of C<$!> at the time when the exception occurred. B<NOTE>: This method will leave the main C<autodie::exception> class and become part of a role in the future. You should only call C<errno> for exceptions where C<$!> would reasonably have been set on failure. =cut # TODO: Make errno part of a role. It doesn't make sense for # everything. sub errno { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{errno}; } =head3 eval_error my $old_eval_error = $E->eval_error; The contents of C<$@> immediately after autodie triggered an exception. This may be useful when dealing with modules such as L<Text::Balanced> that set (but do not throw) C<$@> on error. =cut sub eval_error { return $_[0]->{$PACKAGE}{eval_error}; } =head3 matches if ( $e->matches('open') ) { ... } if ( 'open' ~~ $e ) { ... } C<matches> is used to determine whether a given exception matches a particular role. An exception is considered to match a string if: =over 4 =item * For a string not starting with a colon, the string exactly matches the package and subroutine that threw the exception. For example, C<MyModule::log>. If the string does not contain a package name, C<CORE::> is assumed. =item * For a string that does start with a colon, if the subroutine throwing the exception I<does> that behaviour. For example, the C<CORE::open> subroutine does C<:file>, C<:io> and C<:all>. See L<autodie/CATEGORIES> for further information. On Perl 5.10 and above, using smart-match (C<~~>) with an C<autodie::exception> object will use C<matches> underneath. This module used to recommend using smart-match with the exception object on the left hand side, but in future Perls that is likely to stop working. The smart-match facility of this class should only be used with the exception object on the right hand side. Having the exception object on the right is both future-proof and portable to older Perls, back to 5.10. Beware that this facility can only be relied upon when it is certain that the exception object actually is an C<autodie::exception> object; it is no more capable than an explicit call to the C<matches> method. =back =cut { my (%cache); sub matches { my ($this, $that) = @_; # TODO - Handle references croak "UNIMPLEMENTED" if ref $that; my $sub = $this->function; if ($DEBUG) { my $sub2 = $this->function; warn "Smart-matching $that against $sub / $sub2\n"; } # Direct subname match. return 1 if $that eq $sub; return 1 if $that !~ /:/ and "CORE::$that" eq $sub; return 0 if $that !~ /^:/; # Cached match / check tags. require Fatal; if (exists $cache{$sub}{$that}) { return $cache{$sub}{$that}; } # This rather awful looking line checks to see if our sub is in the # list of expanded tags, caches it, and returns the result. return $cache{$sub}{$that} = grep { $_ eq $sub } @{ $this->_expand_tag($that) }; } } # This exists primarily so that child classes can override or # augment it if they wish. sub _expand_tag { my ($this, @args) = @_; return Fatal->_expand_tag(@args); } =head2 Advanced methods The following methods, while usable from anywhere, are primarily intended for developers wishing to subclass C<autodie::exception>, write code that registers custom error messages, or otherwise work closely with the C<autodie::exception> model. =cut # The table below records customer formatters. # TODO - Should this be a package var instead? # TODO - Should these be in a completely different file, or # perhaps loaded on demand? Most formatters will never # get used in most programs. my %formatter_of = ( 'CORE::close' => \&_format_close, 'CORE::open' => \&_format_open, 'CORE::dbmopen' => \&_format_dbmopen, 'CORE::flock' => \&_format_flock, 'CORE::read' => \&_format_readwrite, 'CORE::sysread' => \&_format_readwrite, 'CORE::syswrite' => \&_format_readwrite, 'CORE::chmod' => \&_format_chmod, 'CORE::mkdir' => \&_format_mkdir, ); sub _beautify_arguments { shift @_; # Walk through all our arguments, and... # # * Replace undef with the word 'undef' # * Replace globs with the string '$fh' # * Quote all other args. foreach my $arg (@_) { if (not defined($arg)) { $arg = 'undef' } elsif (ref($arg) eq "GLOB") { $arg = '$fh' } else { $arg = qq{'$arg'} } } return @_; } sub _trim_package_name { # Info: The following is done since 05/2008 (which is before v1.10) # TODO: This is probably a good idea for CORE, is it # a good idea for other subs? # Trim package name off dying sub for error messages (my $name = $_[1]) =~ s/.*:://; return $name; } # Returns the parameter formatted as octal number sub _octalize_number { my $number = $_[1]; # Only reformat if it looks like a whole number if ($number =~ /^\d+$/) { $number = sprintf("%#04lo", $number); } return $number; } # TODO: Our tests only check LOCK_EX | LOCK_NB is properly # formatted. Try other combinations and ensure they work # correctly. sub _format_flock { my ($this) = @_; require Fcntl; my $filehandle = $this->args->[0]; my $raw_mode = $this->args->[1]; my $mode_type; my $lock_unlock; if ($raw_mode & Fcntl::LOCK_EX() ) { $lock_unlock = "lock"; $mode_type = "for exclusive access"; } elsif ($raw_mode & Fcntl::LOCK_SH() ) { $lock_unlock = "lock"; $mode_type = "for shared access"; } elsif ($raw_mode & Fcntl::LOCK_UN() ) { $lock_unlock = "unlock"; $mode_type = ""; } else { # I've got no idea what they're trying to do. $lock_unlock = "lock"; $mode_type = "with mode $raw_mode"; } my $cooked_filehandle; if ($filehandle and not ref $filehandle) { # A package filehandle with a name! $cooked_filehandle = " $filehandle"; } else { # Otherwise we have a scalar filehandle. $cooked_filehandle = ''; } local $! = $this->errno; return "Can't $lock_unlock filehandle$cooked_filehandle $mode_type: $!"; } # Default formatter for CORE::chmod sub _format_chmod { my ($this) = @_; my @args = @{$this->args}; my $mode = shift @args; local $! = $this->errno; $mode = $this->_octalize_number($mode); @args = $this->_beautify_arguments(@args); return "Can't chmod($mode, ". join(q{, }, @args) ."): $!"; } # Default formatter for CORE::mkdir sub _format_mkdir { my ($this) = @_; my @args = @{$this->args}; # If no mask is specified use default formatter if (@args < 2) { return $this->format_default; } my $file = $args[0]; my $mask = $args[1]; local $! = $this->errno; $mask = $this->_octalize_number($mask); return "Can't mkdir('$file', $mask): '$!'"; } # Default formatter for CORE::dbmopen sub _format_dbmopen { my ($this) = @_; my @args = @{$this->args}; # TODO: Presently, $args flattens out the (usually empty) hash # which is passed as the first argument to dbmopen. This is # a bug in our args handling code (taking a reference to it would # be better), but for the moment we'll just examine the end of # our arguments list for message formatting. my $mode = $args[-1]; my $file = $args[-2]; $mode = $this->_octalize_number($mode); local $! = $this->errno; return "Can't dbmopen(%hash, '$file', $mode): '$!'"; } # Default formatter for CORE::close sub _format_close { my ($this) = @_; my $close_arg = $this->args->[0]; local $! = $this->errno; # If we've got an old-style filehandle, mention it. if ($close_arg and not ref $close_arg) { return "Can't close filehandle '$close_arg': '$!'"; } # TODO - This will probably produce an ugly error. Test and fix. return "Can't close($close_arg) filehandle: '$!'"; } # Default formatter for CORE::read, CORE::sysread and CORE::syswrite # # Similar to default formatter with the buffer filtered out as it # may contain binary data. sub _format_readwrite { my ($this) = @_; my $call = $this->_trim_package_name($this->function); local $! = $this->errno; # These subs receive the following arguments (in order): # # * FILEHANDLE # * SCALAR (buffer, we do not want to write this) # * LENGTH (optional for syswrite) # * OFFSET (optional for all) my (@args) = @{$this->args}; my $arg_name = $args[1]; if (defined($arg_name)) { if (ref($arg_name)) { my $name = blessed($arg_name) || ref($arg_name); $arg_name = "<${name}>"; } else { $arg_name = '<BUFFER>'; } } else { $arg_name = '<UNDEF>'; } $args[1] = $arg_name; return "Can't $call(" . join(q{, }, @args) . "): $!"; } # Default formatter for CORE::open use constant _FORMAT_OPEN => "Can't open '%s' for %s: '%s'"; sub _format_open_with_mode { my ($this, $mode, $file, $error) = @_; my $wordy_mode; if ($mode eq '<') { $wordy_mode = 'reading'; } elsif ($mode eq '>') { $wordy_mode = 'writing'; } elsif ($mode eq '>>') { $wordy_mode = 'appending'; } $file = '<undef>' if not defined $file; return sprintf _FORMAT_OPEN, $file, $wordy_mode, $error if $wordy_mode; Carp::confess("Internal autodie::exception error: Don't know how to format mode '$mode'."); } sub _format_open { my ($this) = @_; my @open_args = @{$this->args}; # Use the default formatter for single-arg and many-arg open if (@open_args <= 1 or @open_args >= 4) { return $this->format_default; } # For two arg open, we have to extract the mode if (@open_args == 2) { my ($fh, $file) = @open_args; if (ref($fh) eq "GLOB") { $fh = '$fh'; } my ($mode) = $file =~ m{ ^\s* # Spaces before mode ( (?> # Non-backtracking subexp. < # Reading |>>? # Writing/appending ) ) [^&] # Not an ampersand (which means a dup) }x; if (not $mode) { # Maybe it's a 2-arg open without any mode at all? # Detect the most simple case for this, where our # file consists only of word characters. if ( $file =~ m{^\s*\w+\s*$} ) { $mode = '<' } else { # Otherwise, we've got no idea what's going on. # Use the default. return $this->format_default; } } # Localising $! means perl makes it a pretty error for us. local $! = $this->errno; return $this->_format_open_with_mode($mode, $file, $!); } # Here we must be using three arg open. my $file = $open_args[2]; local $! = $this->errno; my $mode = $open_args[1]; local $@; my $msg = eval { $this->_format_open_with_mode($mode, $file, $!); }; return $msg if $msg; # Default message (for pipes and odd things) return "Can't open '$file' with mode '$open_args[1]': '$!'"; } =head3 register autodie::exception->register( 'CORE::open' => \&mysub ); The C<register> method allows for the registration of a message handler for a given subroutine. The full subroutine name including the package should be used. Registered message handlers will receive the C<autodie::exception> object as the first parameter. =cut sub register { my ($class, $symbol, $handler) = @_; croak "Incorrect call to autodie::register" if @_ != 3; $formatter_of{$symbol} = $handler; } =head3 add_file_and_line say "Problem occurred",$@->add_file_and_line; Returns the string C< at %s line %d>, where C<%s> is replaced with the filename, and C<%d> is replaced with the line number. Primarily intended for use by format handlers. =cut # Simply produces the file and line number; intended to be added # to the end of error messages. sub add_file_and_line { my ($this) = @_; return sprintf(" at %s line %d\n", $this->file, $this->line); } =head3 stringify say "The error was: ",$@->stringify; Formats the error as a human readable string. Usually there's no reason to call this directly, as it is used automatically if an C<autodie::exception> object is ever used as a string. Child classes can override this method to change how they're stringified. =cut sub stringify { my ($this) = @_; my $call = $this->function; my $msg; if ($DEBUG) { my $dying_pkg = $this->package; my $sub = $this->function; my $caller = $this->caller; warn "Stringifing exception for $dying_pkg :: $sub / $caller / $call\n"; } # TODO - This isn't using inheritance. Should it? if ( my $sub = $formatter_of{$call} ) { $msg = $sub->($this) . $this->add_file_and_line; } else { $msg = $this->format_default . $this->add_file_and_line; } $msg .= $this->{$PACKAGE}{_stack_trace} if $Carp::Verbose; return $msg; } =head3 format_default my $error_string = $E->format_default; This produces the default error string for the given exception, I<without using any registered message handlers>. It is primarily intended to be called from a message handler when they have been passed an exception they don't want to format. Child classes can override this method to change how default messages are formatted. =cut # TODO: This produces ugly errors. Is there any way we can # dig around to find the actual variable names? I know perl 5.10 # does some dark and terrible magicks to find them for undef warnings. sub format_default { my ($this) = @_; my $call = $this->_trim_package_name($this->function); local $! = $this->errno; my @args = @{ $this->args() }; @args = $this->_beautify_arguments(@args); # Format our beautiful error. return "Can't $call(". join(q{, }, @args) . "): $!" ; # TODO - Handle user-defined errors from hash. # TODO - Handle default error messages. } =head3 new my $error = autodie::exception->new( args => \@_, function => "CORE::open", errno => $!, context => 'scalar', return => undef, ); Creates a new C<autodie::exception> object. Normally called directly from an autodying function. The C<function> argument is required, its the function we were trying to call that generated the exception. The C<args> parameter is optional. The C<errno> value is optional. In versions of C<autodie::exception> 1.99 and earlier the code would try to automatically use the current value of C<$!>, but this was unreliable and is no longer supported. Atrributes such as package, file, and caller are determined automatically, and cannot be specified. =cut sub new { my ($class, @args) = @_; my $this = {}; bless($this,$class); # I'd love to use EVERY here, but it causes our code to die # because it wants to stringify our objects before they're # initialised, causing everything to explode. $this->_init(@args); return $this; } sub _init { my ($this, %args) = @_; # Capturing errno here is not necessarily reliable. my $original_errno = $!; our $init_called = 1; my $class = ref $this; # We're going to walk up our call stack, looking for the # first thing that doesn't look like our exception # code, autodie/Fatal, or some whacky eval. my ($package, $file, $line, $sub); my $depth = 0; while (1) { $depth++; ($package, $file, $line, $sub) = CORE::caller($depth); # Skip up the call stack until we find something outside # of the Fatal/autodie/eval space. next if $package->isa('Fatal'); next if $package->isa($class); next if $package->isa(__PACKAGE__); # Anything with the 'autodie::skip' role wants us to skip it. # https://github.com/pjf/autodie/issues/15 next if ($package->can('DOES') and $package->DOES('autodie::skip')); next if $file =~ /^\(eval\s\d+\)$/; last; } # We now have everything correct, *except* for our subroutine # name. If it's __ANON__ or (eval), then we need to keep on # digging deeper into our stack to find the real name. However we # don't update our other information, since that will be correct # for our current exception. my $first_guess_subroutine = $sub; while (defined $sub and $sub =~ /^\(eval\)$|::__ANON__$/) { $depth++; $sub = (CORE::caller($depth))[3]; } # If we end up falling out the bottom of our stack, then our # __ANON__ guess is the best we can get. This includes situations # where we were called from the top level of a program. if (not defined $sub) { $sub = $first_guess_subroutine; } $this->{$PACKAGE}{package} = $package; $this->{$PACKAGE}{file} = $file; $this->{$PACKAGE}{line} = $line; $this->{$PACKAGE}{caller} = $sub; # Tranks to %Carp::CarpInternal all Fatal, autodie and # autodie::exception stack frames are filtered already, but our # nameless wrapper is still present, so strip that. my $trace = Carp::longmess(); $trace =~ s/^\s*at \(eval[^\n]+\n//; # And if we see an __ANON__, then we'll replace that with the actual # name of our autodying function. my $short_func = $args{function}; $short_func =~ s/^CORE:://; $trace =~ s/(\s*[\w:]+)__ANON__/$1$short_func/; # And now we just fill in all our attributes. $this->{$PACKAGE}{_stack_trace} = $trace; $this->{$PACKAGE}{errno} = $args{errno} || 0; $this->{$PACKAGE}{context} = $args{context}; $this->{$PACKAGE}{return} = $args{return}; $this->{$PACKAGE}{eval_error} = $args{eval_error}; $this->{$PACKAGE}{args} = $args{args} || []; $this->{$PACKAGE}{function}= $args{function} or croak("$class->new() called without function arg"); return $this; } 1; __END__ =head1 SEE ALSO L<autodie>, L<autodie::exception::system> =head1 LICENSE Copyright (C)2008 Paul Fenwick This is free software. You may modify and/or redistribute this code under the same terms as Perl 5.10 itself, or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5. =head1 AUTHOR Paul Fenwick E<lt>pjf@perltraining.com.auE<gt>