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- // Package errors implements functions for manipulating errors.
- //
- // The traditional error handling idiom in Go is roughly akin to
- //
- // if err != nil {
- // return err
- // }
- //
- // which applied recursively up the call stack results in error reports
- // without context or debugging information. The errors package allows
- // programmers to add context to the failure path in their code in a way
- // that does not destroy the original value of the error.
- //
- // Adding context to an error
- //
- // The errors.Wrap function returns a new error that adds context to the
- // original error. For example
- //
- // _, err := ioutil.ReadAll(r)
- // if err != nil {
- // return errors.Wrap(err, "read failed")
- // }
- //
- // In addition, errors.Wrap records the file and line where it was called,
- // allowing the programmer to retrieve the path to the original error.
- //
- // Retrieving the cause of an error
- //
- // Using errors.Wrap constructs a stack of errors, adding context to the
- // preceding error. Depending on the nature of the error it may be necessary
- // to recerse the operation of errors.Wrap to retrieve the original error
- // for inspection. Any error value which implements this interface
- //
- // type causer interface {
- // Cause() error
- // }
- //
- // Can be inspected by errors.Cause which will recursively retrieve the topmost
- // error which does nor implement causer, which is assumed to be the original
- // cause. For example:
- //
- // switch err := errors.Cause(err).(type) {
- // case *MyError:
- // // handle specifically
- // default:
- // // unknown error
- // }
- package errors
- import (
- "errors"
- "fmt"
- "io"
- "os"
- "runtime"
- "strings"
- )
- // location represents a program counter that
- // implements the Location() method.
- type location uintptr
- func (l location) Location() (string, int) {
- pc := uintptr(l) - 1
- fn := runtime.FuncForPC(pc)
- if fn == nil {
- return "unknown", 0
- }
- file, line := fn.FileLine(pc)
- // Here we want to get the source file path relative to the compile time
- // GOPATH. As of Go 1.6.x there is no direct way to know the compiled
- // GOPATH at runtime, but we can infer the number of path segments in the
- // GOPATH. We note that fn.Name() returns the function name qualified by
- // the import path, which does not include the GOPATH. Thus we can trim
- // segments from the beginning of the file path until the number of path
- // separators remaining is one more than the number of path separators in
- // the function name. For example, given:
- //
- // GOPATH /home/user
- // file /home/user/src/pkg/sub/file.go
- // fn.Name() pkg/sub.Type.Method
- //
- // We want to produce:
- //
- // pkg/sub/file.go
- //
- // From this we can easily see that fn.Name() has one less path separator
- // than our desired output. We count separators from the end of the file
- // path until it finds two more than in the function name and then move
- // one character forward to preserve the initial path segment without a
- // leading separator.
- const sep = "/"
- goal := strings.Count(fn.Name(), sep) + 2
- i := len(file)
- for n := 0; n < goal; n++ {
- i = strings.LastIndex(file[:i], sep)
- if i == -1 {
- // not enough separators found, set i so that the slice expression
- // below leaves file unmodified
- i = -len(sep)
- break
- }
- }
- // get back to 0 or trim the leading separator
- file = file[i+len(sep):]
- return file, line
- }
- // New returns an error that formats as the given text.
- func New(text string) error {
- pc, _, _, _ := runtime.Caller(1)
- return struct {
- error
- location
- }{
- errors.New(text),
- location(pc),
- }
- }
- type cause struct {
- cause error
- message string
- }
- func (c cause) Error() string { return c.Message() + ": " + c.Cause().Error() }
- func (c cause) Cause() error { return c.cause }
- func (c cause) Message() string { return c.message }
- // Wrap returns an error annotating the cause with message.
- // If cause is nil, Wrap returns nil.
- func Wrap(cause error, message string) error {
- if cause == nil {
- return nil
- }
- pc, _, _, _ := runtime.Caller(1)
- return wrap(cause, message, pc)
- }
- // Wrapf returns an error annotating the cause with the format specifier.
- // If cause is nil, Wrapf returns nil.
- func Wrapf(cause error, format string, args ...interface{}) error {
- if cause == nil {
- return nil
- }
- pc, _, _, _ := runtime.Caller(1)
- return wrap(cause, fmt.Sprintf(format, args...), pc)
- }
- func wrap(err error, msg string, pc uintptr) error {
- return struct {
- cause
- location
- }{
- cause{
- cause: err,
- message: msg,
- },
- location(pc),
- }
- }
- type causer interface {
- Cause() error
- }
- // Cause returns the underlying cause of the error, if possible.
- // An error value has a cause if it implements the following
- // interface:
- //
- // type Causer interface {
- // Cause() error
- // }
- //
- // If the error does not implement Cause, the original error will
- // be returned. If the error is nil, nil will be returned without further
- // investigation.
- func Cause(err error) error {
- for err != nil {
- cause, ok := err.(causer)
- if !ok {
- break
- }
- err = cause.Cause()
- }
- return err
- }
- // Print prints the error to Stderr.
- // If the error implements the Causer interface described in Cause
- // Print will recurse into the error's cause.
- // If the error implements the inteface:
- //
- // type Location interface {
- // Location() (file string, line int)
- // }
- //
- // Print will also print the file and line of the error.
- func Print(err error) {
- Fprint(os.Stderr, err)
- }
- // Fprint prints the error to the supplied writer.
- // The format of the output is the same as Print.
- // If err is nil, nothing is printed.
- func Fprint(w io.Writer, err error) {
- type location interface {
- Location() (string, int)
- }
- type message interface {
- Message() string
- }
- for err != nil {
- if err, ok := err.(location); ok {
- file, line := err.Location()
- fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s:%d: ", file, line)
- }
- switch err := err.(type) {
- case message:
- fmt.Fprintln(w, err.Message())
- default:
- fmt.Fprintln(w, err.Error())
- }
- cause, ok := err.(causer)
- if !ok {
- break
- }
- err = cause.Cause()
- }
- }
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