Wallee
This library provides wallee::Error, a trait object based error type
for easy idiomatic error handling in Rust applications.
This crate is a fork of anyhow with support for caller location tracking. This is useful when
debug information is not included in the build. The caller location attached to [wallee::Error]
includes the file, line and column where the error originated.
[]
= "0.1"
Compiler support: requires rustc 1.76+
Details
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Use
Result<T, wallee::Error>, or equivalentlywallee::Result<T>, as the return type of any fallible function.Within the function, use
?to easily propagate any error that implements thestd::error::Errortrait.use Result; -
Attach context to help the person troubleshooting the error understand where things went wrong. A low-level error like "No such file or directory" can be annoying to debug without more context about what higher level step the application was in the middle of.
use ;Error: Failed to read instrs from ./path/to/instrs.json Caused by: No such file or directory (os error 2) -
Downcasting is supported and can be by value, by shared reference, or by mutable reference as needed.
// If the error was caused by redaction, then return a // tombstone instead of the content. match root_cause. -
A backtrace is captured and printed with the error if the underlying error type does not already provide its own. In order to see backtraces, they must be enabled through the environment variables described in
std::backtrace:- If you want panics and errors to both have backtraces, set
RUST_BACKTRACE=1; - If you want only errors to have backtraces, set
RUST_LIB_BACKTRACE=1; - If you want only panics to have backtraces, set
RUST_BACKTRACE=1andRUST_LIB_BACKTRACE=0.
- If you want panics and errors to both have backtraces, set
-
Wallee works with any error type that has an impl of
std::error::Error, including ones defined in your crate. We do not bundle aderive(Error)macro but you can write the impls yourself or use a standalone macro like thiserror.use Error; -
One-off error messages can be constructed using the
wallee!macro, which supports string interpolation and produces anwallee::Error.return Err;A
bail!macro is provided as a shorthand for the same early return.bail!;
Comparison to failure
The wallee::Error type works something like failure::Error, but unlike
failure ours is built around the standard library's std::error::Error trait
rather than a separate trait failure::Fail. The standard library has adopted
the necessary improvements for this to be possible as part of RFC 2504.
Comparison to thiserror
Use Wallee if you don't care what error type your functions return, you just want it to be easy. This is common in application code. Use thiserror if you are a library that wants to design your own dedicated error type(s) so that on failures the caller gets exactly the information that you choose.