Active Support Error Reporter
ActiveSupport::ErrorReporter
is a common interface for error reporting services.
To rescue and report any unhandled error, you can use the handle
method:
Rails.error.handle do
do_something!
end
If an error is raised, it will be reported and swallowed.
Alternatively, if you want to report the error but not swallow it, you can use record
:
Rails.error.record do
do_something!
end
Both methods can be restricted to handle only a specific error class:
maybe_tags = Rails.error.handle(Redis::BaseError) { redis.get("tags") }
- D
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Constants
DEFAULT_RESCUE | = | [StandardError].freeze |
DEFAULT_SOURCE | = | "application" |
SEVERITIES | = | %i(error warning info) |
UnexpectedError | = | Class.new(Exception) |
Attributes
[RW] | debug_mode | |
[RW] | logger |
Class Public methods
new(*subscribers, logger: nil) Link
Instance Public methods
disable(subscriber) Link
Prevent a subscriber from being notified of errors for the duration of the block. You may pass in the subscriber itself, or its class.
This can be helpful for error reporting service integrations, when they wish to handle any errors higher in the stack.
handle(*error_classes, severity: :warning, context: {}, fallback: nil, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) Link
Evaluates the given block, reporting and swallowing any unhandled error. If no error is raised, returns the return value of the block. Otherwise, returns the result of fallback.call
, or nil
if fallback
is not specified.
# Will report a TypeError to all subscribers and return nil.
Rails.error.handle do
1 + '1'
end
Can be restricted to handle only specific error classes:
maybe_tags = Rails.error.handle(Redis::BaseError) { redis.get("tags") }
Options
-
:severity
- This value is passed along to subscribers to indicate how important the error report is. Can be:error
,:warning
, or:info
. Defaults to:warning
. -
:context
- Extra information that is passed along to subscribers. For example:Rails.error.handle(context: { section: "admin" }) do # ... end
-
:fallback
- A callable that provideshandle
‘s return value when an unhandled error is raised. For example:user = Rails.error.handle(fallback: -> { User.anonymous }) do User.find_by(params) end
-
:source
- This value is passed along to subscribers to indicate the source of the error. Subscribers can use this value to ignore certain errors. Defaults to"application"
.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/error_reporter.rb, line 78 def handle(*error_classes, severity: :warning, context: {}, fallback: nil, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) error_classes = DEFAULT_RESCUE if error_classes.empty? yield rescue *error_classes => error report(error, handled: true, severity: severity, context: context, source: source) fallback.call if fallback end
record(*error_classes, severity: :error, context: {}, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) Link
Evaluates the given block, reporting and re-raising any unhandled error. If no error is raised, returns the return value of the block.
# Will report a TypeError to all subscribers and re-raise it.
Rails.error.record do
1 + '1'
end
Can be restricted to handle only specific error classes:
tags = Rails.error.record(Redis::BaseError) { redis.get("tags") }
Options
-
:severity
- This value is passed along to subscribers to indicate how important the error report is. Can be:error
,:warning
, or:info
. Defaults to:error
. -
:context
- Extra information that is passed along to subscribers. For example:Rails.error.record(context: { section: "admin" }) do # ... end
-
:source
- This value is passed along to subscribers to indicate the source of the error. Subscribers can use this value to ignore certain errors. Defaults to"application"
.
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/error_reporter.rb, line 114 def record(*error_classes, severity: :error, context: {}, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) error_classes = DEFAULT_RESCUE if error_classes.empty? yield rescue *error_classes => error report(error, handled: false, severity: severity, context: context, source: source) raise end
report(error, handled: true, severity: handled ? :warning : :error, context: {}, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) Link
Report an error directly to subscribers. You can use this method when the block-based handle
and record
methods are not suitable.
Rails.error.report(error)
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/error_reporter.rb, line 210 def report(error, handled: true, severity: handled ? :warning : :error, context: {}, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) return if error.instance_variable_defined?(:@__rails_error_reported) unless SEVERITIES.include?(severity) raise ArgumentError, "severity must be one of #{SEVERITIES.map(&:inspect).join(", ")}, got: #{severity.inspect}" end full_context = ActiveSupport::ExecutionContext.to_h.merge(context) disabled_subscribers = ActiveSupport::IsolatedExecutionState[self] @subscribers.each do |subscriber| unless disabled_subscribers&.any? { |s| s === subscriber } subscriber.report(error, handled: handled, severity: severity, context: full_context, source: source) end rescue => subscriber_error if logger logger.fatal( "Error subscriber raised an error: #{subscriber_error.message} (#{subscriber_error.class})\n" + subscriber_error.backtrace.join("\n") ) else raise end end unless error.frozen? error.instance_variable_set(:@__rails_error_reported, true) end nil end
set_context(...) Link
subscribe(subscriber) Link
Register a new error subscriber. The subscriber must respond to
report(Exception, handled: Boolean, severity: (:error OR :warning OR :info), context: Hash, source: String)
The report
method should never raise an error.
unexpected(error, severity: :warning, context: {}, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) Link
Either report the given error when in production, or raise it when in development or test.
When called in production, after the error is reported, this method will return nil and execution will continue.
When called in development, the original error is wrapped in a different error class to ensure it’s not being rescued higher in the stack and will be surfaced to the developer.
This method is intended for reporting violated assertions about preconditions, or similar cases that can and should be gracefully handled in production, but that aren’t supposed to happen.
The error can be either an exception instance or a String
.
example:
def edit
if published?
Rails.error.unexpected("[BUG] Attempting to edit a published article, that shouldn't be possible")
return false
end
# ...
end
# File activesupport/lib/active_support/error_reporter.rb, line 145 def unexpected(error, severity: :warning, context: {}, source: DEFAULT_SOURCE) error = RuntimeError.new(error) if error.is_a?(String) error.set_backtrace(caller(1)) if error.backtrace.nil? if @debug_mode raise UnexpectedError, "#{error.class.name}: #{error.message}", error.backtrace, cause: error else report(error, handled: true, severity: severity, context: context, source: source) end end
unsubscribe(subscriber) Link
Unregister an error subscriber. Accepts either a subscriber or a class.
subscriber = MyErrorSubscriber.new
Rails.error.subscribe(subscriber)
Rails.error.unsubscribe(subscriber)
# or
Rails.error.unsubscribe(MyErrorSubscriber)