Provided by: liberror-perl_0.17025-1_all bug

NAME

       Error - Error/exception handling in an OO-ish way

WARNING

       Using the "Error" module is 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.

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

DESCRIPTION

       The "Error" package provides two interfaces. Firstly "Error" provides a procedural interface to exception
       handling. Secondly "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 "Error" should not be thrown directly, but the user should throw errors from a sub-
       class of "Error".

PROCEDURAL INTERFACE

       "Error" exports subroutines to perform exception handling. These will be exported if the ":try" tag is
       used in the "use" line.

       try BLOCK CLAUSES
           "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.

           "CLAUSES" are the subroutines below, which describe what to do in the event of an error being thrown
           within BLOCK.

       catch CLASS with BLOCK
           This clauses will cause all errors that satisfy "$err->isa(CLASS)" to be caught and handled by
           evaluating "BLOCK".

           "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 $@.

           To propagate the error the catch block may call "$err->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.

       except BLOCK
           When "try" is looking for a handler, if an except clause is found "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.

       otherwise BLOCK
           Catch any error by executing the code in "BLOCK"

           When evaluated "BLOCK" will be passed one argument, which will be the error being processed. The
           error will also be available in $@.

           Only one otherwise block may be specified per try block

       finally BLOCK
           Execute the code in "BLOCK" either after the code in the try block has successfully completed, or if
           the try block throws an error then "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

COMPATIBILITY

       Moose exports a keyword called "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 "maik.hentsche@amd.com" for the report.).

CLASS INTERFACE

   CONSTRUCTORS
       The "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 "Error" class are listed
       below, other classes may add to these.

               -file
               -line
               -text
               -value
               -object

       If "-file" or "-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 "-object" argument.
       This will allow the "Error" package to associate the error with the object.

       The "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 "-object" argument.

       Error->new()
           See the Error::Simple documentation.

       throw ( [ ARGS ] )
           Create a new "Error" object and throw an error, which will be caught by a surrounding "try" block, if
           there is one. Otherwise it will cause the program to exit.

           "throw" may also be called on an existing error to re-throw it.

       with ( [ ARGS ] )
           Create a new "Error" object and returns it. This is defined for syntactic sugar, eg

               die with Some::Error ( ... );

       record ( [ ARGS ] )
           Create a new "Error" object and returns it. This is defined for syntactic sugar, eg

               record Some::Error ( ... )
                   and return;

   STATIC METHODS
       prior ( [ PACKAGE ] )
           Return the last error created, or the last error associated with "PACKAGE"

       flush ( [ PACKAGE ] )
           Flush the last error created, or the last error associated with "PACKAGE".It is necessary to clear
           the error stack before exiting the package or uncaught errors generated using "record" will be
           reported.

                $Error->flush;

   OBJECT METHODS
       stacktrace
           If the variable $Error::Debug was non-zero when the error was created, then "stacktrace" returns a
           string created by calling "Carp::longmess". If the variable was zero the "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.

       object
           The object this error was associated with

       file
           The file where the constructor of this error was called from

       line
           The line where the constructor of this error was called from

       text
           The text of the error

       $err->associate($obj)
           Associates an error with an object to allow error propagation. I.e:

               $ber->encode(...) or
                   return Error->prior($ber)->associate($ldap);

   OVERLOAD METHODS
       stringify
           A method that converts the object into a string. This method may simply return the same as the "text"
           method, or it may append more information. For example the file name and line number.

           By default this method returns the "-text" argument that was passed to the constructor, or the string
           "Died" if none was given.

       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 $! at the
           time.

           By default this method returns the "-value" argument that was passed to the constructor.

PRE-DEFINED ERROR CLASSES

   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 "at file line 1" as $@ strings do, then this information will be used to set
       the "-file" and "-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
       $Error::ObjectifyCallback is modified)

$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 '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.
           }

MESSAGE HANDLERS

       "Error" also provides handlers to extend the output of the "warn()" perl function, and to handle the
       printing of a thrown "Error" that is not caught or otherwise handled. These are not installed by default,
       but are requested using the ":warndie" tag in the "use" line.

        use Error qw( :warndie );

       These new error handlers are installed in $SIG{__WARN__} and $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 $SIG{__WARN__} after the ":warndie" tag has been imported will overwrite the handler
       that "Error" provides. If this cannot be avoided, then the tag can be explicitly "import"ed later

        use Error;

        $SIG{__WARN__} = ...;

        import Error qw( :warndie );

   EXAMPLE
       The "__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

SEE ALSO

       See 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 "try
       { ... }", "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.)

       Error::Exception aims to combine Error and Exception::Class "with correct stringification".

       TryCatch and Try::Tiny are similar in concept to Error.pm only providing a syntax that hopefully breaks
       less.

KNOWN BUGS

       None, but that does not mean there are not any.

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>.

       ":warndie" handlers added by Paul Evans <leonerd@leonerd.org.uk>

MAINTAINER

       Shlomi Fish, <http://www.shlomifish.org/> .

PAST MAINTAINERS

       Arun Kumar U <u_arunkumar@yahoo.com>

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.