Like most programming languages, Rust encourages the programmer to handle errors in a particular way. Generally speaking, error handling is divided into two broad categories: exceptions and return values. Rust opts for return values.
In this section, we intend to provide a comprehensive treatment of how to deal with errors in Rust. More than that, we will attempt to introduce error handling one piece at a time so that you'll come away with a solid working knowledge of how everything fits together.
When done naïvely, error handling in Rust can be verbose and annoying. This section will explore those stumbling blocks and demonstrate how to use the standard library to make error handling concise and ergonomic.
This section is very long, mostly because we start at the very beginning with sum types and combinators, and try to motivate the way Rust does error handling incrementally. As such, programmers with experience in other expressive type systems may want to jump around.
You can think of error handling as using case analysis to determine whether a computation was successful or not. As you will see, the key to ergonomic error handling is reducing the amount of explicit case analysis the programmer has to do while keeping code composable.
Keeping code composable is important, because without that requirement, we could panic
whenever we come across something unexpected. (panic
causes the current task to unwind, and in most cases, the entire program aborts.) Here's an example:
// Guess a number between 1 and 10. // If it matches the number we had in mind, return `true`. Else, return `false`. fn guess(n: i32) -> bool { if n < 1 || n > 10 { panic!("Invalid number: {}", n); } n == 5 } fn main() { guess(11); }
If you try running this code, the program will crash with a message like this:
thread 'main' panicked at 'Invalid number: 11', src/bin/panic-simple.rs:5
Here's another example that is slightly less contrived. A program that accepts an integer as an argument, doubles it and prints it.
use std::env; fn main() { let mut argv = env::args(); let arg: String = argv.nth(1).unwrap(); // error 1 let n: i32 = arg.parse().unwrap(); // error 2 println!("{}", 2 * n); }
If you give this program zero arguments (error 1) or if the first argument isn't an integer (error 2), the program will panic just like in the first example.
You can think of this style of error handling as similar to a bull running through a china shop. The bull will get to where it wants to go, but it will trample everything in the process.
In the previous example, we claimed that the program would simply panic if it reached one of the two error conditions, yet, the program does not include an explicit call to panic
like the first example. This is because the panic is embedded in the calls to unwrap
.
To “unwrap” something in Rust is to say, “Give me the result of the computation, and if there was an error, panic and stop the program.” It would be better if we showed the code for unwrapping because it is so simple, but to do that, we will first need to explore the Option
and Result
types. Both of these types have a method called unwrap
defined on them.
Option
typeThe Option
type is defined in the standard library:
enum Option<T> { None, Some(T), }
The Option
type is a way to use Rust's type system to express the possibility of absence. Encoding the possibility of absence into the type system is an important concept because it will cause the compiler to force the programmer to handle that absence. Let's take a look at an example that tries to find a character in a string:
// Searches `haystack` for the Unicode character `needle`. If one is found, the // byte offset of the character is returned. Otherwise, `None` is returned. fn find(haystack: &str, needle: char) -> Option<usize> { for (offset, c) in haystack.char_indices() { if c == needle { return Some(offset); } } None }
Notice that when this function finds a matching character, it doesn't only return the offset
. Instead, it returns Some(offset)
. Some
is a variant or a value constructor for the Option
type. You can think of it as a function with the type fn<T>(value: T) -> Option<T>
. Correspondingly, None
is also a value constructor, except it has no arguments. You can think of None
as a function with the type fn<T>() -> Option<T>
.
This might seem like much ado about nothing, but this is only half of the story. The other half is using the find
function we've written. Let's try to use it to find the extension in a file name.
fn main() { let file_name = "foobar.rs"; match find(file_name, '.') { None => println!("No file extension found."), Some(i) => println!("File extension: {}", &file_name[i+1..]), } }
This code uses pattern matching to do case analysis on the Option<usize>
returned by the find
function. In fact, case analysis is the only way to get at the value stored inside an Option<T>
. This means that you, as the programmer, must handle the case when an Option<T>
is None
instead of Some(t)
.
But wait, what about unwrap
, which we used previously? There was no case analysis there! Instead, the case analysis was put inside the unwrap
method for you. You could define it yourself if you want:
enum Option<T> { None, Some(T), } impl<T> Option<T> { fn unwrap(self) -> T { match self { Option::Some(val) => val, Option::None => panic!("called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value"), } } }
The unwrap
method abstracts away the case analysis. This is precisely the thing that makes unwrap
ergonomic to use. Unfortunately, that panic!
means that unwrap
is not composable: it is the bull in the china shop.
Option<T>
valuesIn an example from before, we saw how to use find
to discover the extension in a file name. Of course, not all file names have a .
in them, so it's possible that the file name has no extension. This possibility of absence is encoded into the types using Option<T>
. In other words, the compiler will force us to address the possibility that an extension does not exist. In our case, we only print out a message saying as such.
Getting the extension of a file name is a pretty common operation, so it makes sense to put it into a function:
// Returns the extension of the given file name, where the extension is defined // as all characters following the first `.`. // If `file_name` has no `.`, then `None` is returned. fn extension_explicit(file_name: &str) -> Option<&str> { match find(file_name, '.') { None => None, Some(i) => Some(&file_name[i+1..]), } }
(Pro-tip: don't use this code. Use the extension
method in the standard library instead.)
The code stays simple, but the important thing to notice is that the type of find
forces us to consider the possibility of absence. This is a good thing because it means the compiler won't let us accidentally forget about the case where a file name doesn't have an extension. On the other hand, doing explicit case analysis like we've done in extension_explicit
every time can get a bit tiresome.
In fact, the case analysis in extension_explicit
follows a very common pattern: map a function on to the value inside of an Option<T>
, unless the option is None
, in which case, return None
.
Rust has parametric polymorphism, so it is very easy to define a combinator that abstracts this pattern:
fn map<F, T, A>(option: Option<T>, f: F) -> Option<A> where F: FnOnce(T) -> A { match option { None => None, Some(value) => Some(f(value)), } }
Indeed, map
is defined as a method on Option<T>
in the standard library. As a method, it has a slightly different signature: methods take self
, &self
, or &mut self
as their first argument.
Armed with our new combinator, we can rewrite our extension_explicit
method to get rid of the case analysis:
// Returns the extension of the given file name, where the extension is defined // as all characters following the first `.`. // If `file_name` has no `.`, then `None` is returned. fn extension(file_name: &str) -> Option<&str> { find(file_name, '.').map(|i| &file_name[i+1..]) }
One other pattern we commonly find is assigning a default value to the case when an Option
value is None
. For example, maybe your program assumes that the extension of a file is rs
even if none is present. As you might imagine, the case analysis for this is not specific to file extensions - it can work with any Option<T>
:
fn unwrap_or<T>(option: Option<T>, default: T) -> T { match option { None => default, Some(value) => value, } }
Like with map
above, the standard library implementation is a method instead of a free function.
The trick here is that the default value must have the same type as the value that might be inside the Option<T>
. Using it is dead simple in our case:
fn main() { assert_eq!(extension("foobar.csv").unwrap_or("rs"), "csv"); assert_eq!(extension("foobar").unwrap_or("rs"), "rs"); }
(Note that unwrap_or
is defined as a method on Option<T>
in the standard library, so we use that here instead of the free-standing function we defined above. Don't forget to check out the more general unwrap_or_else
method.)
There is one more combinator that we think is worth paying special attention to: and_then
. It makes it easy to compose distinct computations that admit the possibility of absence. For example, much of the code in this section is about finding an extension given a file name. In order to do this, you first need the file name which is typically extracted from a file path. While most file paths have a file name, not all of them do. For example, .
, ..
or /
.
So, we are tasked with the challenge of finding an extension given a file path. Let's start with explicit case analysis:
fn file_path_ext_explicit(file_path: &str) -> Option<&str> { match file_name(file_path) { None => None, Some(name) => match extension(name) { None => None, Some(ext) => Some(ext), } } } fn file_name(file_path: &str) -> Option<&str> { // Implementation elided. unimplemented!() }
You might think that we could use the map
combinator to reduce the case analysis, but its type doesn't quite fit...
fn file_path_ext(file_path: &str) -> Option<&str> { file_name(file_path).map(|x| extension(x)) // This causes a compilation error. }
The map
function here wraps the value returned by the extension
function inside an Option<_>
and since the extension
function itself returns an Option<&str>
the expression file_name(file_path).map(|x| extension(x))
actually returns an Option<Option<&str>>
.
But since file_path_ext
just returns Option<&str>
(and not Option<Option<&str>>
) we get a compilation error.
The result of the function taken by map as input is always rewrapped with Some
. Instead, we need something like map
, but which allows the caller to return a Option<_>
directly without wrapping it in another Option<_>
.
Its generic implementation is even simpler than map
:
fn and_then<F, T, A>(option: Option<T>, f: F) -> Option<A> where F: FnOnce(T) -> Option<A> { match option { None => None, Some(value) => f(value), } }
Now we can rewrite our file_path_ext
function without explicit case analysis:
fn file_path_ext(file_path: &str) -> Option<&str> { file_name(file_path).and_then(extension) }
Side note: Since and_then
essentially works like map
but returns an Option<_>
instead of an Option<Option<_>>
it is known as flatmap
in some other languages.
The Option
type has many other combinators defined in the standard library. It is a good idea to skim this list and familiarize yourself with what's available—they can often reduce case analysis for you. Familiarizing yourself with these combinators will pay dividends because many of them are also defined (with similar semantics) for Result
, which we will talk about next.
Combinators make using types like Option
ergonomic because they reduce explicit case analysis. They are also composable because they permit the caller to handle the possibility of absence in their own way. Methods like unwrap
remove choices because they will panic if Option<T>
is None
.
Result
typeThe Result
type is also defined in the standard library:
enum Result<T, E> { Ok(T), Err(E), }
The Result
type is a richer version of Option
. Instead of expressing the possibility of absence like Option
does, Result
expresses the possibility of error. Usually, the error is used to explain why the execution of some computation failed. This is a strictly more general form of Option
. Consider the following type alias, which is semantically equivalent to the real Option<T>
in every way:
type Option<T> = Result<T, ()>;
This fixes the second type parameter of Result
to always be ()
(pronounced “unit” or “empty tuple”). Exactly one value inhabits the ()
type: ()
. (Yup, the type and value level terms have the same notation!)
The Result
type is a way of representing one of two possible outcomes in a computation. By convention, one outcome is meant to be expected or “Ok
” while the other outcome is meant to be unexpected or “Err
”.
Just like Option
, the Result
type also has an unwrap
method defined in the standard library. Let's define it:
impl<T, E: ::std::fmt::Debug> Result<T, E> { fn unwrap(self) -> T { match self { Result::Ok(val) => val, Result::Err(err) => panic!("called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: {:?}", err), } } }
This is effectively the same as our definition for Option::unwrap
, except it includes the error value in the panic!
message. This makes debugging easier, but it also requires us to add a Debug
constraint on the E
type parameter (which represents our error type). Since the vast majority of types should satisfy the Debug
constraint, this tends to work out in practice. (Debug
on a type simply means that there's a reasonable way to print a human readable description of values with that type.)
OK, let's move on to an example.
The Rust standard library makes converting strings to integers dead simple. It's so easy in fact, that it is very tempting to write something like the following:
fn double_number(number_str: &str) -> i32 { 2 * number_str.parse::<i32>().unwrap() } fn main() { let n: i32 = double_number("10"); assert_eq!(n, 20); }
At this point, you should be skeptical of calling unwrap
. For example, if the string doesn't parse as a number, you'll get a panic:
thread 'main' panicked at 'called `Result::unwrap()` on an `Err` value: ParseIntError { kind: InvalidDigit }', /home/rustbuild/src/rust-buildbot/slave/beta-dist-rustc-linux/build/src/libcore/result.rs:729
This is rather unsightly, and if this happened inside a library you're using, you might be understandably annoyed. Instead, we should try to handle the error in our function and let the caller decide what to do. This means changing the return type of double_number
. But to what? Well, that requires looking at the signature of the parse
method in the standard library:
impl str { fn parse<F: FromStr>(&self) -> Result<F, F::Err>; }
Hmm. So we at least know that we need to use a Result
. Certainly, it's possible that this could have returned an Option
. After all, a string either parses as a number or it doesn't, right? That's certainly a reasonable way to go, but the implementation internally distinguishes why the string didn't parse as an integer. (Whether it's an empty string, an invalid digit, too big or too small.) Therefore, using a Result
makes sense because we want to provide more information than simply “absence.” We want to say why the parsing failed. You should try to emulate this line of reasoning when faced with a choice between Option
and Result
. If you can provide detailed error information, then you probably should. (We'll see more on this later.)
OK, but how do we write our return type? The parse
method as defined above is generic over all the different number types defined in the standard library. We could (and probably should) also make our function generic, but let's favor explicitness for the moment. We only care about i32
, so we need to find its implementation of FromStr
(do a CTRL-F
in your browser for “FromStr”) and look at its associated type Err
. We did this so we can find the concrete error type. In this case, it's std::num::ParseIntError
. Finally, we can rewrite our function:
use std::num::ParseIntError; fn double_number(number_str: &str) -> Result<i32, ParseIntError> { match number_str.parse::<i32>() { Ok(n) => Ok(2 * n), Err(err) => Err(err), } } fn main() { match double_number("10") { Ok(n) => assert_eq!(n, 20), Err(err) => println!("Error: {:?}", err), } }
This is a little better, but now we've written a lot more code! The case analysis has once again bitten us.
Combinators to the rescue! Just like Option
, Result
has lots of combinators defined as methods. There is a large intersection of common combinators between Result
and Option
. In particular, map
is part of that intersection:
use std::num::ParseIntError; fn double_number(number_str: &str) -> Result<i32, ParseIntError> { number_str.parse::<i32>().map(|n| 2 * n) } fn main() { match double_number("10") { Ok(n) => assert_eq!(n, 20), Err(err) => println!("Error: {:?}", err), } }
The usual suspects are all there for Result
, including unwrap_or
and and_then
. Additionally, since Result
has a second type parameter, there are combinators that affect only the error type, such as map_err
(instead of map
) and or_else
(instead of and_then
).
Result
type alias idiomIn the standard library, you may frequently see types like Result<i32>
. But wait, we defined Result
to have two type parameters. How can we get away with only specifying one? The key is to define a Result
type alias that fixes one of the type parameters to a particular type. Usually the fixed type is the error type. For example, our previous example parsing integers could be rewritten like this:
use std::num::ParseIntError; use std::result; type Result<T> = result::Result<T, ParseIntError>; fn double_number(number_str: &str) -> Result<i32> { unimplemented!(); }
Why would we do this? Well, if we have a lot of functions that could return ParseIntError
, then it's much more convenient to define an alias that always uses ParseIntError
so that we don't have to write it out all the time.
The most prominent place this idiom is used in the standard library is with io::Result
. Typically, one writes io::Result<T>
, which makes it clear that you're using the io
module's type alias instead of the plain definition from std::result
. (This idiom is also used for fmt::Result
.)
If you've been following along, you might have noticed that I've taken a pretty hard line against calling methods like unwrap
that could panic
and abort your program. Generally speaking, this is good advice.
However, unwrap
can still be used judiciously. What exactly justifies use of unwrap
is somewhat of a grey area and reasonable people can disagree. I'll summarize some of my opinions on the matter.
unwrap
can be hard in such scenarios, so it is very appealing.assert!
failing, or it could be because your index into an array was out of bounds.This is probably not an exhaustive list. Moreover, when using an Option
, it is often better to use its expect
method. expect
does exactly the same thing as unwrap
, except it prints a message you give to expect
. This makes the resulting panic a bit nicer to deal with, since it will show your message instead of “called unwrap on a None
value.”
My advice boils down to this: use good judgment. There's a reason why the words “never do X” or “Y is considered harmful” don't appear in my writing. There are trade offs to all things, and it is up to you as the programmer to determine what is acceptable for your use cases. My goal is only to help you evaluate trade offs as accurately as possible.
Now that we've covered the basics of error handling in Rust, and explained unwrapping, let's start exploring more of the standard library.
Thus far, we've looked at error handling where everything was either an Option<T>
or a Result<T, SomeError>
. But what happens when you have both an Option
and a Result
? Or what if you have a Result<T, Error1>
and a Result<T, Error2>
? Handling composition of distinct error types is the next challenge in front of us, and it will be the major theme throughout the rest of this section.
Option
and Result
So far, I've talked about combinators defined for Option
and combinators defined for Result
. We can use these combinators to compose results of different computations without doing explicit case analysis.
Of course, in real code, things aren't always as clean. Sometimes you have a mix of Option
and Result
types. Must we resort to explicit case analysis, or can we continue using combinators?
For now, let's revisit one of the first examples in this section:
use std::env; fn main() { let mut argv = env::args(); let arg: String = argv.nth(1).unwrap(); // error 1 let n: i32 = arg.parse().unwrap(); // error 2 println!("{}", 2 * n); }
Given our new found knowledge of Option
, Result
and their various combinators, we should try to rewrite this so that errors are handled properly and the program doesn't panic if there's an error.
The tricky aspect here is that argv.nth(1)
produces an Option
while arg.parse()
produces a Result
. These aren't directly composable. When faced with both an Option
and a Result
, the solution is usually to convert the Option
to a Result
. In our case, the absence of a command line parameter (from env::args()
) means the user didn't invoke the program correctly. We could use a String
to describe the error. Let's try:
use std::env; fn double_arg(mut argv: env::Args) -> Result<i32, String> { argv.nth(1) .ok_or("Please give at least one argument".to_owned()) .and_then(|arg| arg.parse::<i32>().map_err(|err| err.to_string())) .map(|n| 2 * n) } fn main() { match double_arg(env::args()) { Ok(n) => println!("{}", n), Err(err) => println!("Error: {}", err), } }
There are a couple new things in this example. The first is the use of the Option::ok_or
combinator. This is one way to convert an Option
into a Result
. The conversion requires you to specify what error to use if Option
is None
. Like the other combinators we've seen, its definition is very simple:
fn ok_or<T, E>(option: Option<T>, err: E) -> Result<T, E> { match option { Some(val) => Ok(val), None => Err(err), } }
The other new combinator used here is Result::map_err
. This is like Result::map
, except it maps a function on to the error portion of a Result
value. If the Result
is an Ok(...)
value, then it is returned unmodified.
We use map_err
here because it is necessary for the error types to remain the same (because of our use of and_then
). Since we chose to convert the Option<String>
(from argv.nth(1)
) to a Result<String, String>
, we must also convert the ParseIntError
from arg.parse()
to a String
.
Doing IO and parsing input is a very common task, and it's one that I personally have done a lot of in Rust. Therefore, we will use (and continue to use) IO and various parsing routines to exemplify error handling.
Let's start simple. We are tasked with opening a file, reading all of its contents and converting its contents to a number. Then we multiply it by 2
and print the output.
Although I've tried to convince you not to use unwrap
, it can be useful to first write your code using unwrap
. It allows you to focus on your problem instead of the error handling, and it exposes the points where proper error handling need to occur. Let's start there so we can get a handle on the code, and then refactor it to use better error handling.
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> i32 { let mut file = File::open(file_path).unwrap(); // error 1 let mut contents = String::new(); file.read_to_string(&mut contents).unwrap(); // error 2 let n: i32 = contents.trim().parse().unwrap(); // error 3 2 * n } fn main() { let doubled = file_double("foobar"); println!("{}", doubled); }
(N.B. The AsRef<Path>
is used because those are the same bounds used on std::fs::File::open
. This makes it ergonomic to use any kind of string as a file path.)
There are three different errors that can occur here:
The first two problems are described via the std::io::Error
type. We know this because of the return types of std::fs::File::open
and std::io::Read::read_to_string
. (Note that they both use the Result
type alias idiom described previously. If you click on the Result
type, you'll see the type alias, and consequently, the underlying io::Error
type.) The third problem is described by the std::num::ParseIntError
type. The io::Error
type in particular is pervasive throughout the standard library. You will see it again and again.
Let's start the process of refactoring the file_double
function. To make this function composable with other components of the program, it should not panic if any of the above error conditions are met. Effectively, this means that the function should return an error if any of its operations fail. Our problem is that the return type of file_double
is i32
, which does not give us any useful way of reporting an error. Thus, we must start by changing the return type from i32
to something else.
The first thing we need to decide: should we use Option
or Result
? We certainly could use Option
very easily. If any of the three errors occur, we could simply return None
. This will work and it is better than panicking, but we can do a lot better. Instead, we should pass some detail about the error that occurred. Since we want to express the possibility of error, we should use Result<i32, E>
. But what should E
be? Since two different types of errors can occur, we need to convert them to a common type. One such type is String
. Let's see how that impacts our code:
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, String> { File::open(file_path) .map_err(|err| err.to_string()) .and_then(|mut file| { let mut contents = String::new(); file.read_to_string(&mut contents) .map_err(|err| err.to_string()) .map(|_| contents) }) .and_then(|contents| { contents.trim().parse::<i32>() .map_err(|err| err.to_string()) }) .map(|n| 2 * n) } fn main() { match file_double("foobar") { Ok(n) => println!("{}", n), Err(err) => println!("Error: {}", err), } }
This code looks a bit hairy. It can take quite a bit of practice before code like this becomes easy to write. The way we write it is by following the types. As soon as we changed the return type of file_double
to Result<i32, String>
, we had to start looking for the right combinators. In this case, we only used three different combinators: and_then
, map
and map_err
.
and_then
is used to chain multiple computations where each computation could return an error. After opening the file, there are two more computations that could fail: reading from the file and parsing the contents as a number. Correspondingly, there are two calls to and_then
.
map
is used to apply a function to the Ok(...)
value of a Result
. For example, the very last call to map
multiplies the Ok(...)
value (which is an i32
) by 2
. If an error had occurred before that point, this operation would have been skipped because of how map
is defined.
map_err
is the trick that makes all of this work. map_err
is like map
, except it applies a function to the Err(...)
value of a Result
. In this case, we want to convert all of our errors to one type: String
. Since both io::Error
and num::ParseIntError
implement ToString
, we can call the to_string()
method to convert them.
With all of that said, the code is still hairy. Mastering use of combinators is important, but they have their limits. Let's try a different approach: early returns.
I'd like to take the code from the previous section and rewrite it using early returns. Early returns let you exit the function early. We can't return early in file_double
from inside another closure, so we'll need to revert back to explicit case analysis.
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, String> { let mut file = match File::open(file_path) { Ok(file) => file, Err(err) => return Err(err.to_string()), }; let mut contents = String::new(); if let Err(err) = file.read_to_string(&mut contents) { return Err(err.to_string()); } let n: i32 = match contents.trim().parse() { Ok(n) => n, Err(err) => return Err(err.to_string()), }; Ok(2 * n) } fn main() { match file_double("foobar") { Ok(n) => println!("{}", n), Err(err) => println!("Error: {}", err), } }
Reasonable people can disagree over whether this code is better than the code that uses combinators, but if you aren't familiar with the combinator approach, this code looks simpler to read to me. It uses explicit case analysis with match
and if let
. If an error occurs, it simply stops executing the function and returns the error (by converting it to a string).
Isn't this a step backwards though? Previously, we said that the key to ergonomic error handling is reducing explicit case analysis, yet we've reverted back to explicit case analysis here. It turns out, there are multiple ways to reduce explicit case analysis. Combinators aren't the only way.
try!
macroA cornerstone of error handling in Rust is the try!
macro. The try!
macro abstracts case analysis like combinators, but unlike combinators, it also abstracts control flow. Namely, it can abstract the early return pattern seen above.
Here is a simplified definition of a try!
macro:
macro_rules! try { ($e:expr) => (match $e { Ok(val) => val, Err(err) => return Err(err), }); }
(The real definition is a bit more sophisticated. We will address that later.)
Using the try!
macro makes it very easy to simplify our last example. Since it does the case analysis and the early return for us, we get tighter code that is easier to read:
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, String> { let mut file = try!(File::open(file_path).map_err(|e| e.to_string())); let mut contents = String::new(); try!(file.read_to_string(&mut contents).map_err(|e| e.to_string())); let n = try!(contents.trim().parse::<i32>().map_err(|e| e.to_string())); Ok(2 * n) } fn main() { match file_double("foobar") { Ok(n) => println!("{}", n), Err(err) => println!("Error: {}", err), } }
The map_err
calls are still necessary given our definition of try!
. This is because the error types still need to be converted to String
. The good news is that we will soon learn how to remove those map_err
calls! The bad news is that we will need to learn a bit more about a couple important traits in the standard library before we can remove the map_err
calls.
Before we dive into some of the standard library error traits, I'd like to wrap up this section by removing the use of String
as our error type in the previous examples.
Using String
as we did in our previous examples is convenient because it's easy to convert errors to strings, or even make up your own errors as strings on the spot. However, using String
for your errors has some downsides.
The first downside is that the error messages tend to clutter your code. It's possible to define the error messages elsewhere, but unless you're unusually disciplined, it is very tempting to embed the error message into your code. Indeed, we did exactly this in a previous example.
The second and more important downside is that String
s are lossy. That is, if all errors are converted to strings, then the errors we pass to the caller become completely opaque. The only reasonable thing the caller can do with a String
error is show it to the user. Certainly, inspecting the string to determine the type of error is not robust. (Admittedly, this downside is far more important inside of a library as opposed to, say, an application.)
For example, the io::Error
type embeds an io::ErrorKind
, which is structured data that represents what went wrong during an IO operation. This is important because you might want to react differently depending on the error. (e.g., A BrokenPipe
error might mean quitting your program gracefully while a NotFound
error might mean exiting with an error code and showing an error to the user.) With io::ErrorKind
, the caller can examine the type of an error with case analysis, which is strictly superior to trying to tease out the details of an error inside of a String
.
Instead of using a String
as an error type in our previous example of reading an integer from a file, we can define our own error type that represents errors with structured data. We endeavor to not drop information from underlying errors in case the caller wants to inspect the details.
The ideal way to represent one of many possibilities is to define our own sum type using enum
. In our case, an error is either an io::Error
or a num::ParseIntError
, so a natural definition arises:
use std::io; use std::num; // We derive `Debug` because all types should probably derive `Debug`. // This gives us a reasonable human readable description of `CliError` values. #[derive(Debug)] enum CliError { Io(io::Error), Parse(num::ParseIntError), }
Tweaking our code is very easy. Instead of converting errors to strings, we simply convert them to our CliError
type using the corresponding value constructor:
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, CliError> { let mut file = try!(File::open(file_path).map_err(CliError::Io)); let mut contents = String::new(); try!(file.read_to_string(&mut contents).map_err(CliError::Io)); let n: i32 = try!(contents.trim().parse().map_err(CliError::Parse)); Ok(2 * n) } fn main() { match file_double("foobar") { Ok(n) => println!("{}", n), Err(err) => println!("Error: {:?}", err), } }
The only change here is switching map_err(|e| e.to_string())
(which converts errors to strings) to map_err(CliError::Io)
or map_err(CliError::Parse)
. The caller gets to decide the level of detail to report to the user. In effect, using a String
as an error type removes choices from the caller while using a custom enum
error type like CliError
gives the caller all of the conveniences as before in addition to structured data describing the error.
A rule of thumb is to define your own error type, but a String
error type will do in a pinch, particularly if you're writing an application. If you're writing a library, defining your own error type should be strongly preferred so that you don't remove choices from the caller unnecessarily.
The standard library defines two integral traits for error handling: std::error::Error
and std::convert::From
. While Error
is designed specifically for generically describing errors, the From
trait serves a more general role for converting values between two distinct types.
Error
traitThe Error
trait is defined in the standard library:
use std::fmt::{Debug, Display}; trait Error: Debug + Display { /// A short description of the error. fn description(&self) -> &str; /// The lower level cause of this error, if any. fn cause(&self) -> Option<&Error> { None } }
This trait is super generic because it is meant to be implemented for all types that represent errors. This will prove useful for writing composable code as we'll see later. Otherwise, the trait allows you to do at least the following things:
Debug
representation of the error.Display
representation of the error.description
method).cause
method).The first two are a result of Error
requiring impls for both Debug
and Display
. The latter two are from the two methods defined on Error
. The power of Error
comes from the fact that all error types impl Error
, which means errors can be existentially quantified as a trait object. This manifests as either Box<Error>
or &Error
. Indeed, the cause
method returns an &Error
, which is itself a trait object. We'll revisit the Error
trait's utility as a trait object later.
For now, it suffices to show an example implementing the Error
trait. Let's use the error type we defined in the previous section:
use std::io; use std::num; // We derive `Debug` because all types should probably derive `Debug`. // This gives us a reasonable human readable description of `CliError` values. #[derive(Debug)] enum CliError { Io(io::Error), Parse(num::ParseIntError), }
This particular error type represents the possibility of two types of errors occurring: an error dealing with I/O or an error converting a string to a number. The error could represent as many error types as you want by adding new variants to the enum
definition.
Implementing Error
is pretty straight-forward. It's mostly going to be a lot explicit case analysis.
use std::error; use std::fmt; impl fmt::Display for CliError { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { match *self { // Both underlying errors already impl `Display`, so we defer to // their implementations. CliError::Io(ref err) => write!(f, "IO error: {}", err), CliError::Parse(ref err) => write!(f, "Parse error: {}", err), } } } impl error::Error for CliError { fn description(&self) -> &str { // Both underlying errors already impl `Error`, so we defer to their // implementations. match *self { CliError::Io(ref err) => err.description(), CliError::Parse(ref err) => err.description(), } } fn cause(&self) -> Option<&error::Error> { match *self { // N.B. Both of these implicitly cast `err` from their concrete // types (either `&io::Error` or `&num::ParseIntError`) // to a trait object `&Error`. This works because both error types // implement `Error`. CliError::Io(ref err) => Some(err), CliError::Parse(ref err) => Some(err), } } }
We note that this is a very typical implementation of Error
: match on your different error types and satisfy the contracts defined for description
and cause
.
From
traitThe std::convert::From
trait is defined in the standard library:
trait From<T> { fn from(T) -> Self; }
Deliciously simple, yes? From
is very useful because it gives us a generic way to talk about conversion from a particular type T
to some other type (in this case, “some other type” is the subject of the impl, or Self
). The crux of From
is the set of implementations provided by the standard library.
Here are a few simple examples demonstrating how From
works:
let string: String = From::from("foo"); let bytes: Vec<u8> = From::from("foo"); let cow: ::std::borrow::Cow<str> = From::from("foo");
OK, so From
is useful for converting between strings. But what about errors? It turns out, there is one critical impl:
impl<'a, E: Error + 'a> From<E> for Box<Error + 'a>
This impl says that for any type that impls Error
, we can convert it to a trait object Box<Error>
. This may not seem terribly surprising, but it is useful in a generic context.
Remember the two errors we were dealing with previously? Specifically, io::Error
and num::ParseIntError
. Since both impl Error
, they work with From
:
use std::error::Error; use std::fs; use std::io; use std::num; // We have to jump through some hoops to actually get error values: let io_err: io::Error = io::Error::last_os_error(); let parse_err: num::ParseIntError = "not a number".parse::<i32>().unwrap_err(); // OK, here are the conversions: let err1: Box<Error> = From::from(io_err); let err2: Box<Error> = From::from(parse_err);
There is a really important pattern to recognize here. Both err1
and err2
have the same type. This is because they are existentially quantified types, or trait objects. In particular, their underlying type is erased from the compiler's knowledge, so it truly sees err1
and err2
as exactly the same. Additionally, we constructed err1
and err2
using precisely the same function call: From::from
. This is because From::from
is overloaded on both its argument and its return type.
This pattern is important because it solves a problem we had earlier: it gives us a way to reliably convert errors to the same type using the same function.
Time to revisit an old friend; the try!
macro.
try!
macroPreviously, we presented this definition of try!
:
macro_rules! try { ($e:expr) => (match $e { Ok(val) => val, Err(err) => return Err(err), }); }
This is not its real definition. Its real definition is in the standard library:
macro_rules! try { ($e:expr) => (match $e { Ok(val) => val, Err(err) => return Err(::std::convert::From::from(err)), }); }
There's one tiny but powerful change: the error value is passed through From::from
. This makes the try!
macro a lot more powerful because it gives you automatic type conversion for free.
Armed with our more powerful try!
macro, let's take a look at code we wrote previously to read a file and convert its contents to an integer:
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, String> { let mut file = try!(File::open(file_path).map_err(|e| e.to_string())); let mut contents = String::new(); try!(file.read_to_string(&mut contents).map_err(|e| e.to_string())); let n = try!(contents.trim().parse::<i32>().map_err(|e| e.to_string())); Ok(2 * n) }
Earlier, we promised that we could get rid of the map_err
calls. Indeed, all we have to do is pick a type that From
works with. As we saw in the previous section, From
has an impl that lets it convert any error type into a Box<Error>
:
use std::error::Error; use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, Box<Error>> { let mut file = try!(File::open(file_path)); let mut contents = String::new(); try!(file.read_to_string(&mut contents)); let n = try!(contents.trim().parse::<i32>()); Ok(2 * n) }
We are getting very close to ideal error handling. Our code has very little overhead as a result from error handling because the try!
macro encapsulates three things simultaneously:
When all three things are combined, we get code that is unencumbered by combinators, calls to unwrap
or case analysis.
There's one little nit left: the Box<Error>
type is opaque. If we return a Box<Error>
to the caller, the caller can't (easily) inspect underlying error type. The situation is certainly better than String
because the caller can call methods like description
and cause
, but the limitation remains: Box<Error>
is opaque. (N.B. This isn't entirely true because Rust does have runtime reflection, which is useful in some scenarios that are beyond the scope of this section.)
It's time to revisit our custom CliError
type and tie everything together.
In the last section, we looked at the real try!
macro and how it does automatic type conversion for us by calling From::from
on the error value. In particular, we converted errors to Box<Error>
, which works, but the type is opaque to callers.
To fix this, we use the same remedy that we're already familiar with: a custom error type. Once again, here is the code that reads the contents of a file and converts it to an integer:
use std::fs::File; use std::io::{self, Read}; use std::num; use std::path::Path; // We derive `Debug` because all types should probably derive `Debug`. // This gives us a reasonable human readable description of `CliError` values. #[derive(Debug)] enum CliError { Io(io::Error), Parse(num::ParseIntError), } fn file_double_verbose<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, CliError> { let mut file = try!(File::open(file_path).map_err(CliError::Io)); let mut contents = String::new(); try!(file.read_to_string(&mut contents).map_err(CliError::Io)); let n: i32 = try!(contents.trim().parse().map_err(CliError::Parse)); Ok(2 * n) }
Notice that we still have the calls to map_err
. Why? Well, recall the definitions of try!
and From
. The problem is that there is no From
impl that allows us to convert from error types like io::Error
and num::ParseIntError
to our own custom CliError
. Of course, it is easy to fix this! Since we defined CliError
, we can impl From
with it:
use std::io; use std::num; impl From<io::Error> for CliError { fn from(err: io::Error) -> CliError { CliError::Io(err) } } impl From<num::ParseIntError> for CliError { fn from(err: num::ParseIntError) -> CliError { CliError::Parse(err) } }
All these impls are doing is teaching From
how to create a CliError
from other error types. In our case, construction is as simple as invoking the corresponding value constructor. Indeed, it is typically this easy.
We can finally rewrite file_double
:
use std::fs::File; use std::io::Read; use std::path::Path; fn file_double<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P) -> Result<i32, CliError> { let mut file = try!(File::open(file_path)); let mut contents = String::new(); try!(file.read_to_string(&mut contents)); let n: i32 = try!(contents.trim().parse()); Ok(2 * n) }
The only thing we did here was remove the calls to map_err
. They are no longer needed because the try!
macro invokes From::from
on the error value. This works because we've provided From
impls for all the error types that could appear.
If we modified our file_double
function to perform some other operation, say, convert a string to a float, then we'd need to add a new variant to our error type:
use std::io; use std::num; enum CliError { Io(io::Error), ParseInt(num::ParseIntError), ParseFloat(num::ParseFloatError), }
And add a new From
impl:
use std::num; impl From<num::ParseFloatError> for CliError { fn from(err: num::ParseFloatError) -> CliError { CliError::ParseFloat(err) } }
And that's it!
If your library needs to report custom errors, then you should probably define your own error type. It's up to you whether or not to expose its representation (like ErrorKind
) or keep it hidden (like ParseIntError
). Regardless of how you do it, it's usually good practice to at least provide some information about the error beyond its String
representation. But certainly, this will vary depending on use cases.
At a minimum, you should probably implement the Error
trait. This will give users of your library some minimum flexibility for composing errors. Implementing the Error
trait also means that users are guaranteed the ability to obtain a string representation of an error (because it requires impls for both fmt::Debug
and fmt::Display
).
Beyond that, it can also be useful to provide implementations of From
on your error types. This allows you (the library author) and your users to compose more detailed errors. For example, csv::Error
provides From
impls for both io::Error
and byteorder::Error
.
Finally, depending on your tastes, you may also want to define a Result
type alias, particularly if your library defines a single error type. This is used in the standard library for io::Result
and fmt::Result
.
This section was long, and depending on your background, it might be rather dense. While there is plenty of example code to go along with the prose, most of it was specifically designed to be pedagogical. So, we're going to do something new: a case study.
For this, we're going to build up a command line program that lets you query world population data. The objective is simple: you give it a location and it will tell you the population. Despite the simplicity, there is a lot that can go wrong!
The data we'll be using comes from the Data Science Toolkit. I've prepared some data from it for this exercise. You can either grab the world population data (41MB gzip compressed, 145MB uncompressed) or only the US population data (2.2MB gzip compressed, 7.2MB uncompressed).
Up until now, we've kept the code limited to Rust's standard library. For a real task like this though, we'll want to at least use something to parse CSV data, parse the program arguments and decode that stuff into Rust types automatically. For that, we'll use the csv
, and rustc-serialize
crates.
We're not going to spend a lot of time on setting up a project with Cargo because it is already covered well in the Cargo section and Cargo's documentation.
To get started from scratch, run cargo new --bin city-pop
and make sure your Cargo.toml
looks something like this:
[package] name = "city-pop" version = "0.1.0" authors = ["Andrew Gallant <[email protected]>"] [[bin]] name = "city-pop" [dependencies] csv = "0.*" rustc-serialize = "0.*" getopts = "0.*"
You should already be able to run:
cargo build --release ./target/release/city-pop # Outputs: Hello, world!
Let's get argument parsing out of the way. We won't go into too much detail on Getopts, but there is some good documentation describing it. The short story is that Getopts generates an argument parser and a help message from a vector of options (The fact that it is a vector is hidden behind a struct and a set of methods). Once the parsing is done, the parser returns a struct that records matches for defined options, and remaining "free" arguments. From there, we can get information about the flags, for instance, whether they were passed in, and what arguments they had. Here's our program with the appropriate extern crate
statements, and the basic argument setup for Getopts:
extern crate getopts; extern crate rustc_serialize; use getopts::Options; use std::env; fn print_usage(program: &str, opts: Options) { println!("{}", opts.usage(&format!("Usage: {} [options] <data-path> <city>", program))); } fn main() { let args: Vec<String> = env::args().collect(); let program = &args[0]; let mut opts = Options::new(); opts.optflag("h", "help", "Show this usage message."); let matches = match opts.parse(&args[1..]) { Ok(m) => { m } Err(e) => { panic!(e.to_string()) } }; if matches.opt_present("h") { print_usage(&program, opts); return; } let data_path = &matches.free[0]; let city: &str = &matches.free[1]; // Do stuff with information. }
First, we get a vector of the arguments passed into our program. We then store the first one, knowing that it is our program's name. Once that's done, we set up our argument flags, in this case a simplistic help message flag. Once we have the argument flags set up, we use Options.parse
to parse the argument vector (starting from index one, because index 0 is the program name). If this was successful, we assign matches to the parsed object, if not, we panic. Once past that, we test if the user passed in the help flag, and if so print the usage message. The option help messages are constructed by Getopts, so all we have to do to print the usage message is tell it what we want it to print for the program name and template. If the user has not passed in the help flag, we assign the proper variables to their corresponding arguments.
We all write code differently, but error handling is usually the last thing we want to think about. This isn't great for the overall design of a program, but it can be useful for rapid prototyping. Because Rust forces us to be explicit about error handling (by making us call unwrap
), it is easy to see which parts of our program can cause errors.
In this case study, the logic is really simple. All we need to do is parse the CSV data given to us and print out a field in matching rows. Let's do it. (Make sure to add extern crate csv;
to the top of your file.)
use std::fs::File; // This struct represents the data in each row of the CSV file. // Type based decoding absolves us of a lot of the nitty gritty error // handling, like parsing strings as integers or floats. #[derive(Debug, RustcDecodable)] struct Row { country: String, city: String, accent_city: String, region: String, // Not every row has data for the population, latitude or longitude! // So we express them as `Option` types, which admits the possibility of // absence. The CSV parser will fill in the correct value for us. population: Option<u64>, latitude: Option<f64>, longitude: Option<f64>, } fn print_usage(program: &str, opts: Options) { println!("{}", opts.usage(&format!("Usage: {} [options] <data-path> <city>", program))); } fn main() { let args: Vec<String> = env::args().collect(); let program = &args[0]; let mut opts = Options::new(); opts.optflag("h", "help", "Show this usage message."); let matches = match opts.parse(&args[1..]) { Ok(m) => { m } Err(e) => { panic!(e.to_string()) } }; if matches.opt_present("h") { print_usage(&program, opts); return; } let data_path = &matches.free[0]; let city: &str = &matches.free[1]; let file = File::open(data_path).unwrap(); let mut rdr = csv::Reader::from_reader(file); for row in rdr.decode::<Row>() { let row = row.unwrap(); if row.city == city { println!("{}, {}: {:?}", row.city, row.country, row.population.expect("population count")); } } }
Let's outline the errors. We can start with the obvious: the three places that unwrap
is called:
File::open
can return an io::Error
.csv::Reader::decode
decodes one record at a time, and decoding a record (look at the Item
associated type on the Iterator
impl) can produce a csv::Error
.row.population
is None
, then calling expect
will panic.Are there any others? What if we can't find a matching city? Tools like grep
will return an error code, so we probably should too. So we have logic errors specific to our problem, IO errors and CSV parsing errors. We're going to explore two different ways to approach handling these errors.
I'd like to start with Box<Error>
. Later, we'll see how defining our own error type can be useful.
Box<Error>
Box<Error>
is nice because it just works. You don't need to define your own error types and you don't need any From
implementations. The downside is that since Box<Error>
is a trait object, it erases the type, which means the compiler can no longer reason about its underlying type.
Previously we started refactoring our code by changing the type of our function from T
to Result<T, OurErrorType>
. In this case, OurErrorType
is only Box<Error>
. But what's T
? And can we add a return type to main
?
The answer to the second question is no, we can't. That means we'll need to write a new function. But what is T
? The simplest thing we can do is to return a list of matching Row
values as a Vec<Row>
. (Better code would return an iterator, but that is left as an exercise to the reader.)
Let's refactor our code into its own function, but keep the calls to unwrap
. Note that we opt to handle the possibility of a missing population count by simply ignoring that row.
use std::path::Path; struct Row { // This struct remains unchanged. } struct PopulationCount { city: String, country: String, // This is no longer an `Option` because values of this type are only // constructed if they have a population count. count: u64, } fn print_usage(program: &str, opts: Options) { println!("{}", opts.usage(&format!("Usage: {} [options] <data-path> <city>", program))); } fn search<P: AsRef<Path>>(file_path: P, city: &str) -> Vec<PopulationCount> { let mut found = vec![]; let file = File::open(file_path).unwrap(); let mut rdr = csv::Reader::from_reader(file); for row in rdr.decode::<Row>() { let row = row.unwrap(); match row.population { None => { } // Skip it. Some(count) => if row.city == city { found.push(PopulationCount { city: row.city, country: row.country, count: count, }); }, } } found } fn main() { let args: Vec<String> = env::args().collect(); let program = &args[0]; let mut opts = Options::new(); opts.optflag("h", "help", "Show this usage message."); let matches = match opts.parse(&args[1..]) { Ok(m) => { m } Err(e) => { panic!(e.to_string()) } }; if matches.opt_present("h") { print_usage(&program, opts); return; } let data_path = &matches.free[0]; let city: &str = &matches.free[1]; for pop in search(data_path, city) { println!("{}, {}: {:?}", pop.city, pop.country, pop.count); } }
While we got rid of one use of expect
(which is a nicer variant of unwrap
), we still should handle the absence of any search results.
To convert this to proper error handling, we need to do the following:
search
to be Result<Vec<PopulationCount>, Box<Error>>
.try!
macro so that errors are returned to the caller instead of panicking the program.main
.Let's try it:
use std::error::Error; // The rest of the code before this is unchanged. fn search<P: AsRef<Path>> (file_path: P, city: &str) -> Result<Vec<PopulationCount>, Box<Error>> { let mut found = vec![]; let file = try!(File::open(file_path)); let mut rdr = csv::Reader::from_reader(file); for row in rdr.decode::<Row>() { let row = try!(row); match row.population { None => { } // Skip it. Some(count) => if row.city == city { found.push(PopulationCount { city: row.city, country: row.country, count: count, }); }, } } if found.is_empty() { Err(From::from("No matching cities with a population were found.")) } else { Ok(found) } }
Instead of x.unwrap()
, we now have try!(x)
. Since our function returns a Result<T, E>
, the try!
macro will return early from the function if an error occurs.
At the end of search
we also convert a plain string to an error type by using the corresponding From
impls:
// We are making use of this impl in the code above, since we call `From::from` // on a `&'static str`. impl<'a> From<&'a str> for Box<Error> // But this is also useful when you need to allocate a new string for an // error message, usually with `format!`. impl From<String> for Box<Error>
Since search
now returns a Result<T, E>
, main
should use case analysis when calling search
:
... match search(data_path, city) { Ok(pops) => { for pop in pops { println!("{}, {}: {:?}", pop.city, pop.country, pop.count); } } Err(err) => println!("{}", err) } ...
Now that we've seen how to do proper error handling with Box<Error>
, let's try a different approach with our own custom error type. But first, let's take a quick break from error handling and add support for reading from stdin
.
In our program, we accept a single file for input and do one pass over the data. This means we probably should be able to accept input on stdin. But maybe we like the current format too—so let's have both!
Adding support for stdin is actually quite easy. There are only three things we have to do:
-f
can take the file, if it is not passed into stdin.search
function to take an optional file path. When None
, it should know to read from stdin.First, here's the new usage:
fn print_usage(program: &str, opts: Options) { println!("{}", opts.usage(&format!("Usage: {} [options] <city>", program))); }
Of course we need to adapt the argument handling code:
... let mut opts = Options::new(); opts.optopt("f", "file", "Choose an input file, instead of using STDIN.", "NAME"); opts.optflag("h", "help", "Show this usage message."); ... let data_path = matches.opt_str("f"); let city = if !matches.free.is_empty() { &matches.free[0] } else { print_usage(&program, opts); return; }; match search(&data_path, city) { Ok(pops) => { for pop in pops { println!("{}, {}: {:?}", pop.city, pop.country, pop.count); } } Err(err) => println!("{}", err) } ...
We've made the user experience a bit nicer by showing the usage message, instead of a panic from an out-of-bounds index, when city
, the remaining free argument, is not present.
Modifying search
is slightly trickier. The csv
crate can build a parser out of any type that implements io::Read
. But how can we use the same code over both types? There's actually a couple ways we could go about this. One way is to write search
such that it is generic on some type parameter R
that satisfies io::Read
. Another way is to use trait objects:
use std::io; // The rest of the code before this is unchanged. fn search<P: AsRef<Path>> (file_path: &Option<P>, city: &str) -> Result<Vec<PopulationCount>, Box<Error>> { let mut found = vec![]; let input: Box<io::Read> = match *file_path { None => Box::new(io::stdin()), Some(ref file_path) => Box::new(try!(File::open(file_path))), }; let mut rdr = csv::Reader::from_reader(input); // The rest remains unchanged! }
Previously, we learned how to compose errors using a custom error type. We did this by defining our error type as an enum
and implementing Error
and From
.
Since we have three distinct errors (IO, CSV parsing and not found), let's define an enum
with three variants:
#[derive(Debug)] enum CliError { Io(io::Error), Csv(csv::Error), NotFound, }
And now for impls on Display
and Error
:
use std::fmt; impl fmt::Display for CliError { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result { match *self { CliError::Io(ref err) => err.fmt(f), CliError::Csv(ref err) => err.fmt(f), CliError::NotFound => write!(f, "No matching cities with a \ population were found."), } } } impl Error for CliError { fn description(&self) -> &str { match *self { CliError::Io(ref err) => err.description(), CliError::Csv(ref err) => err.description(), CliError::NotFound => "not found", } } fn cause(&self) -> Option<&Error> { match *self { CliError::Io(ref err) => Some(err), CliError::Csv(ref err) => Some(err), // Our custom error doesn't have an underlying cause, // but we could modify it so that it does. CliError::NotFound => None, } } }
Before we can use our CliError
type in our search
function, we need to provide a couple From
impls. How do we know which impls to provide? Well, we'll need to convert from both io::Error
and csv::Error
to CliError
. Those are the only external errors, so we'll only need two From
impls for now:
impl From<io::Error> for CliError { fn from(err: io::Error) -> CliError { CliError::Io(err) } } impl From<csv::Error> for CliError { fn from(err: csv::Error) -> CliError { CliError::Csv(err) } }
The From
impls are important because of how try!
is defined. In particular, if an error occurs, From::from
is called on the error, which in this case, will convert it to our own error type CliError
.
With the From
impls done, we only need to make two small tweaks to our search
function: the return type and the “not found” error. Here it is in full:
fn search<P: AsRef<Path>> (file_path: &Option<P>, city: &str) -> Result<Vec<PopulationCount>, CliError> { let mut found = vec![]; let input: Box<io::Read> = match *file_path { None => Box::new(io::stdin()), Some(ref file_path) => Box::new(try!(File::open(file_path))), }; let mut rdr = csv::Reader::from_reader(input); for row in rdr.decode::<Row>() { let row = try!(row); match row.population { None => { } // Skip it. Some(count) => if row.city == city { found.push(PopulationCount { city: row.city, country: row.country, count: count, }); }, } } if found.is_empty() { Err(CliError::NotFound) } else { Ok(found) } }
No other changes are necessary.
Writing generic code is great, because generalizing stuff is cool, and it can then be useful later. But sometimes, the juice isn't worth the squeeze. Look at what we just did in the previous step:
Error
, Display
and two for From
.The big downside here is that our program didn't improve a whole lot. There is quite a bit of overhead to representing errors with enum
s, especially in short programs like this.
One useful aspect of using a custom error type like we've done here is that the main
function can now choose to handle errors differently. Previously, with Box<Error>
, it didn't have much of a choice: just print the message. We're still doing that here, but what if we wanted to, say, add a --quiet
flag? The --quiet
flag should silence any verbose output.
Right now, if the program doesn't find a match, it will output a message saying so. This can be a little clumsy, especially if you intend for the program to be used in shell scripts.
So let's start by adding the flags. Like before, we need to tweak the usage string and add a flag to the Option variable. Once we've done that, Getopts does the rest:
... let mut opts = Options::new(); opts.optopt("f", "file", "Choose an input file, instead of using STDIN.", "NAME"); opts.optflag("h", "help", "Show this usage message."); opts.optflag("q", "quiet", "Silences errors and warnings."); ...
Now we only need to implement our “quiet” functionality. This requires us to tweak the case analysis in main
:
use std::process; ... match search(&data_path, city) { Err(CliError::NotFound) if matches.opt_present("q") => process::exit(1), Err(err) => panic!("{}", err), Ok(pops) => for pop in pops { println!("{}, {}: {:?}", pop.city, pop.country, pop.count); } } ...
Certainly, we don't want to be quiet if there was an IO error or if the data failed to parse. Therefore, we use case analysis to check if the error type is NotFound
and if --quiet
has been enabled. If the search failed, we still quit with an exit code (following grep
's convention).
If we had stuck with Box<Error>
, then it would be pretty tricky to implement the --quiet
functionality.
This pretty much sums up our case study. From here, you should be ready to go out into the world and write your own programs and libraries with proper error handling.
Since this section is long, it is useful to have a quick summary for error handling in Rust. These are some good “rules of thumb." They are emphatically not commandments. There are probably good reasons to break every one of these heuristics!
unwrap
(whether that's Result::unwrap
, Option::unwrap
or preferably Option::expect
). Consumers of your code should know to use proper error handling. (If they don't, send them here!)unwrap
. Be warned: if it winds up in someone else's hands, don't be surprised if they are agitated by poor error messages!String
or a Box<Error>
for your error type.From
and Error
impls to make the try!
macro more ergonomic.std::error::Error
trait. Where appropriate, implement From
to make both your library code and the caller's code easier to write. (Because of Rust's coherence rules, callers will not be able to impl From
on your error type, so your library should do it.)Option
and Result
. Using them exclusively can be a bit tiring at times, but I've personally found a healthy mix of try!
and combinators to be quite appealing. and_then
, map
and unwrap_or
are my favorites.
© 2010 The Rust Project Developers
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 or the MIT license, at your option.
https://doc.rust-lang.org/book/error-handling.html