Class Exception and its subclasses are used to
communicate between Kernel#raise
and rescue
statements in begin ... end
blocks.
An Exception object carries information about an exception:
Its type (the exception's class).
An optional descriptive message.
Optional backtrace information.
Some built-in subclasses of Exception have additional methods: e.g., NameError#name.
Two Ruby statements have default exception classes:
raise
: defaults to RuntimeError.
rescue
: defaults to StandardError.
When an exception has been raised but not yet handled (in
rescue
, ensure
, at_exit
and
END
blocks), two global variables are set:
$!
contains the current exception.
$@
contains its backtrace.
To provide additional or alternate information, a program may create custom exception classes that derive from the built-in exception classes.
A good practice is for a library to create a single "generic" exception class (typically a subclass of StandardError or RuntimeError) and have its other exception classes derive from that class. This allows the user to rescue the generic exception, thus catching all exceptions the library may raise even if future versions of the library add new exception subclasses.
For example:
class MyLibrary class Error < ::StandardError end class WidgetError < Error end class FrobError < Error end end
To handle both MyLibrary::WidgetError and MyLibrary::FrobError the library user can rescue MyLibrary::Error.
The built-in subclasses of Exception are:
fatal
With no argument, or if the argument is the same as the receiver, return
the receiver. Otherwise, create a new exception object of the same class as
the receiver, but with a message equal to string.to_str
.
Construct a new Exception object, optionally passing in a message.
static VALUE exc_initialize(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE exc) { VALUE arg; arg = (!rb_check_arity(argc, 0, 1) ? Qnil : argv[0]); return exc_init(exc, arg); }
Equality—If obj is not an Exception,
returns false
. Otherwise, returns true
if
exc and obj share same class, messages, and backtrace.
static VALUE exc_equal(VALUE exc, VALUE obj) { VALUE mesg, backtrace; if (exc == obj) return Qtrue; if (rb_obj_class(exc) != rb_obj_class(obj)) { int state; obj = rb_protect(try_convert_to_exception, obj, &state); if (state || obj == Qundef) { rb_set_errinfo(Qnil); return Qfalse; } if (rb_obj_class(exc) != rb_obj_class(obj)) return Qfalse; mesg = rb_check_funcall(obj, id_message, 0, 0); if (mesg == Qundef) return Qfalse; backtrace = rb_check_funcall(obj, id_backtrace, 0, 0); if (backtrace == Qundef) return Qfalse; } else { mesg = rb_attr_get(obj, id_mesg); backtrace = exc_backtrace(obj); } if (!rb_equal(rb_attr_get(exc, id_mesg), mesg)) return Qfalse; if (!rb_equal(exc_backtrace(exc), backtrace)) return Qfalse; return Qtrue; }
Returns any backtrace associated with the exception. The backtrace is an array of strings, each containing either “filename:lineNo: in `method”‘ or “filename:lineNo.”
def a raise "boom" end def b a() end begin b() rescue => detail print detail.backtrace.join("\n") end
produces:
prog.rb:2:in `a' prog.rb:6:in `b' prog.rb:10
In the case no backtrace has been set, nil
is returned
ex = StandardError.new ex.backtrace #=> nil
static VALUE exc_backtrace(VALUE exc) { VALUE obj; obj = rb_attr_get(exc, id_bt); if (rb_backtrace_p(obj)) { obj = rb_backtrace_to_str_ary(obj); /* rb_ivar_set(exc, id_bt, obj); */ } return obj; }
Returns any backtrace associated with the exception. This method is similar to #backtrace, but the backtrace is an array of Thread::Backtrace::Location.
This method is not affected by #set_backtrace.
static VALUE exc_backtrace_locations(VALUE exc) { VALUE obj; obj = rb_attr_get(exc, id_bt_locations); if (!NIL_P(obj)) { obj = rb_backtrace_to_location_ary(obj); } return obj; }
Returns the previous exception ($!) at the time this exception was raised. This is useful for wrapping exceptions and retaining the original exception information.
static VALUE exc_cause(VALUE exc) { return rb_attr_get(exc, id_cause); }
With no argument, or if the argument is the same as the receiver, return
the receiver. Otherwise, create a new exception object of the same class as
the receiver, but with a message equal to string.to_str
.
static VALUE exc_exception(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE self) { VALUE exc; argc = rb_check_arity(argc, 0, 1); if (argc == 0) return self; if (argc == 1 && self == argv[0]) return self; exc = rb_obj_clone(self); rb_ivar_set(exc, id_mesg, argv[0]); return exc; }
Returns formatted string of exception. The returned string is formatted using the same format that Ruby uses when printing an uncaught exceptions to stderr.
If highlight is true
the default error handler will
send the messages to a tty.
order must be either of :top
or :bottom
,
and places the error message and the innermost backtrace come at the top or
the bottom.
The default values of these options depend on $stderr
and its
tty?
at the timing of a call.
static VALUE exc_full_message(int argc, VALUE *argv, VALUE exc) { VALUE opt, str, emesg, errat; enum {kw_highlight, kw_order, kw_max_}; static ID kw[kw_max_]; VALUE args[kw_max_] = {Qnil, Qnil}; rb_scan_args(argc, argv, "0:", &opt); if (!NIL_P(opt)) { if (!kw[0]) { #define INIT_KW(n) kw[kw_##n] = rb_intern_const(#n) INIT_KW(highlight); INIT_KW(order); #undef INIT_KW } rb_get_kwargs(opt, kw, 0, kw_max_, args); switch (args[kw_highlight]) { default: rb_raise(rb_eArgError, "expected true or false as " "highlight: %+"PRIsVALUE, args[kw_highlight]); case Qundef: args[kw_highlight] = Qnil; break; case Qtrue: case Qfalse: case Qnil: break; } if (args[kw_order] == Qundef) { args[kw_order] = Qnil; } else { ID id = rb_check_id(&args[kw_order]); if (id == id_bottom) args[kw_order] = Qtrue; else if (id == id_top) args[kw_order] = Qfalse; else { rb_raise(rb_eArgError, "expected :top or :bottom as " "order: %+"PRIsVALUE, args[kw_order]); } } } str = rb_str_new2(""); errat = rb_get_backtrace(exc); emesg = rb_get_message(exc); rb_error_write(exc, emesg, errat, str, args[kw_highlight], args[kw_order]); return str; }
Return this exception’s class name and message.
static VALUE exc_inspect(VALUE exc) { VALUE str, klass; klass = CLASS_OF(exc); exc = rb_obj_as_string(exc); if (RSTRING_LEN(exc) == 0) { return rb_class_name(klass); } str = rb_str_buf_new2("#<"); klass = rb_class_name(klass); rb_str_buf_append(str, klass); rb_str_buf_cat(str, ": ", 2); rb_str_buf_append(str, exc); rb_str_buf_cat(str, ">", 1); return str; }
Returns the result of invoking exception.to_s
. Normally this
returns the exception’s message or name.
static VALUE exc_message(VALUE exc) { return rb_funcallv(exc, idTo_s, 0, 0); }
Sets the backtrace information associated with exc
. The
backtrace
must be an array of String
objects or a single String in the format
described in #backtrace.
static VALUE exc_set_backtrace(VALUE exc, VALUE bt) { return rb_ivar_set(exc, id_bt, rb_check_backtrace(bt)); }