8522341274
Remove these in favor of the two traits themselves and the wrapper function std::from_str::from_str. Add the function std::num::from_str_radix in the corresponding role for the FromStrRadix trait.
877 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
877 lines
30 KiB
Markdown
% Rust Condition and Error-handling Tutorial
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# Introduction
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Rust does not provide exception handling[^why-no-exceptions]
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in the form most commonly seen in other programming languages such as C++ or Java.
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Instead, it provides four mechanisms that work together to handle errors or other rare events.
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The four mechanisms are:
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- Options
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- Results
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- Failure
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- Conditions
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This tutorial will lead you through use of these mechanisms
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in order to understand the trade-offs of each and relationships between them.
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# Example program
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This tutorial will be based around an example program
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that attempts to read lines from a file
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consisting of pairs of numbers,
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and then print them back out with slightly different formatting.
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The input to the program might look like this:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ cat numbers.txt
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1 2
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34 56
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789 123
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45 67
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~~~~
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For which the intended output looks like this:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ ./example numbers.txt
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0001, 0002
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0034, 0056
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0789, 0123
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0045, 0067
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~~~~
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An example program that does this task reads like this:
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~~~~
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# #[allow(unused_imports)];
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extern mod extra;
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use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
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use std::int;
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# mod FileInput {
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# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
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# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
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# 34 56\n\
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# 789 123\n\
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# 45 67\n\
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# ");
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# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
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# @BytesReader {
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# bytes: s,
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# pos: @mut 0
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# } as @Reader
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# }
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# }
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fn main() {
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let pairs = read_int_pairs();
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for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
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println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
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}
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}
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fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
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let mut pairs = ~[];
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let fi = FileInput::from_args();
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while ! fi.eof() {
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// 1. Read a line of input.
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let line = fi.read_line();
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// 2. Split the line into fields ("words").
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let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
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// 3. Match the vector of fields against a vector pattern.
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match fields {
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// 4. When the line had two fields:
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[a, b] => {
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// 5. Try parsing both fields as ints.
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match (from_str::<int>(a), from_str::<int>(b)) {
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// 6. If parsing succeeded for both, push both.
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(Some(a), Some(b)) => pairs.push((a,b)),
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// 7. Ignore non-int fields.
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_ => ()
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}
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}
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// 8. Ignore lines that don't have 2 fields.
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_ => ()
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}
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}
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pairs
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}
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~~~~
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This example shows the use of `Option`,
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along with some other forms of error-handling (and non-handling).
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We will look at these mechanisms
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and then modify parts of the example to perform "better" error handling.
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# Options
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The simplest and most lightweight mechanism in Rust for indicating an error is the type `std::option::Option<T>`.
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This type is a general purpose `enum`
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for conveying a value of type `T`, represented as `Some(T)`
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_or_ the sentinel `None`, to indicate the absence of a `T` value.
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For simple APIs, it may be sufficient to encode errors as `Option<T>`,
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returning `Some(T)` on success and `None` on error.
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In the example program, the call to `from_str::<int>` returns `Option<int>`
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with the understanding that "all parse errors" result in `None`.
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The resulting `Option<int>` values are matched against the pattern `(Some(a), Some(b))`
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in steps 5 and 6 in the example program,
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to handle the case in which both fields were parsed successfully.
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Using `Option` as in this API has some advantages:
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- Simple API, users can read it and guess how it works.
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- Very efficient, only an extra `enum` tag on return values.
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- Caller has flexibility in handling or propagating errors.
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- Caller is forced to acknowledge existence of possible-error before using value.
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However, it has serious disadvantages too:
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- Verbose, requires matching results or calling `Option::unwrap` everywhere.
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- Infects caller: if caller doesn't know how to handle the error, must propagate (or force).
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- Temptation to do just that: force the `Some(T)` case by blindly calling `unwrap`,
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which hides the error from the API without providing any way to make the program robust against the error.
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- Collapses all errors into one:
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- Caller can't handle different errors differently.
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- Caller can't even report a very precise error message
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Note that in order to keep the example code reasonably compact,
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several unwanted cases are silently ignored:
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lines that do not contain two fields, as well as fields that do not parse as ints.
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To propagate these cases to the caller using `Option` would require even more verbose code.
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# Results
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Before getting into _trapping_ the error,
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we will look at a slight refinement on the `Option` type above.
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This second mechanism for indicating an error is called a `Result`.
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The type `std::result::Result<T,E>` is another simple `enum` type with two forms, `Ok(T)` and `Err(E)`.
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The `Result` type is not substantially different from the `Option` type in terms of its ergonomics.
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Its main advantage is that the error constructor `Err(E)` can convey _more detail_ about the error.
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For example, the `from_str` API could be reformed
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to return a `Result` carrying an informative description of a parse error,
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like this:
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~~~~ {.ignore}
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enum IntParseErr {
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EmptyInput,
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Overflow,
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BadChar(char)
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}
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fn from_str(&str) -> Result<int,IntParseErr> {
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// ...
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}
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~~~~
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This would give the caller more information for both handling and reporting the error,
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but would otherwise retain the verbosity problems of using `Option`.
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In particular, it would still be necessary for the caller to return a further `Result` to _its_ caller if it did not want to handle the error.
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Manually propagating result values this way can be attractive in certain circumstances
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-- for example when processing must halt on the very first error, or backtrack --
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but as we will see later, many cases have simpler options available.
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# Failure
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The third and arguably easiest mechanism for handling errors is called "failure".
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In fact it was hinted at earlier by suggesting that one can choose to propagate `Option` or `Result` types _or "force" them_.
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"Forcing" them, in this case, means calling a method like `Option<T>::unwrap`,
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which contains the following code:
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~~~~ {.ignore}
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pub fn unwrap(self) -> T {
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match self {
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Some(x) => return x,
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None => fail!("option::unwrap `None`")
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}
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}
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~~~~
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That is, it returns `T` when `self` is `Some(T)`, and _fails_ when `self` is `None`.
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Every Rust task can _fail_, either indirectly due to a kill signal or other asynchronous event,
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or directly by failing an `assert!` or calling the `fail!` macro.
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Failure is an _unrecoverable event_ at the task level:
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it causes the task to halt normal execution and unwind its control stack,
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freeing all task-local resources (the local heap as well as any task-owned values from the global heap)
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and running destructors (the `drop` method of the `Drop` trait)
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as frames are unwound and heap values destroyed.
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A failing task is not permitted to "catch" the unwinding during failure and recover,
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it is only allowed to clean up and exit.
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Failure has advantages:
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- Simple and non-verbose. Suitable for programs that can't reasonably continue past an error anyways.
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- _All_ errors (except memory-safety errors) can be uniformly trapped in a supervisory task outside the failing task.
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For a large program to be robust against a variety of errors,
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often some form of task-level partitioning to contain pervasive errors (arithmetic overflow, division by zero,
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logic bugs) is necessary anyways.
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As well as obvious disadvantages:
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- A blunt instrument, terminates the containing task entirely.
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Recall that in the first two approaches to error handling,
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the example program was only handling success cases, and ignoring error cases.
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That is, if the input is changed to contain a malformed line:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ cat bad.txt
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1 2
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34 56
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ostrich
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789 123
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45 67
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~~~~
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Then the program would give the same output as if there was no error:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ ./example bad.txt
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0001, 0002
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0034, 0056
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0789, 0123
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0045, 0067
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~~~~
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If the example is rewritten to use failure, these error cases can be trapped.
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In this rewriting, failures are trapped by placing the I/O logic in a sub-task,
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and trapping its exit status using `task::try`:
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~~~~ {.xfail-test}
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# #[allowed(unused_imports)];
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extern mod extra;
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use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
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use std::int;
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use std::task;
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# mod FileInput {
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# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
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# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
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# 34 56\n\
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# ostrich\n\
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# 789 123\n\
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# 45 67\n\
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# ");
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# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
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# @BytesReader {
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# bytes: s,
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# pos: @mut 0
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# } as @Reader
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# }
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# }
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fn main() {
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// Isolate failure within a subtask.
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let result = do task::try {
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// The protected logic.
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let pairs = read_int_pairs();
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for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
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println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
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}
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};
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if result.is_err() {
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println("parsing failed");
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}
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}
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fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
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let mut pairs = ~[];
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let fi = FileInput::from_args();
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while ! fi.eof() {
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let line = fi.read_line();
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let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
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match fields {
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[a, b] => pairs.push((from_str::<int>(a).unwrap(),
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from_str::<int>(b).unwrap())),
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// Explicitly fail on malformed lines.
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_ => fail!()
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}
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}
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pairs
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}
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~~~~
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With these changes in place, running the program on malformed input gives a different answer:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ ./example bad.txt
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rust: task failed at 'explicit failure', ./example.rs:44
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parsing failed
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~~~~
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Note that while failure unwinds the sub-task performing I/O in `read_int_pairs`,
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control returns to `main` and can easily continue uninterrupted.
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In this case, control simply prints out `parsing failed` and then exits `main` (successfully).
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Failure of a (sub-)task is analogous to calling `exit(1)` or `abort()` in a unix C program:
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all the state of a sub-task is cleanly discarded on exit,
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and a supervisor task can take appropriate action
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without worrying about its own state having been corrupted.
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# Conditions
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The final mechanism for handling errors is called a "condition".
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Conditions are less blunt than failure, and less cumbersome than the `Option` or `Result` types;
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indeed they are designed to strike just the right balance between the two.
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Conditions require some care to use effectively, but give maximum flexibility with minimum verbosity.
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While conditions use exception-like terminology ("trap", "raise") they are significantly different:
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- Like exceptions and failure, conditions separate the site at which the error is raised from the site where it is trapped.
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- Unlike exceptions and unlike failure, when a condition is raised and trapped, _no unwinding occurs_.
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- A successfully trapped condition causes execution to continue _at the site of the error_, as though no error occurred.
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Conditions are declared with the `condition!` macro.
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Each condition has a name, an input type and an output type, much like a function.
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In fact, conditions are implemented as dynamically-scoped functions held in task local storage.
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The `condition!` macro declares a module with the name of the condition;
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the module contains a single static value called `cond`, of type `std::condition::Condition`.
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The `cond` value within the module is the rendezvous point
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between the site of error and the site that handles the error.
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It has two methods of interest: `raise` and `trap`.
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The `raise` method maps a value of the condition's input type to its output type.
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The input type should therefore convey all relevant information to the condition handler.
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The output type should convey all relevant information _for continuing execution at the site of error_.
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When the error site raises a condition handler,
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the `Condition::raise` method searches task-local storage (TLS) for the innermost installed _handler_,
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and if any such handler is found, calls it with the provided input value.
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If no handler is found, `Condition::raise` will fail the task with an appropriate error message.
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Rewriting the example to use a condition in place of ignoring malformed lines makes it slightly longer,
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but similarly clear as the version that used `fail!` in the logic where the error occurs:
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~~~~ {.xfail-test}
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# #[allow(unused_imports)];
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extern mod extra;
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use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
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use std::int;
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# mod FileInput {
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# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
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# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
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# 34 56\n\
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# ostrich\n\
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# 789 123\n\
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# 45 67\n\
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# ");
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# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
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# @BytesReader {
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# bytes: s,
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# pos: @mut 0
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# } as @Reader
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# }
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# }
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// Introduce a new condition.
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condition! {
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pub malformed_line : ~str -> (int,int);
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}
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fn main() {
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let pairs = read_int_pairs();
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for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
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println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
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}
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}
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fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
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let mut pairs = ~[];
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let fi = FileInput::from_args();
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while ! fi.eof() {
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let line = fi.read_line();
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let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
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match fields {
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[a, b] => pairs.push((from_str::<int>(a).unwrap(),
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from_str::<int>(b).unwrap())),
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// On malformed lines, call the condition handler and
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// push whatever the condition handler returns.
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_ => pairs.push(malformed_line::cond.raise(line.clone()))
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}
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}
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pairs
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}
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~~~~
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When this is run on malformed input, it still fails,
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but with a slightly different failure message than before:
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ ./example bad.txt
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rust: task failed at 'Unhandled condition: malformed_line: ~"ostrich"', .../libstd/condition.rs:43
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~~~~
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While this superficially resembles the trapped `fail!` call before,
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it is only because the example did not install a handler for the condition.
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The different failure message is indicating, among other things,
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that the condition-handling system is being invoked and failing
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only due to the absence of a _handler_ that traps the condition.
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# Trapping a condition
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To trap a condition, use `Condition::trap` in some caller of the site that calls `Condition::raise`.
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For example, this version of the program traps the `malformed_line` condition
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and replaces bad input lines with the pair `(-1,-1)`:
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~~~~
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# #[allow(unused_imports)];
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extern mod extra;
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use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
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use std::int;
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# mod FileInput {
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# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
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# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
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# 34 56\n\
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# ostrich\n\
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# 789 123\n\
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# 45 67\n\
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# ");
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# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
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# @BytesReader {
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# bytes: s,
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# pos: @mut 0
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# } as @Reader
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# }
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# }
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condition! {
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pub malformed_line : ~str -> (int,int);
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}
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fn main() {
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// Trap the condition:
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do malformed_line::cond.trap(|_| (-1,-1)).inside {
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|
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// The protected logic.
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let pairs = read_int_pairs();
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for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
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println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
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}
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}
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}
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fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
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let mut pairs = ~[];
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let fi = FileInput::from_args();
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while ! fi.eof() {
|
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let line = fi.read_line();
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let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
|
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match fields {
|
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[a, b] => pairs.push((from_str::<int>(a).unwrap(),
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from_str::<int>(b).unwrap())),
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_ => pairs.push(malformed_line::cond.raise(line.clone()))
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}
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}
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pairs
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}
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~~~~
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Note that the remainder of the program is _unchanged_ with this trap in place;
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only the caller that installs the trap changed.
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Yet when the condition-trapping variant runs on the malformed input,
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it continues execution past the malformed line, substituting the handler's return value.
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|
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~~~~ {.notrust}
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$ ./example bad.txt
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0001, 0002
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0034, 0056
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-0001, -0001
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0789, 0123
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0045, 0067
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~~~~
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# Refining a condition
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As you work with a condition, you may find that the original set of options you present for recovery is insufficient.
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This is no different than any other issue of API design:
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a condition handler is an API for recovering from the condition, and sometimes APIs need to be enriched.
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In the example program, the first form of the `malformed_line` API implicitly assumes that recovery involves a substitute value.
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This assumption may not be correct; some callers may wish to skip malformed lines, for example.
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Changing the condition's return type from `(int,int)` to `Option<(int,int)>` will suffice to support this type of recovery:
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~~~~
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# #[allow(unused_imports)];
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extern mod extra;
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use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
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use std::int;
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# mod FileInput {
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# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
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# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
|
|
# 34 56\n\
|
|
# ostrich\n\
|
|
# 789 123\n\
|
|
# 45 67\n\
|
|
# ");
|
|
# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
|
|
# @BytesReader {
|
|
# bytes: s,
|
|
# pos: @mut 0
|
|
# } as @Reader
|
|
# }
|
|
# }
|
|
|
|
// Modify the condition signature to return an Option.
|
|
condition! {
|
|
pub malformed_line : ~str -> Option<(int,int)>;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
// Trap the condition and return `None`
|
|
do malformed_line::cond.trap(|_| None).inside {
|
|
|
|
// The protected logic.
|
|
let pairs = read_int_pairs();
|
|
for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
|
|
println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
|
|
let mut pairs = ~[];
|
|
let fi = FileInput::from_args();
|
|
while ! fi.eof() {
|
|
let line = fi.read_line();
|
|
let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
|
|
match fields {
|
|
[a, b] => pairs.push((from_str::<int>(a).unwrap(),
|
|
from_str::<int>(b).unwrap())),
|
|
|
|
// On malformed lines, call the condition handler and
|
|
// either ignore the line (if the handler returns `None`)
|
|
// or push any `Some(pair)` value returned instead.
|
|
_ => {
|
|
match malformed_line::cond.raise(line.clone()) {
|
|
Some(pair) => pairs.push(pair),
|
|
None => ()
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
pairs
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Again, note that the remainder of the program is _unchanged_,
|
|
in particular the signature of `read_int_pairs` is unchanged,
|
|
even though the innermost part of its reading-loop has a new way of handling a malformed line.
|
|
When the example is run with the `None` trap in place,
|
|
the line is ignored as it was in the first example,
|
|
but the choice of whether to ignore or use a substitute value has been moved to some caller,
|
|
possibly a distant caller.
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
$ ./example bad.txt
|
|
0001, 0002
|
|
0034, 0056
|
|
0789, 0123
|
|
0045, 0067
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
# Further refining a condition
|
|
|
|
Like with any API, the process of refining argument and return types of a condition will continue,
|
|
until all relevant combinations encountered in practice are encoded.
|
|
In the example, suppose a third possible recovery form arose: reusing the previous value read.
|
|
This can be encoded in the handler API by introducing a helper type: `enum MalformedLineFix`.
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
|
|
extern mod extra;
|
|
use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
|
|
use std::int;
|
|
# mod FileInput {
|
|
# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
|
|
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
|
|
# 34 56\n\
|
|
# ostrich\n\
|
|
# 789 123\n\
|
|
# 45 67\n\
|
|
# ");
|
|
# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
|
|
# @BytesReader {
|
|
# bytes: s,
|
|
# pos: @mut 0
|
|
# } as @Reader
|
|
# }
|
|
# }
|
|
|
|
// Introduce a new enum to convey condition-handling strategy to error site.
|
|
pub enum MalformedLineFix {
|
|
UsePair(int,int),
|
|
IgnoreLine,
|
|
UsePreviousLine
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Modify the condition signature to return the new enum.
|
|
// Note: a condition introduces a new module, so the enum must be
|
|
// named with the `super::` prefix to access it.
|
|
condition! {
|
|
pub malformed_line : ~str -> super::MalformedLineFix;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
// Trap the condition and return `UsePreviousLine`
|
|
do malformed_line::cond.trap(|_| UsePreviousLine).inside {
|
|
|
|
// The protected logic.
|
|
let pairs = read_int_pairs();
|
|
for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
|
|
println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
|
|
let mut pairs = ~[];
|
|
let fi = FileInput::from_args();
|
|
while ! fi.eof() {
|
|
let line = fi.read_line();
|
|
let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
|
|
match fields {
|
|
[a, b] => pairs.push((from_str::<int>(a).unwrap(),
|
|
from_str::<int>(b).unwrap())),
|
|
|
|
// On malformed lines, call the condition handler and
|
|
// take action appropriate to the enum value returned.
|
|
_ => {
|
|
match malformed_line::cond.raise(line.clone()) {
|
|
UsePair(a,b) => pairs.push((a,b)),
|
|
IgnoreLine => (),
|
|
UsePreviousLine => {
|
|
let prev = pairs[pairs.len() - 1];
|
|
pairs.push(prev)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
pairs
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Running the example with `UsePreviousLine` as the fix code returned from the handler
|
|
gives the expected result:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
$ ./example bad.txt
|
|
0001, 0002
|
|
0034, 0056
|
|
0034, 0056
|
|
0789, 0123
|
|
0045, 0067
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
At this point the example has a rich variety of recovery options,
|
|
none of which is visible to casual users of the `read_int_pairs` function.
|
|
This is intentional: part of the purpose of using a condition
|
|
is to free intermediate callers from the burden of having to write repetitive error-propagation logic,
|
|
and/or having to change function call and return types as error-handling strategies are refined.
|
|
|
|
# Multiple conditions, intermediate callers
|
|
|
|
So far the function trapping the condition and the function raising it have been immediately adjacent in the call stack.
|
|
That is, the caller traps and its immediate callee raises.
|
|
In most programs, the function that traps may be separated by very many function calls from the function that raises.
|
|
Again, this is part of the point of using conditions:
|
|
to support that separation without having to thread multiple error values and recovery strategies all the way through the program's main logic.
|
|
|
|
Careful readers will notice that there is a remaining failure mode in the example program: the call to `.unwrap()` when parsing each integer.
|
|
For example, when presented with a file that has the correct number of fields on a line,
|
|
but a non-numeric value in one of them, such as this:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
$ cat bad.txt
|
|
1 2
|
|
34 56
|
|
7 marmot
|
|
789 123
|
|
45 67
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
|
|
Then the program fails once more:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
$ ./example bad.txt
|
|
task <unnamed> failed at 'called `Option::unwrap()` on a `None` value', .../libstd/option.rs:314
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
To make the program robust -- or at least flexible -- in the face of this potential failure,
|
|
a second condition and a helper function will suffice:
|
|
|
|
~~~~
|
|
# #[allow(unused_imports)];
|
|
extern mod extra;
|
|
use extra::fileinput::FileInput;
|
|
use std::int;
|
|
# mod FileInput {
|
|
# use std::io::{Reader, BytesReader};
|
|
# static s : &'static [u8] = bytes!("1 2\n\
|
|
# 34 56\n\
|
|
# 7 marmot\n\
|
|
# 789 123\n\
|
|
# 45 67\n\
|
|
# ");
|
|
# pub fn from_args() -> @Reader{
|
|
# @BytesReader {
|
|
# bytes: s,
|
|
# pos: @mut 0
|
|
# } as @Reader
|
|
# }
|
|
# }
|
|
|
|
pub enum MalformedLineFix {
|
|
UsePair(int,int),
|
|
IgnoreLine,
|
|
UsePreviousLine
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
condition! {
|
|
pub malformed_line : ~str -> ::MalformedLineFix;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Introduce a second condition.
|
|
condition! {
|
|
pub malformed_int : ~str -> int;
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn main() {
|
|
// Trap the `malformed_int` condition and return -1
|
|
do malformed_int::cond.trap(|_| -1).inside {
|
|
|
|
// Trap the `malformed_line` condition and return `UsePreviousLine`
|
|
do malformed_line::cond.trap(|_| UsePreviousLine).inside {
|
|
|
|
// The protected logic.
|
|
let pairs = read_int_pairs();
|
|
for &(a,b) in pairs.iter() {
|
|
println(fmt!("%4.4d, %4.4d", a, b));
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
// Parse an int; if parsing fails, call the condition handler and
|
|
// return whatever it returns.
|
|
fn parse_int(x: &str) -> int {
|
|
match from_str::<int>(x) {
|
|
Some(v) => v,
|
|
None => malformed_int::cond.raise(x.to_owned())
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
fn read_int_pairs() -> ~[(int,int)] {
|
|
let mut pairs = ~[];
|
|
let fi = FileInput::from_args();
|
|
while ! fi.eof() {
|
|
let line = fi.read_line();
|
|
let fields = line.word_iter().to_owned_vec();
|
|
match fields {
|
|
|
|
// Delegate parsing ints to helper function that will
|
|
// handle parse errors by calling `malformed_int`.
|
|
[a, b] => pairs.push((parse_int(a), parse_int(b))),
|
|
|
|
_ => {
|
|
match malformed_line::cond.raise(line.clone()) {
|
|
UsePair(a,b) => pairs.push((a,b)),
|
|
IgnoreLine => (),
|
|
UsePreviousLine => {
|
|
let prev = pairs[pairs.len() - 1];
|
|
pairs.push(prev)
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
}
|
|
pairs
|
|
}
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
Again, note that `read_int_pairs` has not changed signature,
|
|
nor has any of the machinery for trapping or raising `malformed_line`,
|
|
but now the program can handle the "right number of fields, non-integral field" form of bad input:
|
|
|
|
~~~~ {.notrust}
|
|
$ ./example bad.txt
|
|
0001, 0002
|
|
0034, 0056
|
|
0007, -0001
|
|
0789, 0123
|
|
0045, 0067
|
|
~~~~
|
|
|
|
There are three other things to note in this variant of the example program:
|
|
|
|
- It traps multiple conditions simultaneously,
|
|
nesting the protected logic of one `trap` call inside the other.
|
|
|
|
- There is a function in between the `trap` site and `raise` site for the `malformed_int` condition.
|
|
There could be any number of calls between them:
|
|
so long as the `raise` occurs within a callee (of any depth) of the logic protected by the `trap` call,
|
|
it will invoke the handler.
|
|
|
|
- This variant insulates callers from a design choice in the library:
|
|
the `from_str` function was designed to return an `Option<int>`,
|
|
but this program insulates callers from that choice,
|
|
routing all `None` values that arise from parsing integers in this file into the condition.
|
|
|
|
|
|
# When to use which technique
|
|
|
|
This tutorial explored several techniques for handling errors.
|
|
Each is appropriate to different circumstances:
|
|
|
|
- If an error may be extremely frequent, expected, and very likely dealt with by an immediate caller,
|
|
then returning an `Option` or `Result` type is best. These types force the caller to handle the error,
|
|
and incur the lowest speed overhead, usually only returning one extra word to tag the return value.
|
|
Between `Option` and `Result`: use an `Option` when there is only one kind of error,
|
|
otherwise make an `enum FooErr` to represent the possible error codes and use `Result<T,FooErr>`.
|
|
|
|
- If an error can reasonably be handled at the site it occurs by one of a few strategies -- possibly including failure --
|
|
and it is not clear which strategy a caller would want to use, a condition is best.
|
|
For many errors, the only reasonable "non-stop" recovery strategies are to retry some number of times,
|
|
create or substitute an empty or sentinel value, ignore the error, or fail.
|
|
|
|
- If an error cannot reasonably be handled at the site it occurs,
|
|
and the only reasonable response is to abandon a large set of operations in progress,
|
|
then directly failing is best.
|
|
|
|
Note that an unhandled condition will cause failure (along with a more-informative-than-usual message),
|
|
so if there is any possibility that a caller might wish to "ignore and keep going",
|
|
it is usually harmless to use a condition in place of a direct call to `fail!()`.
|
|
|
|
|
|
[^why-no-exceptions]: Exceptions in languages like C++ and Java permit unwinding, like Rust's failure system,
|
|
but with the option to halt unwinding partway through the process and continue execution.
|
|
This behavior unfortunately means that the _heap_ may be left in an inconsistent but accessible state,
|
|
if an exception is thrown part way through the process of initializing or modifying memory.
|
|
To compensate for this risk, correct C++ and Java code must program in an extremely elaborate and difficult "exception-safe" style
|
|
-- effectively transactional style against heap structures --
|
|
or else risk introducing silent and very difficult-to-debug errors due to control resuming in a corrupted heap after a caught exception.
|
|
These errors are frequently memory-safety errors, which Rust strives to eliminate,
|
|
and so Rust unwinding is unrecoverable within a single task:
|
|
once unwinding starts, the entire local heap of a task is destroyed and the task is terminated.
|