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129 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
129 lines
5.1 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Errors
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menu: docs_advanced
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weight: 180
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---
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# Errors
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Actix-web uses its own [`actix_web::error::Error`][actixerror] type and
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[`actix_web::error::ResponseError`][responseerror] trait for error handling from web handlers.
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If a handler returns an `Error` (referring to the [general Rust trait
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`std::error::Error`][stderror]) in a `Result` that also implements the `ResponseError` trait,
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actix-web will render that error as an HTTP response with it's corresponding
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[`actix_web::http::StatusCode`][status_code]. Internal server error is generated by default:
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```rust
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pub trait ResponseError {
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fn error_response(&self) -> Response<Body>;
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fn status_code(&self) -> StatusCode;
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}
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```
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A `Responder` coerces compatible `Result`s into HTTP responses:
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```rust
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impl<T: Responder, E: Into<Error>> Responder for Result<T, E>
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```
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`Error` in the code above is actix-web's error definition, and any errors that implement
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`ResponseError` can be converted to one automatically.
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Actix-web provides `ResponseError` implementations for some common non-actix errors. For example, if
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a handler responds with an `io::Error`, that error is converted into an `HttpInternalServerError`:
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```rust
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use std::io;
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use actix_files::NamedFile;
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fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> io::Result<NamedFile> {
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Ok(NamedFile::open("static/index.html")?)
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}
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```
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See [the actix-web API documentation][responseerrorimpls] for a full list of foreign implementations
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for `ResponseError`.
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## An example of a custom error response
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Here's an example implementation for `ResponseError`, using the [derive_more] crate
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for declarative error enums.
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{{< include-example example="errors" file="main.rs" section="response-error" >}}
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`ResponseError` has a default implementation for `error_response()` that will render a _500_
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(internal server error), and that's what will happen when the `index` handler executes above.
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Override `error_response()` to produce more useful results:
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{{< include-example example="errors" file="override_error.rs" section="override" >}}
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# Error helpers
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Actix-web provides a set of error helper functions that are useful for generating specific HTTP
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error codes from other errors. Here we convert `MyError`, which doesn't implement the
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`ResponseError` trait, to a _400_ (bad request) using `map_err`:
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{{< include-example example="errors" file="helpers.rs" section="helpers" >}}
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See the [API documentation for actix-web's `error` module][actixerror] for a full list of available
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error helpers.
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# Error logging
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Actix logs all errors at the `WARN` log level. If an application's log level is set to `DEBUG` and
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`RUST_BACKTRACE` is enabled, the backtrace is also logged. These are configurable with environmental
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variables:
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```
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>> RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=actix_web=debug cargo run
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```
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The `Error` type uses the cause's error backtrace if available. If the underlying failure does not
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provide a backtrace, a new backtrace is constructed pointing to the point where the conversion
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occurred (rather than the origin of the error).
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# Recommended practices in error handling
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It might be useful to think about dividing the errors an application produces into two broad groups:
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those which are intended to be be user-facing, and those which are not.
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An example of the former is that I might use failure to specify a `UserError` enum which
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encapsulates a `ValidationError` to return whenever a user sends bad input:
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{{< include-example example="errors" file="recommend_one.rs" section="recommend-one" >}}
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This will behave exactly as intended because the error message defined with `display` is written
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with the explicit intent to be read by a user.
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However, sending back an error's message isn't desirable for all errors -- there are many failures
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that occur in a server environment where we'd probably want the specifics to be hidden from the
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user. For example, if a database goes down and client libraries start producing connect timeout
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errors, or if an HTML template was improperly formatted and errors when rendered. In these cases, it
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might be preferable to map the errors to a generic error suitable for user consumption.
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Here's an example that maps an internal error to a user-facing `InternalError` with a custom
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message:
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{{< include-example example="errors" file="recommend_two.rs" section="recommend-two" >}}
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By dividing errors into those which are user facing and those which are not, we can ensure that we
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don't accidentally expose users to errors thrown by application internals which they weren't meant
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to see.
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# Error Logging
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This is a basic example using `middleware::Logger`:
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{{< include-example example="errors" file="logging.rs" section="logging" >}}
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[actixerror]: https://docs.rs/actix-web/3/actix_web/error/struct.Error.html
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[errorhelpers]: https://docs.rs/actix-web/3/actix_web/trait.ResponseError.html
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[derive_more]: https://crates.io/crates/derive_more
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[responseerror]: https://docs.rs/actix-web/3/actix_web/error/trait.ResponseError.html
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[responseerrorimpls]:
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https://docs.rs/actix-web/3/actix_web/error/trait.ResponseError.html#foreign-impls
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[stderror]: https://doc.rust-lang.org/std/error/trait.Error.html
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[status_code]: https://docs.rs/actix-web/3.0.0/actix_web/http/struct.StatusCode.html
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