5.2 KiB
title | menu | weight |
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Errors | docs_advanced | 180 |
Errors
Actix-web uses its own actix_web::error::Error
type and
actix_web::error::ResponseError
trait for error handling
from web handlers.
If a handler returns an Error
(referring to the general Rust trait
std::error::Error
) in a Result
that also implements the
ResponseError
trait, actix-web will render that error as an HTTP response.
ResponseError
has a single function called error_response()
that returns
HttpResponse
:
pub trait ResponseError: Fail {
fn error_response(&self) -> HttpResponse {
HttpResponse::new(StatusCode::INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR)
}
}
A Responder
coerces compatible Result
s into HTTP responses:
impl<T: Responder, E: Into<Error>> Responder for Result<T, E>
Error
in the code above is actix-web's error definition, and any errors that
implement ResponseError
can be converted to one automatically.
Actix-web provides ResponseError
implementations for some common non-actix
errors. For example, if a handler responds with an io::Error
, that error is
converted into an HttpInternalServerError
:
use std::io;
fn index(_req: HttpRequest) -> io::Result<fs::NamedFile> {
Ok(fs::NamedFile::open("static/index.html")?)
}
See the actix-web API documentation for a full list of foreign
implementations for ResponseError
.
An example of a custom error response
Here's an example implementation for ResponseError
:
{{< include-example example="errors" file="main.rs" section="response-error" >}}
ResponseError
has a default implementation for error_response()
that will
render a 500 (internal server error), and that's what will happen when the
index
handler executes above.
Override error_response()
to produce more useful results:
{{< include-example example="errors" file="override_error.rs" section="override" >}}
Error helpers
Actix-web provides a set of error helper functions that are useful for generating
specific HTTP error codes from other errors. Here we convert MyError
, which
doesn't implement the ResponseError
trait, to a 400 (bad request) using
map_err
:
{{< include-example example="errors" file="helpers.rs" section="helpers" >}}
See the API documentation for actix-web's error
module
for a full list of available error helpers.
Compatibility with failure
Actix-web provides automatic compatibility with the failure library so that
errors deriving fail
will be converted automatically to an actix error. Keep
in mind that those errors will render with the default 500 status code unless you
also provide your own error_response()
implementation for them.
Error logging
Actix logs all errors at the WARN
log level. If an application's log level is
set to DEBUG
and RUST_BACKTRACE
is enabled, the backtrace is also logged.
These are configurable with environmental variables:
>> RUST_BACKTRACE=1 RUST_LOG=actix_web=debug cargo run
The Error
type uses the cause's error backtrace if available. If the
underlying failure does not provide a backtrace, a new backtrace is constructed
pointing to the point where the conversion occurred (rather than the origin of
the error).
Recommended practices in error handling
It might be useful to think about dividing the errors an application produces into two broad groups: those which are intended to be be user-facing, and those which are not.
An example of the former is that I might use failure to specify a UserError
enum which encapsulates a ValidationError
to return whenever a user sends bad
input:
{{< include-example example="errors" file="recommend_one.rs" section="recommend-one" >}}
This will behave exactly as intended because the error message defined with
display
is written with the explicit intent to be read by a user.
However, sending back an error's message isn't desirable for all errors -- there are many failures that occur in a server environment where we'd probably want the specifics to be hidden from the user. For example, if a database goes down and client libraries start producing connect timeout errors, or if an HTML template was improperly formatted and errors when rendered. In these cases, it might be preferable to map the errors to a generic error suitable for user consumption.
Here's an example that maps an internal error to a user-facing InternalError
with a custom message:
{{< include-example example="errors" file="recommend_two.rs" section="recommend-two" >}}
By dividing errors into those which are user facing and those which are not, we can ensure that we don't accidentally expose users to errors thrown by application internals which they weren't meant to see.