Categorygithub.com/hashicorp/errwrap
modulepackage
1.1.0
Repository: https://github.com/hashicorp/errwrap.git
Documentation: pkg.go.dev

# README

errwrap

errwrap is a package for Go that formalizes the pattern of wrapping errors and checking if an error contains another error.

There is a common pattern in Go of taking a returned error value and then wrapping it (such as with fmt.Errorf) before returning it. The problem with this pattern is that you completely lose the original error structure.

Arguably the correct approach is that you should make a custom structure implementing the error interface, and have the original error as a field on that structure, such as this example. This is a good approach, but you have to know the entire chain of possible rewrapping that happens, when you might just care about one.

errwrap formalizes this pattern (it doesn't matter what approach you use above) by giving a single interface for wrapping errors, checking if a specific error is wrapped, and extracting that error.

Installation and Docs

Install using go get github.com/hashicorp/errwrap.

Full documentation is available at http://godoc.org/github.com/hashicorp/errwrap

Usage

Basic Usage

Below is a very basic example of its usage:

// A function that always returns an error, but wraps it, like a real
// function might.
func tryOpen() error {
	_, err := os.Open("/i/dont/exist")
	if err != nil {
		return errwrap.Wrapf("Doesn't exist: {{err}}", err)
	}

	return nil
}

func main() {
	err := tryOpen()

	// We can use the Contains helpers to check if an error contains
	// another error. It is safe to do this with a nil error, or with
	// an error that doesn't even use the errwrap package.
	if errwrap.Contains(err, "does not exist") {
		// Do something
	}
	if errwrap.ContainsType(err, new(os.PathError)) {
		// Do something
	}

	// Or we can use the associated `Get` functions to just extract
	// a specific error. This would return nil if that specific error doesn't
	// exist.
	perr := errwrap.GetType(err, new(os.PathError))
}

Custom Types

If you're already making custom types that properly wrap errors, then you can get all the functionality of errwraps.Contains and such by implementing the Wrapper interface with just one function. Example:

type AppError {
  Code ErrorCode
  Err  error
}

func (e *AppError) WrappedErrors() []error {
  return []error{e.Err}
}

Now this works:

err := &AppError{Err: fmt.Errorf("an error")}
if errwrap.ContainsType(err, fmt.Errorf("")) {
	// This will work!
}

# Functions

Contains checks if the given error contains an error with the message msg.
ContainsType checks if the given error contains an error with the same concrete type as v.
Get is the same as GetAll but returns the deepest matching error.
GetAll gets all the errors that might be wrapped in err with the given message.
GetAllType gets all the errors that are the same type as v.
GetType is the same as GetAllType but returns the deepest matching error.
Walk walks all the wrapped errors in err and calls the callback.
Wrap defines that outer wraps inner, returning an error type that can be cleanly used with the other methods in this package, such as Contains, GetAll, etc.
Wrapf wraps an error with a formatting message.

# Interfaces

Wrapper is an interface that can be implemented by custom types to have all the Contains, Get, etc.

# Type aliases

WalkFunc is the callback called for Walk.