eyre

Build Status Latest Version Rust Documentation

This library provides eyre::Report, a trait object based error handling type for easy idiomatic error handling and reporting in Rust applications.

This crate is a fork of [anyhow] with a support for customized error reports. For more details on customization checkout the docs on [eyre::EyreHandler].

Custom Report Handlers

The heart of this crate is it's ability to swap out the Handler type to change what information is carried alongside errors and how the end report is formatted. This crate is meant to be used alongside companion crates that customize it's behavior. Below is a list of known crates that export report handlers for eyre and short summaries of what features they provide.

Details

No-std support

NOTE: tests are currently broken for no_std so I cannot guarantee that everything works still. I'm waiting for upstream fixes to be merged rather than fixing them myself, so bear with me.

In nostd mode, the same API is almost all available and works the same way. To depend on Eyre in nostd mode, disable our default enabled "std" feature in Cargo.toml. A global allocator is required.

toml [dependencies] eyre = { version = "0.6", default-features = false }

Since the ?-based error conversions would normally rely on the std::error::Error trait which is only available through std, no_std mode will require an explicit .map_err(Report::msg) when working with a non-Eyre error type inside a function that returns Eyre's error type.

Comparison to failure

The eyre::Report type works something like failure::Error, but unlike failure ours is built around the standard library's std::error::Error trait rather than a separate trait failure::Fail. The standard library has adopted the necessary improvements for this to be possible as part of [RFC 2504].

Comparison to thiserror

Use eyre if you don't think you'll do anything with an error other than report it. This is common in application code. Use thiserror if you think you need an error type that can be handled via match or reported. This is common in library crates where you don't know how your users will handle your errors.

Compatibility with anyhow

This crate does its best to be usable as a drop in replacement of anyhow and vice-versa by re-exporting all of the renamed APIs with the names used in anyhow, though there are some differences still.

Context and Option

As part of renaming Context to WrapErr we also intentionally do not implement WrapErr for Option. This decision was made because wrap_err implies that you're creating a new error that saves the old error as its source. With Option there is no source error to wrap, so wrap_err ends up being somewhat meaningless.

Instead eyre intends for users to use the combinator functions provided by std for converting Options to Results. So where you would write this with anyhow:

```rust use anyhow::Context;

let opt: Option<()> = None; let result = opt.context("new error message"); ```

With eyre we want users to write:

```rust use eyre::{eyre, Result};

let opt: Option<()> = None; let result: Result<()> = opt.okorelse(|| eyre!("new error message")); ```

NOTE: However, to help with porting we do provide a ContextCompat trait which implements context for options which you can import to make existing .context calls compile.

License

Licensed under either of Apache License, Version 2.0 or MIT license at your option.


Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this crate by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.