you run miette? You run her code like the software? Oh. Oh! Error code for coder! Error code for One Thousand Lines!
miette
is a diagnostic definition library for Rust. It includes a series of
protocols that allow you to hook into its error reporting facilities, and even
write your own error reports! It lets you define error types that can print out
like this (or in any format you like!):
```console Error: Error[oops::my::bad]: oops it broke!
[bad_file.rs] This is the part that broke:
1 | source
2 | text
⫶ | ^^^^ this bit here
3 | here
﹦try doing it better next time? ```
The [Diagnostic] trait in miette
is an extension of std::error::Error
that
adds various facilities like [Severity], error codes that could be looked up
by users, and snippet display with support for multiline reports, arbitrary
[Source]s, and pretty printing.
While the miette
crate bundles some baseline implementations for [Source]
and [DiagnosticReporter], it's intended to define a protocol that other crates
can build on top of to provide rich error reporting, and encourage an
ecosystem that leans on this extra metadata to provide it for others in a way
that's compatible with [std::error::Error]
Using cargo-edit
:
sh
$ cargo add miette
``rust
/*
First, you implement a regular
std::error::Error` type.
thiserror
is a great way to do so, and plays extremely nicely with miette
!
*/
use thiserror::Error;
struct MyBad {
snippets: Vec
/*
Next, we have to implement the Diagnostic
trait for it:
*/
use miette::{Diagnostic, Severity, DiagnosticSnippet};
impl Diagnostic for MyBad {
fn code(&self) -> Box
fn help(&self) -> Option<Box<dyn std::fmt::Display>> {
Some(Box::new("try doing it better next time?"))
}
fn snippets(&self) -> Option<Box<dyn Iterator<Item = DiagnosticSnippet>>> {
Some(Box::new(self.snippets.clone().into_iter()))
}
}
/*
Then, we implement std::fmt::Debug
using the included MietteReporter
,
which is able to pretty print diagnostics reasonably well.
You can use any reporter you want here, or no reporter at all,
but Debug
is required by std::error::Error
, so you need to at
least derive it.
Make sure you pull in the miette::DiagnosticReporter
trait!.
*/
use std::fmt;
use miette::{DiagnosticReporter, MietteReporter};
impl fmt::Debug for MyBad { fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter<'_>) -> fmt::Result { MietteReporter.debug(self, f) } }
/*
Now we can use miette
~
*/
use std::sync::Arc;
use miette::{MietteError, SourceSpan};
fn makemyerror() -> MyBad {
// You can use plain strings as a Source
, bu the protocol is fully extensible!
let src = "source\n text\n here".to_string();
let len = src.len();
// The Rust runtime will use `{:?}` (Debug) to print any error you return
// from `main`!
MyBad {
// Snippets are **fully optional**, but in some use cases can provide
// additional contextual detail for users!
//
// This is all you need to write to get `rustc`-style, rich error reports!
//
// See the docs for `DiagnosticSnippet` to learn more about how to
// construct these objects!
snippets: vec![DiagnosticSnippet {
message: Some("This is the part that broke".into()),
source_name: "bad_file.rs".into(),
source: Arc::new(src),
context: SourceSpan {
start: 0.into(),
end: (len - 1).into(),
},
highlights: Some(vec![
("this bit here".into(), SourceSpan {
start: 9.into(),
end: 12.into(),
})
]),
}],
}
} ```
And this is the output you'll get if you run this program:
```sh Error: Error[oops::my::bad]: oops it broke!
[bad_file.rs] This is the part that broke:
1 | source
2 | text
⫶ | ^^^^ this bit here
3 | here
﹦try doing it better next time? ```
miette
is released to the Rust community under the MIT license.
It also includes some code taken from eyre
,
also under the MIT license.