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Edit File: failure.py
# -*- test-case-name: twisted.test.test_failure -*- # See also test suite twisted.test.test_pbfailure # Copyright (c) Twisted Matrix Laboratories. # See LICENSE for details. """ Asynchronous-friendly error mechanism. See L{Failure}. """ # System Imports import copy import inspect import linecache import sys from inspect import getmro from io import StringIO import opcode from twisted.python import reflect count = 0 traceupLength = 4 class DefaultException(Exception): pass def format_frames(frames, write, detail="default"): """ Format and write frames. @param frames: is a list of frames as used by Failure.frames, with each frame being a list of (funcName, fileName, lineNumber, locals.items(), globals.items()) @type frames: list @param write: this will be called with formatted strings. @type write: callable @param detail: Four detail levels are available: default, brief, verbose, and verbose-vars-not-captured. C{Failure.printDetailedTraceback} uses the latter when the caller asks for verbose, but no vars were captured, so that an explicit warning about the missing data is shown. @type detail: string """ if detail not in ("default", "brief", "verbose", "verbose-vars-not-captured"): raise ValueError( "Detail must be default, brief, verbose, or " "verbose-vars-not-captured. (not %r)" % (detail,) ) w = write if detail == "brief": for method, filename, lineno, localVars, globalVars in frames: w(f"{filename}:{lineno}:{method}\n") elif detail == "default": for method, filename, lineno, localVars, globalVars in frames: w(f' File "{filename}", line {lineno}, in {method}\n') w(" %s\n" % linecache.getline(filename, lineno).strip()) elif detail == "verbose-vars-not-captured": for method, filename, lineno, localVars, globalVars in frames: w("%s:%d: %s(...)\n" % (filename, lineno, method)) w(" [Capture of Locals and Globals disabled (use captureVars=True)]\n") elif detail == "verbose": for method, filename, lineno, localVars, globalVars in frames: w("%s:%d: %s(...)\n" % (filename, lineno, method)) w(" [ Locals ]\n") # Note: the repr(val) was (self.pickled and val) or repr(val))) for name, val in localVars: w(f" {name} : {repr(val)}\n") w(" ( Globals )\n") for name, val in globalVars: w(f" {name} : {repr(val)}\n") # slyphon: i have a need to check for this value in trial # so I made it a module-level constant EXCEPTION_CAUGHT_HERE = "--- <exception caught here> ---" class NoCurrentExceptionError(Exception): """ Raised when trying to create a Failure from the current interpreter exception state and there is no current exception state. """ def _Traceback(stackFrames, tbFrames): """ Construct a fake traceback object using a list of frames. Note that although frames generally include locals and globals, this information is not kept by this method, since locals and globals are not used in standard tracebacks. @param stackFrames: [(methodname, filename, lineno, locals, globals), ...] @param tbFrames: [(methodname, filename, lineno, locals, globals), ...] """ assert len(tbFrames) > 0, "Must pass some frames" # We deliberately avoid using recursion here, as the frames list may be # long. # 'stackFrames' is a list of frames above (ie, older than) the point the # exception was caught, with oldest at the start. Start by building these # into a linked list of _Frame objects (with the f_back links pointing back # towards the oldest frame). stack = None for sf in stackFrames: stack = _Frame(sf, stack) # 'tbFrames' is a list of frames from the point the exception was caught, # down to where it was thrown, with the oldest at the start. Add these to # the linked list of _Frames, but also wrap each one with a _Traceback # frame which is linked in the opposite direction (towards the newest # frame). stack = _Frame(tbFrames[0], stack) firstTb = tb = _TracebackFrame(stack) for sf in tbFrames[1:]: stack = _Frame(sf, stack) tb.tb_next = _TracebackFrame(stack) tb = tb.tb_next # Return the first _TracebackFrame. return firstTb class _TracebackFrame: """ Fake traceback object which can be passed to functions in the standard library L{traceback} module. """ def __init__(self, frame): """ @param frame: _Frame object """ self.tb_frame = frame self.tb_lineno = frame.f_lineno self.tb_next = None class _Frame: """ A fake frame object, used by L{_Traceback}. @ivar f_code: fake L{code<types.CodeType>} object @ivar f_lineno: line number @ivar f_globals: fake f_globals dictionary (usually empty) @ivar f_locals: fake f_locals dictionary (usually empty) @ivar f_back: previous stack frame (towards the caller) """ def __init__(self, frameinfo, back): """ @param frameinfo: (methodname, filename, lineno, locals, globals) @param back: previous (older) stack frame @type back: C{frame} """ name, filename, lineno, localz, globalz = frameinfo self.f_code = _Code(name, filename) self.f_lineno = lineno self.f_globals = {} self.f_locals = {} self.f_back = back class _Code: """ A fake code object, used by L{_Traceback} via L{_Frame}. """ def __init__(self, name, filename): self.co_name = name self.co_filename = filename _inlineCallbacksExtraneous = [] def _extraneous(f): """ Mark the given callable as extraneous to inlineCallbacks exception reporting; don't show these functions. @param f: a function that you NEVER WANT TO SEE AGAIN in ANY TRACEBACK reported by Failure. @type f: function @return: f """ _inlineCallbacksExtraneous.append(f.__code__) return f class Failure(BaseException): """ A basic abstraction for an error that has occurred. This is necessary because Python's built-in error mechanisms are inconvenient for asynchronous communication. The C{stack} and C{frame} attributes contain frames. Each frame is a tuple of (funcName, fileName, lineNumber, localsItems, globalsItems), where localsItems and globalsItems are the contents of C{locals().items()}/C{globals().items()} for that frame, or an empty tuple if those details were not captured. @ivar value: The exception instance responsible for this failure. @ivar type: The exception's class. @ivar stack: list of frames, innermost last, excluding C{Failure.__init__}. @ivar frames: list of frames, innermost first. """ pickled = 0 stack = None # The opcode of "yield" in Python bytecode. We need this in # _findFailure in order to identify whether an exception was # thrown by a throwExceptionIntoGenerator. # on PY3, b'a'[0] == 97 while in py2 b'a'[0] == b'a' opcodes # are stored in bytes so we need to properly account for this # difference. _yieldOpcode = opcode.opmap["YIELD_VALUE"] def __init__(self, exc_value=None, exc_type=None, exc_tb=None, captureVars=False): """ Initialize me with an explanation of the error. By default, this will use the current C{exception} (L{sys.exc_info}()). However, if you want to specify a particular kind of failure, you can pass an exception as an argument. If no C{exc_value} is passed, then an "original" C{Failure} will be searched for. If the current exception handler that this C{Failure} is being constructed in is handling an exception raised by L{raiseException}, then this C{Failure} will act like the original C{Failure}. For C{exc_tb} only L{traceback} instances or L{None} are allowed. If L{None} is supplied for C{exc_value}, the value of C{exc_tb} is ignored, otherwise if C{exc_tb} is L{None}, it will be found from execution context (ie, L{sys.exc_info}). @param captureVars: if set, capture locals and globals of stack frames. This is pretty slow, and makes no difference unless you are going to use L{printDetailedTraceback}. """ global count count = count + 1 self.count = count self.type = self.value = tb = None self.captureVars = captureVars if isinstance(exc_value, str) and exc_type is None: raise TypeError("Strings are not supported by Failure") stackOffset = 0 if exc_value is None: exc_value = self._findFailure() if exc_value is None: self.type, self.value, tb = sys.exc_info() if self.type is None: raise NoCurrentExceptionError() stackOffset = 1 elif exc_type is None: if isinstance(exc_value, Exception): self.type = exc_value.__class__ else: # Allow arbitrary objects. self.type = type(exc_value) self.value = exc_value else: self.type = exc_type self.value = exc_value if isinstance(self.value, Failure): self._extrapolate(self.value) return if hasattr(self.value, "__failure__"): # For exceptions propagated through coroutine-awaiting (see # Deferred.send, AKA Deferred.__next__), which can't be raised as # Failure because that would mess up the ability to except: them: self._extrapolate(self.value.__failure__) # Clean up the inherently circular reference established by storing # the failure there. This should make the common case of a Twisted # / Deferred-returning coroutine somewhat less hard on the garbage # collector. del self.value.__failure__ return if tb is None: if exc_tb: tb = exc_tb elif getattr(self.value, "__traceback__", None): # Python 3 tb = self.value.__traceback__ frames = self.frames = [] stack = self.stack = [] # Added 2003-06-23 by Chris Armstrong. Yes, I actually have a # use case where I need this traceback object, and I've made # sure that it'll be cleaned up. self.tb = tb if tb: f = tb.tb_frame elif not isinstance(self.value, Failure): # We don't do frame introspection since it's expensive, # and if we were passed a plain exception with no # traceback, it's not useful anyway f = stackOffset = None while stackOffset and f: # This excludes this Failure.__init__ frame from the # stack, leaving it to start with our caller instead. f = f.f_back stackOffset -= 1 # Keeps the *full* stack. Formerly in spread.pb.print_excFullStack: # # The need for this function arises from the fact that several # PB classes have the peculiar habit of discarding exceptions # with bareword "except:"s. This premature exception # catching means tracebacks generated here don't tend to show # what called upon the PB object. while f: if captureVars: localz = f.f_locals.copy() if f.f_locals is f.f_globals: globalz = {} else: globalz = f.f_globals.copy() for d in globalz, localz: if "__builtins__" in d: del d["__builtins__"] localz = localz.items() globalz = globalz.items() else: localz = globalz = () stack.insert( 0, ( f.f_code.co_name, f.f_code.co_filename, f.f_lineno, localz, globalz, ), ) f = f.f_back while tb is not None: f = tb.tb_frame if captureVars: localz = f.f_locals.copy() if f.f_locals is f.f_globals: globalz = {} else: globalz = f.f_globals.copy() for d in globalz, localz: if "__builtins__" in d: del d["__builtins__"] localz = list(localz.items()) globalz = list(globalz.items()) else: localz = globalz = () frames.append( ( f.f_code.co_name, f.f_code.co_filename, tb.tb_lineno, localz, globalz, ) ) tb = tb.tb_next if inspect.isclass(self.type) and issubclass(self.type, Exception): parentCs = getmro(self.type) self.parents = list(map(reflect.qual, parentCs)) else: self.parents = [self.type] def _extrapolate(self, otherFailure): """ Extrapolate from one failure into another, copying its stack frames. @param otherFailure: Another L{Failure}, whose traceback information, if any, should be preserved as part of the stack presented by this one. @type otherFailure: L{Failure} """ # Copy all infos from that failure (including self.frames). self.__dict__ = copy.copy(otherFailure.__dict__) # If we are re-throwing a Failure, we merge the stack-trace stored in # the failure with the current exception's stack. This integrated with # throwExceptionIntoGenerator and allows to provide full stack trace, # even if we go through several layers of inlineCallbacks. _, _, tb = sys.exc_info() frames = [] while tb is not None: f = tb.tb_frame if f.f_code not in _inlineCallbacksExtraneous: frames.append( (f.f_code.co_name, f.f_code.co_filename, tb.tb_lineno, (), ()) ) tb = tb.tb_next # Merging current stack with stack stored in the Failure. frames.extend(self.frames) self.frames = frames def trap(self, *errorTypes): """ Trap this failure if its type is in a predetermined list. This allows you to trap a Failure in an error callback. It will be automatically re-raised if it is not a type that you expect. The reason for having this particular API is because it's very useful in Deferred errback chains:: def _ebFoo(self, failure): r = failure.trap(Spam, Eggs) print('The Failure is due to either Spam or Eggs!') if r == Spam: print('Spam did it!') elif r == Eggs: print('Eggs did it!') If the failure is not a Spam or an Eggs, then the Failure will be 'passed on' to the next errback. In Python 2 the Failure will be raised; in Python 3 the underlying exception will be re-raised. @type errorTypes: L{Exception} """ error = self.check(*errorTypes) if not error: self.raiseException() return error def check(self, *errorTypes): """ Check if this failure's type is in a predetermined list. @type errorTypes: list of L{Exception} classes or fully-qualified class names. @returns: the matching L{Exception} type, or None if no match. """ for error in errorTypes: err = error if inspect.isclass(error) and issubclass(error, Exception): err = reflect.qual(error) if err in self.parents: return error return None def raiseException(self): """ raise the original exception, preserving traceback information if available. """ raise self.value.with_traceback(self.tb) @_extraneous def throwExceptionIntoGenerator(self, g): """ Throw the original exception into the given generator, preserving traceback information if available. @return: The next value yielded from the generator. @raise StopIteration: If there are no more values in the generator. @raise anything else: Anything that the generator raises. """ # Note that the actual magic to find the traceback information # is done in _findFailure. return g.throw(self.type, self.value, self.tb) @classmethod def _findFailure(cls): """ Find the failure that represents the exception currently in context. """ tb = sys.exc_info()[-1] if not tb: return secondLastTb = None lastTb = tb while lastTb.tb_next: secondLastTb = lastTb lastTb = lastTb.tb_next lastFrame = lastTb.tb_frame # NOTE: f_locals.get('self') is used rather than # f_locals['self'] because psyco frames do not contain # anything in their locals() dicts. psyco makes debugging # difficult anyhow, so losing the Failure objects (and thus # the tracebacks) here when it is used is not that big a deal. # Handle raiseException-originated exceptions if lastFrame.f_code is cls.raiseException.__code__: return lastFrame.f_locals.get("self") # Handle throwExceptionIntoGenerator-originated exceptions # this is tricky, and differs if the exception was caught # inside the generator, or above it: # It is only really originating from # throwExceptionIntoGenerator if the bottom of the traceback # is a yield. # Pyrex and Cython extensions create traceback frames # with no co_code, but they can't yield so we know it's okay to # just return here. if (not lastFrame.f_code.co_code) or lastFrame.f_code.co_code[ lastTb.tb_lasti ] != cls._yieldOpcode: return # If the exception was caught above the generator.throw # (outside the generator), it will appear in the tb (as the # second last item): if secondLastTb: frame = secondLastTb.tb_frame if frame.f_code is cls.throwExceptionIntoGenerator.__code__: return frame.f_locals.get("self") # If the exception was caught below the generator.throw # (inside the generator), it will appear in the frames' linked # list, above the top-level traceback item (which must be the # generator frame itself, thus its caller is # throwExceptionIntoGenerator). frame = tb.tb_frame.f_back if frame and frame.f_code is cls.throwExceptionIntoGenerator.__code__: return frame.f_locals.get("self") def __repr__(self) -> str: return "<{} {}: {}>".format( reflect.qual(self.__class__), reflect.qual(self.type), self.getErrorMessage(), ) def __str__(self) -> str: return "[Failure instance: %s]" % self.getBriefTraceback() def __getstate__(self): """Avoid pickling objects in the traceback.""" if self.pickled: return self.__dict__ c = self.__dict__.copy() c["frames"] = [ [ v[0], v[1], v[2], _safeReprVars(v[3]), _safeReprVars(v[4]), ] for v in self.frames ] # Added 2003-06-23. See comment above in __init__ c["tb"] = None if self.stack is not None: # XXX: This is a band-aid. I can't figure out where these # (failure.stack is None) instances are coming from. c["stack"] = [ [ v[0], v[1], v[2], _safeReprVars(v[3]), _safeReprVars(v[4]), ] for v in self.stack ] c["pickled"] = 1 return c def cleanFailure(self): """ Remove references to other objects, replacing them with strings. On Python 3, this will also set the C{__traceback__} attribute of the exception instance to L{None}. """ self.__dict__ = self.__getstate__() if getattr(self.value, "__traceback__", None): # Python 3 self.value.__traceback__ = None def getTracebackObject(self): """ Get an object that represents this Failure's stack that can be passed to traceback.extract_tb. If the original traceback object is still present, return that. If this traceback object has been lost but we still have the information, return a fake traceback object (see L{_Traceback}). If there is no traceback information at all, return None. """ if self.tb is not None: return self.tb elif len(self.frames) > 0: return _Traceback(self.stack, self.frames) else: return None def getErrorMessage(self) -> str: """ Get a string of the exception which caused this Failure. """ if isinstance(self.value, Failure): return self.value.getErrorMessage() return reflect.safe_str(self.value) def getBriefTraceback(self) -> str: io = StringIO() self.printBriefTraceback(file=io) return io.getvalue() def getTraceback(self, elideFrameworkCode: int = 0, detail: str = "default") -> str: io = StringIO() self.printTraceback( file=io, elideFrameworkCode=elideFrameworkCode, detail=detail ) return io.getvalue() def printTraceback(self, file=None, elideFrameworkCode=False, detail="default"): """ Emulate Python's standard error reporting mechanism. @param file: If specified, a file-like object to which to write the traceback. @param elideFrameworkCode: A flag indicating whether to attempt to remove uninteresting frames from within Twisted itself from the output. @param detail: A string indicating how much information to include in the traceback. Must be one of C{'brief'}, C{'default'}, or C{'verbose'}. """ if file is None: from twisted.python import log file = log.logerr w = file.write if detail == "verbose" and not self.captureVars: # We don't have any locals or globals, so rather than show them as # empty make the output explicitly say that we don't have them at # all. formatDetail = "verbose-vars-not-captured" else: formatDetail = detail # Preamble if detail == "verbose": w( "*--- Failure #%d%s---\n" % (self.count, (self.pickled and " (pickled) ") or " ") ) elif detail == "brief": if self.frames: hasFrames = "Traceback" else: hasFrames = "Traceback (failure with no frames)" w( "%s: %s: %s\n" % (hasFrames, reflect.safe_str(self.type), reflect.safe_str(self.value)) ) else: w("Traceback (most recent call last):\n") # Frames, formatted in appropriate style if self.frames: if not elideFrameworkCode: format_frames(self.stack[-traceupLength:], w, formatDetail) w(f"{EXCEPTION_CAUGHT_HERE}\n") format_frames(self.frames, w, formatDetail) elif not detail == "brief": # Yeah, it's not really a traceback, despite looking like one... w("Failure: ") # Postamble, if any if not detail == "brief": w(f"{reflect.qual(self.type)}: {reflect.safe_str(self.value)}\n") # Chaining if isinstance(self.value, Failure): # TODO: indentation for chained failures? file.write(" (chained Failure)\n") self.value.printTraceback(file, elideFrameworkCode, detail) if detail == "verbose": w("*--- End of Failure #%d ---\n" % self.count) def printBriefTraceback(self, file=None, elideFrameworkCode=0): """ Print a traceback as densely as possible. """ self.printTraceback(file, elideFrameworkCode, detail="brief") def printDetailedTraceback(self, file=None, elideFrameworkCode=0): """ Print a traceback with detailed locals and globals information. """ self.printTraceback(file, elideFrameworkCode, detail="verbose") def _safeReprVars(varsDictItems): """ Convert a list of (name, object) pairs into (name, repr) pairs. L{twisted.python.reflect.safe_repr} is used to generate the repr, so no exceptions will be raised by faulty C{__repr__} methods. @param varsDictItems: a sequence of (name, value) pairs as returned by e.g. C{locals().items()}. @returns: a sequence of (name, repr) pairs. """ return [(name, reflect.safe_repr(obj)) for (name, obj) in varsDictItems] # slyphon: make post-morteming exceptions tweakable DO_POST_MORTEM = True def _debuginit( self, exc_value=None, exc_type=None, exc_tb=None, captureVars=False, Failure__init__=Failure.__init__, ): """ Initialize failure object, possibly spawning pdb. """ if (exc_value, exc_type, exc_tb) == (None, None, None): exc = sys.exc_info() if not exc[0] == self.__class__ and DO_POST_MORTEM: try: strrepr = str(exc[1]) except BaseException: strrepr = "broken str" print( "Jumping into debugger for post-mortem of exception '{}':".format( strrepr ) ) import pdb pdb.post_mortem(exc[2]) Failure__init__(self, exc_value, exc_type, exc_tb, captureVars) def startDebugMode(): """ Enable debug hooks for Failures. """ Failure.__init__ = _debuginit