table of contents
Log::Report::Die(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Log::Report::Die(3pm) |
NAME¶
Log::Report::Die - compatibility routines with Perl's die/croak/confess
INHERITANCE¶
Log::Report::Die is an Exporter
SYNOPSIS¶
# use internally only
DESCRIPTION¶
This module is used internally, to translate output of 'die' and Carp functions into Log::Report::Message objects. Also, it tries to convert other kinds of exception frameworks into our message object.
FUNCTIONS¶
- die_decode(STRING, %options)
- The STRING is the content of $@ after an
eval() caught a die(). croak(), or confess().
This routine tries to convert this into parameters for
Log::Report::report(). This is done in a very smart way, even
trying to find the stringifications of $!.
Returned are four elements: the error string or object which triggered the death originally (the original $@), and the opts, reason, and plain text message. The opts is a HASH which, amongst other things, may contain a stack trace and location extracted from the death text or object.
Translated components will have exception classes "perl", and "die" or "confess". On the moment, the "croak" cannot be distiguished from the "confess" (when used in package main) or "die" (otherwise).
The returned reason depends on whether the translation of the current $! is found in the STRING, and the presence of a stack trace. The following table is used:
errstr stack => reason no no ERROR (die) application internal problem yes no FAULT (die) external problem, think open() no yes PANIC (confess) implementation error yes yes ALERT (confess) external problem, caught -Option--Default on_die 'ERROR'
- exception_decode($exception, %options)
- [1.23] This function attempts to translate object of other exception
frameworks into information to create a Log::Report::Exception. It returns
the same list of parameters as die_decode() does.
Currently supported:
- DBIx::Class::Exception
- XML::LibXML::Error
SEE ALSO¶
This module is part of Log-Report distribution version 1.34, built on September 15, 2022. Website: http://perl.overmeer.net/CPAN/
LICENSE¶
Copyrights 2007-2022 by [Mark Overmeer <markov@cpan.org>]. For other contributors see ChangeLog.
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. See http://dev.perl.org/licenses/
2022-09-18 | perl v5.34.0 |