NAME¶
HTML::Mason::Exceptions - Exception objects thrown by Mason
SYNOPSIS¶
use HTML::Mason::Exceptions ( abbr => [ qw(system_error) ] );
open FH, 'foo' or system_error "cannot open foo: $!";
DESCRIPTION¶
This module creates the hierarchy of exception objects used by Mason, and
provides some extra methods for them beyond those provided by
"Exception::Class"
IMPORT¶
When this module is imported, it is possible to specify a list of abbreviated
function names that you want to use to throw exceptions. In the SYNOPSIS
example, we use the "system_error" function to throw a
"HTML::Mason::Exception::System" exception.
These abbreviated functions do not allow you to set additional fields in the
exception, only the message.
EXCEPTIONS¶
- HTML::Mason::Exception
- This is the parent class for all exceptions thrown by
Mason. Mason sometimes throws exceptions in this class when we could not
find a better category for the message.
Abbreviated as "error"
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Abort
- The "$m->abort" method was called.
Exceptions in this class contain the field "aborted_value".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Decline
- The "$m->decline" method was called.
Exceptions in this class contain the field "declined_value".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Compilation
- An exception occurred when attempting to "eval"
an existing object file.
Exceptions in this class have the field "filename", which
indicates what file contained the code that caused the error.
Abbreviated as "compilation_error".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Compiler
- The compiler threw an exception because it received
incorrect input. For example, this would be thrown if the lexer told the
compiler to initialize compilation while it was in the middle of compiling
another component.
Abbreviated as "compiler_error".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Compilation::IncompatibleCompiler
- A component was compiled by a compiler or lexer with
incompatible options. This is used to tell Mason to recompile a component.
Abbreviated as "wrong_compiler_error".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Params
- Invalid parameters were passed to a method or function.
Abbreviated as "param_error".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::Syntax
- This exception indicates that a component contained invalid
syntax.
Exceptions in this class have the fields "source_line", which is
the actual source where the error was found, "comp_name", and
"line_number".
Abbreviated as "syntax_error".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::System
- A system call of some sort, such as a file open, failed.
Abbreviated as "system_error".
- HTML::Mason::Exception::TopLevelNotFound
- The requested top level component could not be found.
Abbreviated as "top_level_not_found_error".
- HTML::Mason::VirtualMethod
- Some piece of code attempted to call a virtual method which
was not overridden.
Abbreviated as "virtual_error"
FIELDS¶
Some of the exceptions mentioned above have additional fields, which are
available via accessors. For example, to get the line number of an
"HTML::Mason::Exception::Syntax" exception, you call the
"line_number" method on the exception object.
EXCEPTION METHODS¶
All of the Mason exceptions implement the following methods:
- as_brief
- This simply returns the exception message, without any
trace information.
- as_line
- This returns the exception message and its trace
information, all on a single line with tabs between the message and each
frame of the stack trace.
- as_text
- This returns the exception message and stack information,
with each frame on a separate line.
- as_html
- This returns the exception message and stack as an HTML
page.
Each of these methods corresponds to a valid error_format parameter for the
Request object such as "text" or "html".
You can create your own method in the "HTML::Mason::Exception"
namespace, such as "as_you_wish", in which case you could set this
parameter to "you_wish". This method will receive a single argument,
the exception object, and is expected to return some sort of string containing
the formatted error message.
EXCEPTION CLASS CHECKING¶
This module also exports the "isa_mason_exception" function. This
function takes the exception object and an optional string parameter
indicating what subclass to check for.
So it can be called either as:
if ( isa_mason_exception($@) ) { ... }
or
if ( isa_mason_exception($@, 'Syntax') ) { ... }
Note that when specifying a subclass you should not include the leading
"HTML::Mason::Exception::" portion of the class name.