From d1d84f2faa858377736563da85d59c1f02e5b2e5 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: siddontang Date: Mon, 15 Sep 2014 08:57:28 +0800 Subject: [PATCH] add tb package --- tb/error.go | 124 ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 124 insertions(+) create mode 100644 tb/error.go diff --git a/tb/error.go b/tb/error.go new file mode 100644 index 0000000..28e3450 --- /dev/null +++ b/tb/error.go @@ -0,0 +1,124 @@ +// Copyright 2012, Google Inc. All rights reserved. +// Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style +// license that can be found in the LICENSE file. + +package tb + +import ( + "bytes" + "fmt" + "io/ioutil" + "runtime" +) + +var ( + dunno = []byte("???") + centerDot = []byte("·") + dot = []byte(".") +) + +// This package exposes some handy traceback functionality buried in the runtime. +// +// It can also be used to provide context to errors reducing the temptation to +// panic carelessly, just to get stack information. +// +// The theory is that most errors that are created with the fmt.Errorf +// style are likely to be rare, but require more context to debug +// properly. The additional cost of computing a stack trace is +// therefore negligible. +type StackError interface { + Error() string + StackTrace() string +} + +type stackError struct { + err error + stackTrace string +} + +func (e stackError) Error() string { + return fmt.Sprintf("%v\n%v", e.err, e.stackTrace) +} + +func (e stackError) StackTrace() string { + return e.stackTrace +} + +func Errorf(msg string, args ...interface{}) error { + stack := "" + // See if any arg is already embedding a stack - no need to + // recompute something expensive and make the message unreadable. + for _, arg := range args { + if stackErr, ok := arg.(stackError); ok { + stack = stackErr.stackTrace + break + } + } + + if stack == "" { + // magic 5 trims off just enough stack data to be clear + stack = string(Stack(5)) + } + + return stackError{fmt.Errorf(msg, args...), stack} +} + +// Taken from runtime/debug.go +func Stack(calldepth int) []byte { + return stack(calldepth) +} + +func stack(calldepth int) []byte { + buf := new(bytes.Buffer) // the returned data + // As we loop, we open files and read them. These variables record the currently + // loaded file. + var lines [][]byte + var lastFile string + for i := calldepth; ; i++ { // Caller we care about is the user, 2 frames up + pc, file, line, ok := runtime.Caller(i) + if !ok { + break + } + // Print this much at least. If we can't find the source, it won't show. + fmt.Fprintf(buf, "%s:%d (0x%x)\n", file, line, pc) + if file != lastFile { + data, err := ioutil.ReadFile(file) + if err != nil { + continue + } + lines = bytes.Split(data, []byte{'\n'}) + lastFile = file + } + line-- // in stack trace, lines are 1-indexed but our array is 0-indexed + fmt.Fprintf(buf, "\t%s: %s\n", function(pc), source(lines, line)) + } + return buf.Bytes() +} + +// source returns a space-trimmed slice of the n'th line. +func source(lines [][]byte, n int) []byte { + if n < 0 || n >= len(lines) { + return dunno + } + return bytes.Trim(lines[n], " \t") +} + +// function returns, if possible, the name of the function containing the PC. +func function(pc uintptr) []byte { + fn := runtime.FuncForPC(pc) + if fn == nil { + return dunno + } + name := []byte(fn.Name()) + // The name includes the path name to the package, which is unnecessary + // since the file name is already included. Plus, it has center dots. + // That is, we see + // runtime/debug.*T·ptrmethod + // and want + // *T.ptrmethod + if period := bytes.Index(name, dot); period >= 0 { + name = name[period+1:] + } + name = bytes.Replace(name, centerDot, dot, -1) + return name +}