Derive Macro derive_more_impl::Error
source · #[derive(Error)]
{
// Attributes available to this derive:
#[error]
}
error
only.Expand description
§Using #[derive(Error)]
Deriving Error
will generate an Error
implementation, that contains
(depending on the type) a source()
and a provide()
method. Please note,
at the time of writing provide()
is only supported on nightly rust. So you
have to use that to make use of it.
For a struct, these methods always do the same. For an enum
they have separate
behaviour for each of the variants. The variant is first matched and then the
implementation will do the same as it would have done if the variant was a
struct.
Usually when you derive Error
you will also want to derive Display
and
often From
as well.
§When and how does it derive source()
?
- It’s a struct/variant with named fields and one is the fields is
called
source
. Then it would return that field as thesource
. - It’s a tuple struct/variant and there’s exactly one field that is not used as
the
backtrace
. So either a tuple struct with one field, or one with two where one is thebacktrace
. Then it returns this field as thesource
. - One of the fields is annotated with
#[error(source)]
. Then it would return that field as thesource
.
§When and how does it derive provide()
?
- It’s a struct/variant with named fields and one of the fields is
called
backtrace
. Then it would return that field as thebacktrace
. - It’s a tuple struct/variant and the type of exactly one of the fields is
called
Backtrace
. Then it would return that field as thebacktrace
. - One of the fields is annotated with
#[error(backtrace)]
. Then it would return that field as thebacktrace
.
§Ignoring fields for derives
It’s possible to ignore a field or a whole enum variant completely for this
derive using the #[error(ignore)]
attribute. This will ignore it both for
detecting backtrace
and source
. It’s also possible to mark a field only
ignored for one of these methods by using #[error(not(backtrace))]
or
#[error(not(source))]
.
§What works in no_std
?
If you want to use the Error
derive on no_std
environments, then
you need to compile with nightly, or wait until Rust 1.81 when Error
in core
is expected to be stabilized.
Backtraces don’t work though, because the Backtrace
type is only available in
std
.
§Example usage
// Nightly requires enabling this feature:
// #![feature(error_generic_member_access)]
// std::error::Error requires std::fmt::Debug and std::fmt::Display,
// so we can also use derive_more::Display for fully declarative
// error-type definitions.
#[derive(Default, Debug, Display, Error)]
struct Simple;
#[derive(Default, Debug, Display, Error)]
struct WithSource {
source: Simple,
}
#[derive(Default, Debug, Display, Error)]
struct WithExplicitSource {
#[error(source)]
explicit_source: Simple,
}
#[derive(Default, Debug, Display, Error)]
struct Tuple(Simple);
#[derive(Default, Debug, Display, Error)]
struct WithoutSource(#[error(not(source))] i32);
#[derive(Debug, Display, Error)]
#[display("An error with a backtrace")]
struct WithSourceAndBacktrace {
source: Simple,
backtrace: Backtrace,
}
// derive_more::From fits nicely into this pattern as well
#[derive(Debug, Display, Error, From)]
enum CompoundError {
Simple,
WithSource {
source: Simple,
},
#[from(ignore)]
WithBacktraceFromSource {
#[error(backtrace)]
source: Simple,
},
#[display("{source}")]
WithDifferentBacktrace {
source: Simple,
backtrace: Backtrace,
},
WithExplicitSource {
#[error(source)]
explicit_source: WithSource,
},
#[from(ignore)]
WithBacktraceFromExplicitSource {
#[error(backtrace, source)]
explicit_source: WithSource,
},
Tuple(WithExplicitSource),
WithoutSource(#[error(not(source))] Tuple),
}
assert!(Simple.source().is_none());
assert!(request_ref::<Backtrace>(&Simple).is_none());
assert!(WithSource::default().source().is_some());
assert!(WithExplicitSource::default().source().is_some());
assert!(Tuple::default().source().is_some());
assert!(WithoutSource::default().source().is_none());
let with_source_and_backtrace = WithSourceAndBacktrace {
source: Simple,
backtrace: Backtrace::capture(),
};
assert!(with_source_and_backtrace.source().is_some());
assert!(request_ref::<Backtrace>(&with_source_and_backtrace).is_some());
assert!(CompoundError::Simple.source().is_none());
assert!(CompoundError::from(Simple).source().is_some());
assert!(CompoundError::from(WithSource::default()).source().is_some());
assert!(CompoundError::from(WithExplicitSource::default()).source().is_some());
assert!(CompoundError::from(Tuple::default()).source().is_none());