NAME Error::Show - Show context around syntax errors and exceptions SYNOPSIS Command Line Consider the following program (at examples/synopsis.pl in this distribution). It has a syntax error on line 13, and uses an experimental feature on line 7. use strict; use warnings; use Time::HiRes; use feature "refaliasing"; \my $a=\"hello"; my $time=time; for(1..1000){ print "$_\n"; } my $crazy-var=2; use Socket; print "this will never work"; Attempting to run this program with perl normally gives this error output: ->perl examples/synopsis.pl Aliasing via reference is experimental at examples/synopsis.pl line 7. Can't modify subtraction (-) in scalar assignment at examples/synopsis.pl line 13, near "2;" BEGIN not safe after errors--compilation aborted at examples/synopsis.pl line 15. With "Error::Show" enabled with the "-M" switch, this instead looks like this: ->perl -MError::Show=warn examples/synopsis.pl examples/synopsis.pl 3 use Time::HiRes; 4 5 use feature "refaliasing"; 6 7=> \my $a=\"hello"; 8 my $time=time; 9 for(1..1000){ 10 print "$_\n"; 11 } 12 Aliasing via reference is experimental at examples/synopsis.pl line 7. examples/synopsis.pl 9 for(1..1000){ 10 print "$_\n"; 11 } 12 13=> my $crazy-var=2; 14 15 use Socket; 16 17 print "this will never work"; Can't modify subtraction (-) in scalar assignment at examples/synopsis.pl line 13, near "2;" examples/synopsis.pl 11 } 12 13 my $crazy-var=2; 14 15=> use Socket; 16 17 print "this will never work"; BEGIN not safe after errors--compilation aborted at examples/synopsis.pl line 15. In Program Use at runtime to supplement exception handling: use Error::Show; #an die caught in a try/eval triggers an exception # No argument uses $@ as error # eval { exceptional_code }; say STDERR Error::Show::context if $@; # or a single exception argument of your choosing # use v5.36; try { exceptional_code } catch($e) { say STDERR Error::Show $e; } # Show context down a stack try { Some_execption_class->throw("Bad things"); } catch($e){ say STDERR Error::Show message=>$e, frames=>$e->frames } DESCRIPTION From the command line this module transparently executes your syntactically correct program. However in the case of syntax errors (or warnings if desired), it extracts context (lines of code) surrounding them. The lines are prefixed with numbers and the nicely formatted context is dumped on STDERR for you to see the error or your ways. The resulting output is optionally filtered seamlessly through the splain program (see diagnostics), giving more information on why the reported syntax errors and warnings might have occurred. From within a program at runtime, this module can be used to give the same formatted code context around the source of an exception and iterate through any associated stack frames if provided. It supports perl string exceptions and warnings directly and also provides the ability to integrate third party CPAN exception objects and traces with minimal effort. Please see examples in this document or in the examples directory of the distribution showing use with Mojo::Exception, Exception::Base, Exception::Class::Base and Class::Throwable. A handful of options are available for basic configuration of how many lines of code to print before and after the error line, indenting of stack trace context, etc. From v0.2.0, added 'advanced string eval' support has been added for better context reporting of dynamically generated code. No symbols are exported and as such they must be accessed via the package name. USAGE Command Line Usage (Syntax check and run) perl -MError::Show [options] file.pl When included in a command line switch to perl, "-MError::Show" syntax checks the input program. If the syntax is OK, normal execution continues in a transparent fashion. Otherwise, detailed code context surrounding the source of the error is generated and printed on STDERR. NOTE: It is important that it's the first "-M" switch. If the -c flag is specified, only a syntax check will be performed, mimicking normal perl behaviour. Additional @INC directories using the -I switch are supported as are additional modules via the -M switch. CLI Syntax Checking Options The following options can be used in isolation or together: clean If you prefer just the code context without the perl error, add the clean option: perl -MError::Show=clean file.pl warn This options enables processing of warnings as well as errors. perl -MError::Show=warn file.pl splain Runs the output through the splain program (see diagnostics), giving probable reasons behind the error or warning perl -MError::Show=splain file.pl Return code When in check only mode (-c), the main process is exited, just has perl normally would have done. The return code is a replica of what perl would have reported for success/failure of a syntax check. In Program (Exception) Usage Simply bring Error::Show into your program with a use statement: use Error::Show; It provides a single subroutine for processing errors and exceptions. Error::Show::context my $context=Error::Show::context; (1) my $context=Error::Show::context $error; (2) my $context=Error::Show::context option_pairs, message=>$error_as_string, frames=>$stack frames (3) Takes an error string, or exception object and extracts the code surrounding the source of the error. The code lines are prefixed with line numbers and the error line marked with a fat arrow. The return value is the formatted context, followed by the original perl error strings, or stringified exception objects/messages: filename.pl 10 #code before 11 #code before 12=>#this line caused the error 13 #code after 14 #code after ... error... at filename.pl line 12 ... In the first form (1), the $@ variable is implicitly used as the error. No processing options can be supplied in this form. This is stringified for processing. In the second form (2), a single argument is supplied, which becomes the error to process. No processing options can be supplied in this form. This is stringified for processing. In the third for (3), all options are provided as key value pairs. The expected types of data are as follows: 1. String Errors (perl errors) Error string, as per "die" and "warn", containing file and line number. These are extracted from the string error to locate context. The output message after the context is this string, 2. An reference to an array containing results from "caller" The filename, and line elements are used to process. No error message is output unless the message option is also specified. 3. An Devel::StackTrace::Frame object This is converted internally to a array of "caller()" output. As above. 4. or, an array of 2. or 3. An reference to an array of call frames in "caller()" or "Devel::StackTrace::Frame" format can also be supplied as the error or frames. Again the "message" option needs to be provided if error string is required in the output. Options include: limit limit=>$int From v0.2.0: Limits the number of errors to extract and generate context for. Default is 100. If <=0, no limiting is applied all all errors are processed. reverse reverse=>$bool From v0.2.0: Reverses the order of error processing. Perl type string errors are sorted and processing in ascending line number order. When this option is used, the lines are processed by descending line number first. Does not change order of files processed. If frames are used instead, they are processed in reverse order to how they where supplied when this option is in effect. pre_lines pre_lines=>value Specific the maximum lines of code to display before the error line. Default is 5. post_lines post_lines=>value Specific the maximum lines of code to display after the error line. Default is 5. clean clean=>bool When true, the normal perl error string is not included in the context information, for a cleaner look. indent indent=>string The string to use for each level of indent when printing multiple stack frames. Defaults to 4 spaces. splain splain=>1 The resulting output will be filtered through the splain program. program program=>$prog The program option is used to specify the program text to process when there is no actual file. This is needed when to show syntax errors in a string "eval": my $prog='my $a="This will Fail"+b'; eval $prog; if($@){ say Error::Show::context error=>$@, program=>prog; } For advanced string eval processing options please see the ADVANCED STRING EVAL section in this document. EXAMPLES Integrating with Exception classes The following are a cheat sheet / example code to interoperate this module with exception objects. The most reliable way is usually to explicitly set the message and frames options explicitly. This works with a single frame (for the latest exception) or ref to array, for a complete trace Mojo::Exception FYI: Mojo::Exception does provide it's own facility to show the code context around an exception. use v5.36; use feature "try"; use Error::Show; use Mojo::Exception qw; try{ raise 'MyApp::X::Name', 'The name Minion is already taken'; } catch($e){ # Message is the stringified $e object. Print the first frame # say Error::Show::context message=>$e, error=> $e->frames->[0]; # Message is the stringified $e object. Print all frames # say Error::Show::context message=>$e, error=>$e->frames; } Class::Throwable use v5.36; my @a=qw; use Class::Throwable;# VERBOSE=>1; Class::Throwable->setVerbosity(2); #use Exception::Class; use Error::Show; use feature "try"; sub my_func { try{ Class::Throwable->throw("Something has gone wrong"); } catch($e){ #Show the top of the stack, the latest exception say Error::Show::context message=>$e, frames=>$e->getStackTrace->[0]; #Show the whole stack say Error::Show::context message=>"$e", frames=>[$e->getStackTrace]; } } sub my_func2{ my_func; } warn "some warning"; my_func2; Exception::Base use v5.36; use feature qw; use Exception::Base verbosity=>4; use Error::Show; sub my_func { try{ my $e= Exception::Base->new(); #$e->verbosity(10); $e->throw(message=>"Bad things"); } catch($e){ # Set verbosity to stop duplicate outputs, but provide a file and line number # in the stringified version of the error # $e->verbosity=2; # Message normally contatins the file and line numbers. So stringified # process will work # say Error::Show::context $e; # Access the frames in the caller stack # say Error::Show::context message=>$e->message, frames=>$e->caller_stack; } } sub my_func2{ my_func; } my_func2; Exception::Class::Base use v5.36; use Exception::Class; use Error::Show; use feature "try"; try{ Exception::Class::Base->throw("An error occured"); } catch($e){ my @frames=$e->trace->frames; # Message is the stringified $e object. Print the first frame # say Error::Show::context message=>$e, frames=>$frames[0]; # Message is the stringified $e object. Print all frames # say Error::Show::context message=>$e, frames=>\@frames; } Syntax Checking String "eval", Without Execution A block eval will have it's syntax checked during normal compilation time. A string eval is checked at run time and it uses the same variable $@ to report syntax errors and run time errors. Together these limitation make it impossible to distinguish between syntax errors and runtime errors (without some kind of heavy error lookup). The code is also executed immediately. To work around these limitations, and have "Error::Show" still provide context information, start by wrapping your eval string with "sub { ... }. The eval result will be code ref if syntactically correct. Otherwise the error in $@ is the syntax error string, which can be feed directly into "Error::Show". The code ref is executed in a block eval, which if dies from an exception will place the runtime error in $@, which again can be used in "Error::Show". As an example: Example: Separate compiling/syntax checking from eval execution ======= use strict; use warnings; use feature "say"; use Error::Show; # Orginal string to eval my $prog='say "hello there"; $a+1/0; '; # Wrap string in a sub $prog="sub { $prog }"; # Do an eval to retun an actual code ref my $code =eval $prog; # Check for syntax errors here. No run time error as the code ref has not been executed. # Use the program option in Error::Show to specifiy the text of the program if($@){ say "ERROR is".Error::Show::context error=>$@, program=>$prog; } # Execute the code reference. Any errors here are run time eval {$code->()}; # Again use the program option in Error::Show to specifiy the text of the program if($@){ say "ERROR is".Error::Show::context error=>$@, program=>$prog; } Please see the examples directory in this distribution ADVANCED STRING EVAL From v0.2.0 features to support advanced string evaluation are available. This was added to support the error reporting needs of the Template::Plex module. Consider the following example. The 'meat' is the sub in the middle of the string. Any errors/context reported should be relative to this, not the start of the overall eval string. With some help from comment markers "##_PREAMBLE" and "##_POSTAMBLE", when can search for the middle and rebase the error line numbering. eval { "my $some_prep_work=1; call_somthing(); #comments... ##_PREAMBLE sub { #code generated from user input... say "My really cool dynamically created code" } ##_POSTAMBLE #More code #Cleanup stuff. " } Additional configuration options can be provided to search for the relevant code lines and offset the error line numbers. NOTE if these options are used, the message field is modified with updated line numbers if its in the form of a normal perl errors ie 'error line 123 at file'. start_mark start_mark=>$regexp If specified, is a used as a regexp to match against source code lines. The line after a successful match is now the first line. This allows inserting a special marker to indicate the start of 'code of interest' with out knowing the exact line number in the resulting code. This is undefined and unused by default. end_mark end_mark=>$regexp If specified, is used as a regexp to match against source lines, in reverse order. The line after a successful match is now the last line This allows inserting a special marker to indicate the end of 'code of interest'. This is undefined unused by default. start_offset start_offset=>$int A static offset to add to the start line (which may have been modified by the start_mark option). The result will be classed as the minimum line number of the file/string. This is useful to prevent any preamble after the start_mark line in your string eval showing up in the user program context. end_offset A static offset to subtract to the end line (which may have been modified by the end_mark option). The result will be classed as the maximum line number of the file. This is useful to prevent any postamble before the end_mark in your string eval showing up in the user program context. FUTURE WORK/TODO Make usable from a Language Server? Colour terminal output JSON output? KNOWN ISSUES/GOTCHAS Checking/running programs via STDIN, -e and -E switches is not supported and will die with an error message. More data then needed is pushed through the splain program when splain option is used, which isn't ideal. SEE ALSO Perl::Syntax provides syntax checking from the command line. However it doesn't show any errors by design (only interested in process return code) Syntax::Check provides programmatic syntax checking of files. Perl::Critic gives actual perl linting, but not great for syntax errors. diagnostics and the "splain" program give some very useful explanations about the otherwise terse error strings normally output. It is part of the perl distribution AUTHOR Ruben Westerberg, REPOSITORTY and BUGS Please report any bugs via git hub: COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE Copyright (C) 2023 by Ruben Westerberg This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl or the MIT license. DISCLAIMER OF WARRANTIES THIS PACKAGE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND WITHOUT ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, WITHOUT LIMITATION, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.