4

I'm writing a login class in c#, and I'm trying to be diligent about throwing exceptions for null passwords, insufficiant password characters, etc. The thing that suddenly occured to me was - What do I do with these exception? What/who are they for? Whether I handle the exception or not, the app will still fail at that point. Is the exception for other developers, the customer!?

2
  • 1
    possible duplicate of Exceptions or error codes Dec 14, 2010 at 18:03
  • 5
    I don't see this as a duplicate. This question is 'why do it?' while that question is 'how should I do it?' It's very similar though.
    – jcollum
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:24

11 Answers 11

6

Exceptions are used to provide detailed information about the cause of a particular failure. If you simply let the code fail on its own you miss the opportunity to provide richer details about the actual cause of the failure.

Your users should not be seeing the information you add to your exceptions. Instead, consider adding a global exception handler that catches your detailed exceptions, logs the information, and then displays a friendly error message to your user.

Exceptions provide not only a detailed message in your logs about why the failure occurred (i.e. password was null in your example) but also call stack information that indicates the call chain that led to the exception. In a login form this is less important. However, in a multi-threaded asynchronous client/server application this can be critical.

This article contains many good guidelines: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms229005.aspx

6

If you're the one creating the Exception, you shouldn't do anything with it.

Exceptions are your way of letting your consumers know that something went wrong that you can't properly recover from. You're giving them the chance to either correct the issue, log the error, or pass the Exception up the chain until something useful can be done with it.

9
  • 2
    That's a weird way to put it. At lot of people end up writing both the classes and the clients! Dec 14, 2010 at 18:04
  • 6
    @André Caron While that is true, you need to be able to change hats. When you are writing a method then you are not the client of the method. Later when you write the client code then you do not need to worry about the details of the method, only the contract. Dec 14, 2010 at 18:08
  • Does this mean then, that exceptions are typically thrown at lower levels but should be managed in such a way further up the chain, that the application should continue to function?
    – hoakey
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:16
  • @hoakey - If you can gracefully recover from the Exception, then chances are it should be logged somewhere but the app can continue to function. Some Exceptions can't be recovered from and cause the app to stop. Dec 14, 2010 at 18:21
  • 1
    @Vincent: yes, I totally agree, but the first sentence, taken by itself is just plain weird! Dec 14, 2010 at 18:21
3

To signal to the next level up of abstraction that there is a problem, and alter its logical flow to account for the problem.

3

The exception itself happens to prevent bigger problems in the future. If you just silently did nothing when you knew something happened that wasn't supposed to, the program calling your code might assume that the user's file got saved when it really didn't, which can obviously be worse than if it's able to tell the user, "I couldn't save your file."

The message you give to an exception is for other developers. If the program crashes during development, the developer should be able to see the stack trace and more easily figure out why something happened that wasn't supposed to. Ideally you'll be able to log errors in such a way that developers can see them even in production.

2
  • I personally prefer On Error Resume Next... I can't even say it without shuddering. There were some symptoms to bugs I had to fix that were the real world equivalent of miles from originator of the bug. Dec 14, 2010 at 19:45
  • @ChaosPandion: My sympathies. Fail-fast is your friend. Dec 14, 2010 at 19:57
2

Exceptions usually indicate that the contract of the method has been violated. The client of the method cares about the exception and should handle them appropriately. When the contract is violated, the method itself usually cannot recover and cannot produce meaningful results. The exception indicates that no meaningful results is forthcoming.

1
  • +1: this is probably the most sensible rule about exception handling I've ever heard. However, there are security issues related to plain error codes in a login context. Dec 14, 2010 at 18:17
1

In short, the point is to indicate that something which shouldn't have happened did indeed happen.

6
  • I hear this very often in error code VS exception discussions and it has never, even once, seemed like a good argument. "Shouldn't have happened" is subject to debate. Dec 14, 2010 at 18:20
  • Exceptions are expensive to throw and handle--a well designed system will validate that conditions are met before performing an action which could produce an exception. That's not to say that Exceptions should never occur--but they should be reserved for cases where things are either done incorrectly or when an unexpected condition occurs.
    – STW
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:22
  • STW@ in that case, you would possible not throw an exception for a null password, as this is isn't a failure as such?
    – hoakey
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:25
  • @hoakey -- the method validates a password; so if no password is given you could return false (implying "that's not valid") or throw an ArgumentNullException (implying "you didn't give me a password to validate"). I would lean towards the latter; it's not the validator's job to ensure the user input a required field, so throwing an exception is perfectly fine. However, returning false wouldn't be incorrect either.
    – STW
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:38
  • @STW - I'm slowly discovering with programming that it's possible to spend too much time over-think alternative approaches, and not get on with the job of coding.
    – hoakey
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:42
0

Exceptions are a way for code to notify callers of some kind of failure. The calling code can do whatever they want with it, like display an error message, suppress the exception and degrade gracefully, etc.

0

Elegant way of showing what they(Customers) did bad.

0

So. you've written an excellent program. this program has a possible fail point. if for whatever reason the part of the program fails you might still want to continue the rest of the program and either call explicit attention to failure, log it, or just keep on going.

I'm going to use a pseudo-code syntax, but you should be able to follow it:

  var pw=$_POST['pw'];
    var un=$_POST['un'];
    try{
      $sql="select lastlogin,access from users where un=q(/'$un'/) and pw= q(/'md5($pw)'/)";
      $user=$db->getRow($sql);
      if(!$user) {
          //they don't exist
      }else{
        //process their login
      }
    }catch(Exception $e){
          //we has a Database error. either my query s really screwed up or the DB is down. let's log it and exit this stream; service 
           $mylogger->log("Error while logging in using module $MODULENAME$ ".implode("<br/>",(array)$e));

         exit;
    }
1
  • yeah well, I did no debugging... and not sure about my q(/''/) syntax. Think you can do that in oracle now but seem to have forgotten for sure. Dec 14, 2010 at 18:39
0

If your function will throw an exception if it can't log in, then code which calls your function can assume that if your function returns, it's logged in. This will ease the amount of work the code has to do to handle the "login succeeded" scenario, in exchange for requiring more work in the "login failed" scenario. If code will sometimes be used in cases where failure is semi-expected (e.g. try logging in with one set of credentials; if that doesn't work, try some other set) and sometimes used when failure would be unexpected and unrecoverable, it may be helpful to either have a "throw on error" boolean flag, or else have separate "Login" and "TryLogin" methods.

-4

The nature of exceptions is that they have to be explicitly ignored. Suppose you have this function:

bool authenticate ( String username, String password )
{
     if ( invalid_password(password) ) {
         return (false);
     }
     // ... perform authentication ...
}

Now, consider that this is part of some server, and that the server runs in a highly privileged context. If the calling code (the one that performs authorization) has some error in it's logic, it might unintentionally allow users to perform actions they are not normally allowed.

I would write the following function instead:

void authenticate ( String username, String password )
{
     if ( invalid_password(password) ) {
         throw new LoginFailed();
     }
     // ... perform authentication ...
}

Note that this is purely a defensive programming approach, and it is my preference within this context. This way, an error in login will most likely not allow the operation to keep executing.

14
  • ...had to think about this more, and this smells. While it's clever, it makes this code harder to consumer. How does another developer know this method throws an exception instead of returning false (as the signature implies it will)?
    – STW
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:31
  • in this context it would be better to have the method defined as void authenticate() -- a function which always returns true (or throws an exception) reeks of code-smell.
    – STW
    Dec 14, 2010 at 18:36
  • 4
    Invalid credentials when trying to authenticate is not exceptional - I think returning LoginResult or similar would be much clearer to the client.
    – Lee
    Dec 14, 2010 at 19:16
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    @STW: that is why he changed the signature in the second example to void. I agree with Lee, though, that an invalid password is not an exception in programming terms. It happens all the time, and should be part of your normal logic flow. However, if a particular method should never be called unless the user is authenticated, that method should have a guard clause that throws an exception if the user is not authenticated. Dec 14, 2010 at 20:07
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    @André - I'd say an exceptional condition is one that cannot be either expected or protected against (or both). Opening a file that doesn't exist is exceptional since there's no way to know if it will succeed without trying it. It's reasonable to throw exceptions for contract violations since a method cannot protect against bad arguments. However in your example invalid credentials are not bad arguments (since preconditions are static) and they can be expected since failed logins are common. Handling this case should be part of the normal control flow of the application.
    – Lee
    Dec 14, 2010 at 21:35

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