I just did a bunch of research on this (see here, here, here, and here) and the answer to your question is that Node will not allow you to write one error handler that will catch every error scenario that could possibly occur in your system.
Some frameworks like express will allow you to catch certain types of errors (when an async method returns an error object), but there are other conditions that you cannot catch with a global error handler. This is a limitation (in my opinion) of Node and possibly inherent to async programming in general.
For example, say you have the following express handler:
app.get("/test", function(req, res, next) {
require("fs").readFile("/some/file", function(err, data) {
if(err)
next(err);
else
res.send("yay");
});
});
Let's say that the file "some/file" does not actually exist. In this case fs.readFile will return an error as the first argument to the callback method. If you check for that and do next(err) when it happens, the default express error handler will take over and do whatever you make it do (e.g. return a 500 to the user). That's a graceful way to handle an error. Of course, if you forget to call next(err)
, it doesn't work.
So that's the error condition that a global handler can deal with, however consider another case:
app.get("/test", function(req, res, next) {
require("fs").readFile("/some/file", function(err, data) {
if(err)
next(err);
else {
nullObject.someMethod(); //throws a null reference exception
res.send("yay");
}
});
});
In this case, there is a bug if your code that results in you calling a method on a null object. Here an exception will be thrown, it will not be caught by the global error handler, and your node app will terminate. All clients currently executing requests on that service will get suddenly disconnected with no explanation as to why. Ungraceful.
There is currently no global error handler functionality in Node to handle this case. You cannot put a giant try/catch
around all your express handlers because by the time your asyn callback executes, those try/catch
blocks are no longer in scope. That's just the nature of async code, it breaks the try/catch error handling paradigm.
AFAIK, your only recourse here is to put try/catch
blocks around the synchronous parts of your code inside each one of your async callbacks, something like this:
app.get("/test", function(req, res, next) {
require("fs").readFile("/some/file", function(err, data) {
if(err) {
next(err);
}
else {
try {
nullObject.someMethod(); //throws a null reference exception
res.send("yay");
}
catch(e) {
res.send(500);
}
}
});
});
That's going to make for some nasty code, especially once you start getting into nested async calls.
Some people think that what Node does in these cases (that is, die) is the proper thing to do because your system is in an inconsistent state and you have no other option. I disagree with that reasoning but I won't get into a philosophical debate about it. The point is that with Node, your options are lots of little try/catch
blocks or hope that your test coverage is good enough so that this doesn't happen. You can put something like upstart or supervisor in place to restart your app when it goes down but that's simply mitigation of the problem, not a solution.
Node.js has a currently unstable feature called domains that appears to address this issue, though I don't know much about it.