5

I am trying to implement an application-level error handler to catch failed promises within my application. Most of the suggestions I've seen around this have to do with error logging, but I actually want to trigger a modal window to let my users know they're no longer connected to the internet + can only read data.

I'd like to trigger an action from within the RSVP.onerror handler. The only way I've managed to do this so far is with something like this:

Ember.RSVP.configure('onerror', function(e) {
  window.App.__container__
    .lookup('controller:application')
    .send('showModal', 'disconnected');
});

but it seems a bit hacky to me.

Is there somewhere more appropriate to write this code? More generally, are there any best practices around notifying users of a lost internet connection?

2
  • 1
    This isn't an Ember-specific solution, but this library is pretty nifty.
    – GJK
    Jul 31, 2014 at 22:47
  • Why do you think its hacky ? "Ember.RSVP.onerrorDefault = function(error) {};" will give you the same thing I guess.
    – lame_coder
    Aug 1, 2014 at 0:03

2 Answers 2

2

Ember has a built in error route (docs here).

Depending on how you want to handle other kinds of errors in your app, you could add views/error.js and run a method on willInsertElement in that view that tests whether the user is offline and, if true, sends the showModal action.

Alternatively, failed promises can automatically be caught in the original promise and trigger some method that has been injected into the controller or whatever instance is making the promise:

Controller:

this.set('thing').then(function() {
  // Success
}, this.offlineError()); // Failure

Initializer (note the syntax is for ember-cli):

export default {
  name: 'offline-error',

  initialize: function(container, app) {
    var offlineError = function() {
      // or something like this
      container.lookup('controller:application').send('showModal', 'disconnected');
    };

    app.register('offlineError', offlineError, { instantiate: false });

    // Inject into routes, controllers, and views.
    Em.A(['route', 'controller', 'view']).forEach(function(place) {
      app.inject(place, 'offlineError', 'offlineError:main');
    });
  }
};

The above code makes the offlineError method available in all routes, controllers, and views but the beauty of it is that the method has access to the container without using the hacky private property.

2
  • Nice! Any way to invoke the offlineError method if any of my promises reject, say if I forget to add the rejection handler? Aug 1, 2014 at 14:10
  • That would probably be the way you are already doing it haha. I declare every reject method manually because I often find I don't want to use the default handling (e.g. a filepicker plugin doesn't return useful errors so I send a hardcoded flash message to the user). If you don't want to use the __container__ hack I would suggest injecting a global error method into your controllers to use as above because it's more flexible and only adds two words to each promise but it really depends on how standard your app error events are. Aug 1, 2014 at 14:45
1

I ended up wrapping Offline.js in a service. I'm using ember-cli.

// services/connection.js

/* global Offline */
import Ember from 'ember';

// Configure Offline.js. In this case, we don't want to retry XHRs.
Offline.requests = false;

export default Ember.Object.extend({

  setup: function() {
    if (Offline.state === 'up') {
      this._handleOnline();
    } else {
      this._handleOffline();
    }

    Offline.on('down', this._handleOffline, this);
    Offline.on('up', this._handleOnline, this);
  }.on('init'),

  _handleOffline: function() {
    this.set('isOffline', true);  
    this.set('isOnline', false);  
  },

  _handleOnline: function() {
    this.set('isOnline', true);  
    this.set('isOffline', false);  
  }

});

I injected the service into controllers and routes:

// initializers/connection.js

export default {
  name: 'connection',
  initialize: function(container, app) {
    app.inject('controller', 'connection', 'service:connection');
    app.inject('route', 'connection', 'service:connection');
  }
};

Now in my templates, I can reference the service:

{{#if connection.isOffline}}
  <span class="offline-status">
    <span class="offline-status__indicator"></span>
    Offline
  </span>
{{/if}}

(Offline.js also has some packaged themes, but I went with something custom here).

Also, in my promise rejection handlers I can check if the app is offline, or if it was another unknown error with the back-end, and respond appropriately.


If anyone has any suggestions on this solution, chime in!

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