vote up 9 vote down star
2

Yes, the problem is with a library I'm using, and no, I cannot modify it. I need a workaround.

Basically, I'm dealing with a badly written Perl library, that exits with 'die' when a certain error condition is encountered reading a file. I call this routine from a program which is looping through thousands of files, a handful of which are bad. Bad files happen; I just want my routine to log an error and move on.

IF I COULD modify the library, I would simply change the

die "error";

to a

print "error";return;

, but I cannot. Is there any way I can couch the routine so that the bad files won't crash the entire process?

FOLLOWUP QUESTION: Using an "eval" to couch the crash-prone call works nicely, but how do I set up handling for catch-able errors within that framework? To describe:

I have a subroutine that calls the library-which-crashes-sometimes many times. Rather than couch each call within this subroutine with an eval{}, I just allow it to die, and use an eval{} on the level that calls my subroutine:

my $status=eval{function($param);};
unless($status){print $@; next;}; # print error and go to next file if function() fails

However, there are error conditions that I can and do catch in function(). What is the most proper/elegant way to design the error-catching in the subroutine and the calling routine so that I get the correct behavior for both caught and uncaught errors?

flag

A die in the case of an error is not at all a sign for a library that is "badly written". Call it "throwing an exception" and suddenly is sounds much more advanced. – Manni Jan 16 at 18:05
I agree with Manni on this one. Dying in response to errors, especially file related errors, means that it is more properly written than one that continues chugging along oblivious to those errors. – Mr. Muskrat Jan 16 at 19:05
I agree with the commenters above me – Leon Timmermans Jan 17 at 1:13
While it's good that the library is doing error checking, it's bad that it has decided that errors should be fatal. In most cases the function(s) should probably do a bare 'return' instead. – Michael Carman Jan 22 at 1:19

2 Answers

vote up 28 vote down check

You could wrap it in an eval. See:

perldoc -f eval

For instance, you could write:

# warn if routine calls die
eval { routine_might_die }; warn $@ if $@;

This will turn the fatal error into a warning, which is more or less what you suggested. If die is called, $@ contains the string passed to it.

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Two-line solution FTW! Had that coded and running in ten minutes flat, and it does the job nicely. Now that they don't derail my whole processing chain, I now have stats on the frequency of busted files too! – Ed Hyer Jan 16 at 21:29
vote up 4 vote down

Does it trap $SIG{__DIE__}? If it does, then it's more local than you are. But there are a couple strategies:

  • You can evoke its package and override die:

    package Library::Dumb::Dyer;
    use subs 'die';
    sub die {
        my ( $package, $file, $line ) = caller();
        unless ( $decider->decide( $file, $package, $line ) eq 'DUMB' ) {
            say "It's a good death.";
            die @_;
       }
    }
    
  • If not, can trap it. (look for $SIG on the page, markdown is not handling the full link.)

    my $old_die_handler = $SIG{__DIE__};
    sub _death_handler { 
        my ( $package, $file, $line ) = caller();
        unless ( $decider->decide( $file, $package, $line ) eq 'DUMB DIE' ) {
            say "It's a good death.";
            goto &$old_die_handler;
        }
    }
    $SIG{__DIE__} = \&_death_handler;
    
  • You might have to scan the library, find a sub that it always calls, and use that to load your $SIG handler by overriding that.

    my $dumb_package_do_something_dumb = \&Dumb::do_something_dumb;
    *Dumb::do_something_dumb = sub { 
        $SIG{__DIE__} = ...
        goto &$dumb_package_do_something_dumb;
    };
    
  • Or override a builtin that it always calls...

    package Dumb; 
    use subs 'chdir';
    sub chdir { 
        $SIG{__DIE__} = ...
        CORE::chdir @_;
    };
    
  • If all else fails, you can whip the horse's eyes with this:

    package CORE::GLOBAL;
    use subs 'die';
    
    
    sub die { 
        ... 
        CORE::die @_;
    }
    

This will override die globally, the only way you can get back die is to address it as CORE::die.

Some combination of this will work.

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Yikes! I sincerely hope the package doesn't override the DIE signal. Interesting idea, however. ;-) – Jon Ericson Jan 16 at 18:36
Make those assignments to $SIG{__DIE__} local so you don't step on anyone else who did the same thing :) – brian d foy Jan 16 at 20:27
You know, I thought about that. But I wasn't aware of the calling structure. Now, I realize that my whole approach was overblown if all he wanted was to "try" the library and continue on. So the library probably isn't so dumb. It just expects you "catch" to catch it. – Axeman Jan 16 at 23:10
+1 for thoroughness Axeman. And if I could downvote whoever thought $SIG{__DIE__} was a good idea (Larry?) I would. – j_random_hacker Jan 17 at 8:50

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