@solana/errors
This package brings together every error message across all Solana JavaScript modules.
Reading error messages
In development mode
When your bundler sets the constant __DEV__
to true
, every error message will be included in the bundle. As such, you will be able to read them in plain language wherever they appear.
[!WARNING]
The size of your JavaScript bundle will increase significantly with the inclusion of every error message in development mode. Be sure to build your bundle with __DEV__
set to false
when you go to production.
In production mode
When your bundler sets the constant __DEV__
to false
, error messages will be stripped from the bundle to save space. Only the error code will appear when an error is encountered. Follow the instructions in the error message to convert the error code back to the human-readable error message.
For instance, to recover the error text for the error with code 123
:
npx @solana/errors decode 123
Adding a new error
- Add a new exported error code constant to
src/codes.ts
. - Add that new constant to the
SolanaErrorCode
union in src/codes.ts
. - If you would like the new error to encapsulate context about the error itself (eg. the public keys for which a transaction is missing signatures) define the shape of that context in
src/details.ts
. - Add the error's message to
src/messages.ts
. Any context values that you defined above will be interpolated into the message wherever you write $key
, where key
is the index of a value in the context (eg. 'Missing a signature for account `$address`'
). - Publish a new version of
@solana/errors
. - Bump the version of
@solana/errors
in the package from which the error is thrown.
Removing an error message
- Don't remove errors.
- Don't change the meaning of an error message.
- Don't change or reorder error codes.
- Don't change or remove members of an error's context.
When an older client throws an error, we want to make sure that they can always decode the error. If you make any of the changes above, old clients will, by definition, not have received your changes. This could make the errors that they throw impossible to decode going forward.
Catching errors
When you catch a SolanaError
and assert its error code using isSolanaError()
, TypeScript will refine the error's context to the type associated with that error code. You can use that context to render useful error messages, or to make context-aware decisions that help your application to recover from the error.
import {
SOLANA_ERROR__TRANSACTION_MISSING_SIGNATURE,
SOLANA_ERROR__TRANSACTION_SIGNATURE_NOT_COMPUTABLE,
isSolanaError,
} from '@solana/errors';
import { assertTransactionIsFullySigned, getSignatureFromTransaction } from '@solana/transactions';
try {
const transactionSignature = getSignatureFromTransaction(tx);
assertTransactionIsFullySigned(tx);
} catch (e) {
if (isSolanaError(e, SOLANA_ERROR__TRANSACTION_MISSING_SIGNATURES)) {
displayError(
"We can't send this transaction without signatures for these addresses:\n- %s",
e.context.addresses.join('\n- '),
);
return;
} else if (isSolanaError(e, SOLANA_ERROR__TRANSACTION_SIGNATURE_NOT_COMPUTABLE)) {
if (!tx.feePayer) {
displayError('Choose a fee payer for this transaction before sending it');
} else {
displayError('The fee payer still needs to sign for this transaction');
}
return;
}
throw e;
}