Merge an error with its cause
.
This merges
error.cause
recursively with its parent error
, including its
message
,
stack
,
name
and
errors
.
Example
import mergeErrorCause from 'merge-error-cause'
const main = function (userId) {
try {
return createUser(userId)
} catch (error) {
throw mergeErrorCause(error)
}
}
const createUser = function (userId) {
try {
validateUserId(userId)
return sendDatabaseRequest('create', userId)
} catch (cause) {
throw new Error('Could not create user.', { cause })
}
}
const validateUserId = function (userId) {
if (typeof userId !== 'string') {
throw new TypeError(`Invalid user id: ${userId}.`)
}
}
main(false)
Install
npm install merge-error-cause
This package works in both Node.js >=14.18.0 and
browsers.
It is an ES module and must be loaded using
an import
or import()
statement,
not require()
.
API
mergeErrorCause(error)
error
Error | any
Return value: Error
error
is modified and returned.
If error
's class is Error
or if error.wrap
is true
,
error.cause
is modified and returned instead.
If error
is not a valid Error
, a new error
is created and returned
instead.
This never throws.
Background
error.cause
is a
recent
JavaScript feature to wrap error messages and properties.
try {
validateUserId(userId)
sendDatabaseRequest('create', userId)
} catch (cause) {
throw new Error('Could not create user.', { cause })
}
However, it comes with a few issues.
Traversing error.cause
Problem
Consumers need to traverse error.cause
.
try {
createUser(userId)
} catch (error) {
if (error.code === 'E101' || (error.cause && error.cause.code === 'E101')) {
}
if (
error.name === 'UserError' ||
(error.cause && error.cause.name === 'UserError')
) {
}
}
This is tricky to get right. For example:
error.cause.cause
might also exist (and so on)- If
error
is not an Error
instance, error.name
might throw - Recursing over
error.cause
might be an infinite cycle
Solution
This library merges error.cause
recursively. It also
ensures error
is an Error
instance. Consumers can then
handle errors without checking its cause
.
try {
createUser(userId)
} catch (error) {
if (error.code === 'E101') {
}
if (error.name === 'UserError') {
}
}
Verbose stack trace
Problem
Stack traces with multiple error.cause
can be quite verbose.
Error: Could not create user group.
at createUserGroup (/home/user/app/user_group.js:19:9)
at createGroups (/home/user/app/user_group.js:101:10)
at startApp (/home/user/app/app.js:35:20)
at main (/home/user/app/app.js:3:4) {
[cause]: Error: Could not create user.
at newUser (/home/user/app/user.js:52:7)
at createUser (/home/user/app/user.js:43:5)
at createUserGroup (/home/user/app/user_group.js:17:11)
at createGroups (/home/user/app/user_group.js:101:10)
at startApp (/home/user/app/app.js:35:20)
at main (/home/user/app/app.js:3:4) {
[cause]: Error: Invalid user.
at validateUser (/home/user/app/user.js:159:8)
at userInstance (/home/user/app/user.js:20:4)
at newUser (/home/user/app/user.js:50:7)
at createUser (/home/user/app/user.js:43:5)
at createUserGroup (/home/user/app/user_group.js:17:11)
at createGroups (/home/user/app/user_group.js:101:10)
at startApp (/home/user/app/app.js:35:20)
at main (/home/user/app/app.js:3:4) {
[cause]: UserError: User "15" does not exist.
at checkUserId (/home/user/app/user.js:195:3)
at checkUserExist (/home/user/app/user.js:170:10)
at validateUser (/home/user/app/user.js:157:23)
at userInstance (/home/user/app/user.js:20:4)
at newUser (/home/user/app/user.js:50:7)
at createUser (/home/user/app/user.js:43:5)
at createUserGroup (/home/user/app/user_group.js:17:11)
at createGroups (/home/user/app/user_group.js:101:10)
at startApp (/home/user/app/app.js:35:20)
at main (/home/user/app/app.js:3:4)
}
}
}
Each error cause is indented and printed separately.
- The stack traces mostly repeat each other since the function calls are part of
the same line execution
- The most relevant message (innermost) is harder to find since it is shown last
Solution
This library only keeps the innermost stack trace. Error messages are
concatenated by default from innermost to outermost. This results in much
simpler stack traces without losing any information.
TypeError: User "15" does not exist.
Invalid user.
Could not create user.
Could not create user group.
at checkUserId (/home/user/app/user.js:195:3)
at checkUserExist (/home/user/app/user.js:170:10)
at validateUser (/home/user/app/user.js:157:23)
at userInstance (/home/user/app/user.js:20:4)
at newUser (/home/user/app/user.js:50:7)
at createUser (/home/user/app/user.js:43:5)
at createUserGroup (/home/user/app/user_group.js:17:11)
at createGroups (/home/user/app/user_group.js:101:10)
at startApp (/home/user/app/app.js:35:20)
at main (/home/user/app/app.js:3:4)
Features
Stack traces
Only the innermost stack trace is kept.
Please make sure you use async
/await
instead of new Promise()
or callbacks
to prevent truncated stack traces.
Messages
Inner error messages are printed first.
try {
throw new Error('Invalid user id.')
} catch (cause) {
throw new Error('Could not create user.', { cause })
}
If the outer error message ends with :
, it is prepended instead.
try {
throw new Error('Invalid user id.')
} catch (cause) {
throw new Error('Could not create user:', { cause })
}
:
can optionally be followed by a newline.
try {
throw new Error('Invalid user id.')
} catch (cause) {
throw new Error('Could not create user:\n', { cause })
}
Error class
The outer error class is used.
try {
throw new TypeError('User id is not a string.')
} catch (cause) {
const error = new UserError('Could not create user.', { cause })
const mergedError = mergeErrorCause(error)
console.log(mergedError instanceof UserError)
console.log(mergedError.name)
}
If the parent error class is Error
, the child class is used instead. This
allows wrapping the error message or properties while keeping its class.
try {
throw new TypeError('User id is not a string.')
} catch (cause) {
const error = new Error('Could not create user.', { cause })
console.log(mergeErrorCause(error) instanceof TypeError)
}
error.wrap: true
has the same effect, but works with any parent error class.
try {
throw new TypeError('User id is not a string.')
} catch (cause) {
const error = new UserError('Could not create user.', { cause })
error.wrap = true
console.log(mergeErrorCause(error) instanceof TypeError)
}
Error properties
Error properties are shallowly merged.
try {
throw Object.assign(new Error('Invalid user id.'), { userId: '5' })
} catch (cause) {
throw Object.assign(new Error('Could not create user.', { cause }), {
invalidUser: true,
})
}
Empty error messages are ignored. This is useful when wrapping error properties.
try {
throw new Error('Invalid user id.')
} catch (cause) {
throw Object.assign(new Error('', { cause }), { invalidUser: true })
}
Aggregate errors
Any
aggregateError.errors[*].cause
is processed recursively. However, aggregateError.errors
are not merged with
each other since those are different from each other.
If both error.errors
and error.cause.errors
exist, they are concatenated.
Normalization
Invalid errors are normalized
to proper Error
instances.
try {
throw 'Invalid user id.'
} catch (error) {
console.log(mergeErrorCause(error))
}
Related projects
Support
For any question, don't hesitate to submit an issue on GitHub.
Everyone is welcome regardless of personal background. We enforce a
Code of conduct in order to promote a positive and
inclusive environment.
Contributing
This project was made with ❤️. The simplest way to give back is by starring and
sharing it online.
If the documentation is unclear or has a typo, please click on the page's Edit
button (pencil icon) and suggest a correction.
If you would like to help us fix a bug or add a new feature, please check our
guidelines. Pull requests are welcome!