Part of twisted.python.failure View Source View In Hierarchy
Known subclasses: twisted.spread.pb.CopiedFailure, twisted.spread.pb.CopyableFailure
A basic abstraction for an error that has occurred.
This is necessary because Python's built-in error mechanisms are inconvenient for asynchronous communication.| Instance Variables | value | The exception instance responsible for this failure. |
| type | The exception's class. |
| Method | __init__ | Initialize me with an explanation of the error. |
| Method | trap | Trap this failure if its type is in a predetermined list. |
| Method | check | Check if this failure's type is in a predetermined list. |
| Method | raiseException | raise the original exception, preserving traceback information if available. |
| Method | throwExceptionIntoGenerator | Throw the original exception into the given generator, preserving traceback information if available. |
| Method | __repr__ | Undocumented |
| Method | __str__ | Undocumented |
| Method | __getstate__ | Avoid pickling objects in the traceback. |
| Method | cleanFailure | Remove references to other objects, replacing them with strings. |
| Method | getTracebackObject | Get an object that represents this Failure's stack that can be passed to traceback.extract_tb. |
| Method | getErrorMessage | Get a string of the exception which caused this Failure. |
| Method | getBriefTraceback | Undocumented |
| Method | getTraceback | Undocumented |
| Method | printTraceback | Emulate Python's standard error reporting mechanism. |
| Method | printBriefTraceback | Print a traceback as densely as possible. |
| Method | printDetailedTraceback | Print a traceback with detailed locals and globals information. |
| Class Method | _findFailure | Find the failure that represents the exception currently in context. |
Initialize me with an explanation of the error.
By default, this will use the current exception
(sys.exc_info()). However, if you want to specify a
particular kind of failure, you can pass an exception as an argument.
If no exc_value is passed, then an "original"
Failure will be searched for. If the current exception handler
that this Failure is being constructed in is handling an
exception raised by raiseException,
then this Failure will act like the original
Failure.
exc_tb only traceback instances or
None are allowed. If None is supplied for
exc_value, the value of exc_tb is ignored,
otherwise if exc_tb is None, it will be found
from execution context (ie, sys.exc_info).
Trap this failure if its type is in a predetermined list.
This allows you to trap a Failure in an error callback. It will be automatically re-raised if it is not a type that you expect.
The reason for having this particular API is because it's very useful in Deferred errback chains:
def _ebFoo(self, failure):
r = failure.trap(Spam, Eggs)
print 'The Failure is due to either Spam or Eggs!'
if r == Spam:
print 'Spam did it!'
elif r == Eggs:
print 'Eggs did it!'
If the failure is not a Spam or an Eggs, then the Failure will be
'passed on' to the next errback.
| Parameters | errorTypes | (type: Exception
) |
| Parameters | errorTypes | (type: list of Exception classes or fully-qualified class
names.
) |
| Returns | the matching Exception type, or None if no match.
| |
| Returns | The next value yielded from the generator. | |
| Raises | StopIteration | If there are no more values in the generator. |
| anything else | Anything that the generator raises. | |
Get an object that represents this Failure's stack that can be passed to traceback.extract_tb.
If the original traceback object is still present, return that. If this traceback object has been lost but we still have the information, return a fake traceback object (see_Traceback).
If there is no traceback information at all, return None.