#traceback #macro #proc-macro #procedural #derive #traceback-error

macro traceback-derive

Procedural macros made to work with the traceback-error crate

2 releases

0.1.1 Sep 11, 2023
0.1.0 Sep 11, 2023

#1613 in Development tools

43 downloads per month

MIT/Apache

12KB
52 lines

traceback-derive

traceback-derive is a procedural macro crate designed to enhance the functionality of the traceback-error crate by providing custom macros for streamlined error handling and tracebacks in Rust.

Usage

To use traceback-derive in your Rust project, follow these steps:

  1. Add traceback-derive and traceback-error as dependencies in your Cargo.toml:
[dependencies]
traceback-derive = "0.1.1"
traceback-error = "0.1.5"

The #[traceback] attribute enhances the function with traceback capabilities, making it easier to handle errors and capture detailed trace information.

  1. Apply the traceback macro to your function to create and handle errors with tracebacks:
#[traceback_derive::traceback]
fn my_function() -> Result<(), traceback_error::TracebackError> {
    // Your code here
    risky_function()?;
    // ...
}

The traceback! macro simplifies error creation and captures relevant context information.

Examples

Here's an example of how traceback-derive simplifies error handling compared to using traceback-error directly:

Without traceback-derive (using traceback-error directly):

use traceback_error::{traceback, TracebackError};

fn main() {
    match caller_of_tasks() {
        Ok(_) => {}
        Err(e) => {
            traceback!(e, "One of the tasks failed");
        }
    }
}

fn task_that_may_fail() -> Result<(), TracebackError> {
    return Err(traceback!("task_that_may_fail failed"));
}

fn other_task_that_may_fail() -> Result<(), TracebackError> {
    return Err(traceback!("other_task_that_may_fail failed"));
}

fn caller_of_tasks() -> Result<(), TracebackError> {
    match task_that_may_fail() {
        Ok(_) => {}
        Err(e) => {
            return Err(traceback!(err e));
        }
    };
    match other_task_that_may_fail() {
        Ok(_) => {}
        Err(e) => {
            return Err(traceback!(err e));
        }
    };
    Ok(())
}

With traceback-derive:

use traceback_error::{traceback, TracebackError};

fn main() {
    match caller_of_tasks() {
        Ok(_) => {}
        Err(e) => {
            traceback!(e, "One of the tasks failed");
        }
    }
}

fn task_that_may_fail() -> Result<(), TracebackError> {
    return Err(traceback!("task_that_may_fail failed"));
}

fn other_task_that_may_fail() -> Result<(), TracebackError> {
    return Err(traceback!("other_task_that_may_fail failed"));
}

#[traceback_derive::traceback]
fn caller_of_tasks() -> Result<(), TracebackError> {
    task_that_may_fail()?;
    other_task_that_may_fail()?;
    Ok(())
}

The two code snippets are equivalent when expanded, but traceback-derive simplifies error handling and capture.

Contribution

Contributions are welcome! Feel free to open issues or pull requests on the GitHub repository. This project is still in very early development, and proper contribution guidelines have not yet been established.

License

This crate is dual-licensed under the MIT License and the Apache License, Version 2.0. You may choose either of these licenses when using this crate. See the LICENSE-MIT and LICENSE-APACHE-2.0 files for the full text of the licenses.

GitHub Repository

For more information and to contribute to the development of traceback-derive, visit the GitHub repository.

Dependencies

~315–770KB
~18K SLoC