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Add examples describing error handling in ActiveSupport::Notifications and ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber documentation files
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2 changed files with 35 additions and 9 deletions
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@ -5,8 +5,8 @@ require "active_support/core_ext/class/attribute"
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require "active_support/subscriber"
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module ActiveSupport
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# ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber is an object set to consume
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# ActiveSupport::Notifications with the sole purpose of logging them.
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# <tt>ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber</tt> is an object set to consume
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# <tt>ActiveSupport::Notifications</tt> with the sole purpose of logging them.
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# The log subscriber dispatches notifications to a registered object based
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# on its given namespace.
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#
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@ -29,13 +29,36 @@ module ActiveSupport
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# subscriber, the line above should be called after your
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# <tt>ActiveRecord::LogSubscriber</tt> definition.
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#
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# After configured, whenever a "sql.active_record" notification is published,
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# it will properly dispatch the event (ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event) to
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# the sql method.
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# After configured, whenever a <tt>"sql.active_record"</tt> notification is published,
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# it will properly dispatch the event
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# (<tt>ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event</tt>) to the sql method.
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#
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# Being an <tt>ActiveSupport::Notifications</tt> consumer,
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# <tt>ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber</tt> exposes a simple interface to check if
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# instrumented code raises an exception. It is common to log a different
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# message in case of an error, and this can be achieved by extending
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# the previous example:
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#
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# module ActiveRecord
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# class LogSubscriber < ActiveSupport::LogSubscriber
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# def sql(event)
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# exception = event.payload[:exception]
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#
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# if exception
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# exception_object = event.payload[:exception_object]
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#
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# "[ERROR] #{event.payload[:name]}: #{exception.join(', ')} " \
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# "(#{exception_object.backtrace.first})"
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# else
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# # standard logger code
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# end
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# end
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# end
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# end
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#
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# Log subscriber also has some helpers to deal with logging and automatically
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# flushes all logs when the request finishes (via action_dispatch.callback
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# notification) in a Rails environment.
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# flushes all logs when the request finishes
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# (via <tt>action_dispatch.callback</tt> notification) in a Rails environment.
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class LogSubscriber < Subscriber
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# Embed in a String to clear all previous ANSI sequences.
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CLEAR = "\e[0m"
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@ -67,9 +67,12 @@ module ActiveSupport
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# have a key <tt>:exception</tt> with an array of two elements as value: a string with
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# the name of the exception class, and the exception message.
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# The <tt>:exception_object</tt> key of the payload will have the exception
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# itself as the value.
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# itself as the value:
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#
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# As the previous example depicts, the class <tt>ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event</tt>
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# event.payload[:exception] # => ["ArgumentError", "Invalid value"]
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# event.payload[:exception_object] # => #<ArgumentError: Invalid value>
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#
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# As the earlier example depicts, the class <tt>ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event</tt>
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# is able to take the arguments as they come and provide an object-oriented
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# interface to that data.
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#
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