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authorGuillaume Maudoux <guillaume.maudoux@tweag.io>2022-03-18 23:17:50 +0100
committerGuillaume Maudoux <guillaume.maudoux@tweag.io>2022-03-18 23:17:50 +0100
commit963b8aa39b169bf5c054449ddce39d60faacf298 (patch)
tree62fec751a948c4ad2ec78991ca4f5f886c760902 /src
parentc2b620f3ad80f3d5c091c955401445106d0579fe (diff)
Explain current error trace impl
Diffstat (limited to 'src')
-rw-r--r--src/libutil/error.cc95
1 files changed, 94 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/src/libutil/error.cc b/src/libutil/error.cc
index ae0bbc06f..c66dfa112 100644
--- a/src/libutil/error.cc
+++ b/src/libutil/error.cc
@@ -288,7 +288,100 @@ std::ostream & showErrorInfo(std::ostream & out, const ErrorInfo & einfo, bool s
"?" << std::endl;
}
- // traces
+ /*
+ * Traces
+ * ------
+ *
+ * The semantics of traces is a bit weird. We have only one option to
+ * print them and to make them verbose (--show-trace). In the code they
+ * are always collected, but they are not printed by default. The code
+ * also collects more traces when the option is on. This means that there
+ * is no way to print the simplified traces at all.
+ *
+ * I (layus) designed the code to attach positions to a restricted set of
+ * messages. This means that we have a lot of traces with no position at
+ * all, including most of the base error messages. For example "type
+ * error: found a string while a set was expected" has no position, but
+ * will come with several traces detailing it's precise relation to the
+ * closest know position. This makes erroring without printing traces
+ * quite useless.
+ *
+ * This is why I introduced the idea to always print a few traces on
+ * error. The number 3 is quite arbitrary, and was selected so as not to
+ * clutter the console on error. For the same reason, a trace with an
+ * error position takes more space, and counts as two traces towards the
+ * limit.
+ *
+ * The rest is truncated, unless --show-trace is passed. This preserves
+ * the same bad semantics of --show-trace to both show the trace and
+ * augment it with new data. Not too sure what is the best course of
+ * action.
+ *
+ * The issue is that it is fundamentally hard to provide a trace for a
+ * lazy language. The trace will only cover the current spine of the
+ * evaluation, missing things that have been evaluated before. For
+ * example, most type errors are hard to inspect because there is not
+ * trace for the faulty value. These errors should really print the faulty
+ * value itself.
+ *
+ * In function calls, the --show-trace flag triggers extra traces for each
+ * function invocation. These work as scopes, allowing to follow the
+ * current spine of the evaluation graph. Without that flag, the error
+ * trace should restrict itself to a restricted prefix of that trace,
+ * until the first scope. If we ever get to such a precise error
+ * reporting, there would be no need to add an arbitrary limit here. We
+ * could always print the full trace, and it would just be small without
+ * the flag.
+ *
+ * One idea I had is for XxxError.addTrace() to perform nothing if one
+ * scope has already been traced. Alternatively, we could stop here when
+ * we encounter such a scope instead of after an arbitrary number of
+ * traces. This however requires to augment traces with the notion of
+ * "scope".
+ *
+ * This is particularly visible in code like evalAttrs(...) where we have
+ * to make a decision between the two following options.
+ *
+ * ``` long traces
+ * inline void EvalState::evalAttrs(Env & env, Expr * e, Value & v, const Pos & pos, const std::string_view & errorCtx)
+ * {
+ * try {
+ * e->eval(*this, env, v);
+ * if (v.type() != nAttrs)
+ * throwTypeError("value is %1% while a set was expected", v);
+ * } catch (Error & e) {
+ * e.addTrace(pos, errorCtx);
+ * throw;
+ * }
+ * }
+ * ```
+ *
+ * ``` short traces
+ * inline void EvalState::evalAttrs(Env & env, Expr * e, Value & v, const Pos & pos, const std::string_view & errorCtx)
+ * {
+ * e->eval(*this, env, v);
+ * try {
+ * if (v.type() != nAttrs)
+ * throwTypeError("value is %1% while a set was expected", v);
+ * } catch (Error & e) {
+ * e.addTrace(pos, errorCtx);
+ * throw;
+ * }
+ * }
+ * ```
+ *
+ * The second example can be rewritten more concisely, but kept in this
+ * form to highlight the symmetry. The first option adds more information,
+ * because whatever caused an error down the line, in the generic eval
+ * function, will get annotated with the code location that uses and
+ * required it. The second option is less verbose, but does not provide
+ * any context at all as to where and why a failing value was required.
+ *
+ * Scopes would fix that, by adding context only when --show-trace is
+ * passed, and keeping the trace terse otherwise.
+ *
+ */
+
if (!einfo.traces.empty()) {
unsigned int count = 0;
for (auto iter = einfo.traces.rbegin(); iter != einfo.traces.rend(); ++iter) {