Error handling: Difference between revisions
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To summarise debugging approaches discussed in this article, you can use <code>break</code> to debug nix code, <code>breakpointHook</code> to debug nix builds and interactive tools to debug NixOS tests. | |||
== References == | == References == |
Revision as of 14:17, 4 May 2023
This page is a collection of facilities and tools from nix, nixpkgs and NixOS for error handling and debugging. You can use them to convey configuration errors to users or to debug nix expressions trough interactive or print debugging.
In most cases you will want to stick to the highest level abstraction: config.warnings
or lib.warn
and its relatives.
{ config, lib, ... }:
# in any nix code:
lib.warn "This is a sample warning message."
{
config.warnings = [
# Some NixOS module: throw error, if services.foo.bar == true
(lib.optionals config.services.foo.bar "This is also a sample warning message, but invoked differently.")
];
}
Nix
The nix language has a construct to help with printing messages.
- assert: throw an error (see Nix manual: Assertions)
The nix language also comes with some related builtin functions:
- throw: throw an error with a message
- abort: same as throw, but always stop evaluation
- trace: print to stderr
- traceVerbose: print, but only when in
--trace-verbose
mode - break: breakpoint when in
--debugger
mode - tryEval: catch throws and asserts
Most of those functions (nix builtins as well as nixpkgs lib functions) take an expression e
as their last argument which they return unmodified. Thus they are chained in front of some expression:
a = builtins.trace "trace message" {
# what should be assigned to a
};
Commonly, assert is combined with throw to generate meaningful error messages: assert condition || throw "message";
. This pattern is essentially how lib.assertMsg
works (see Sec. nixpkgs). [1]
nixpkgs
There are three main facilities for printing errors and do print debugging in nixpkgs:
- lib.trivial.* (see nixpkgs manual: lib.trivial)
- lib.throwIf and throwIfNot
- lib.warn, warnIf and warnIfNot
- lib.debug.*: tracing functions with some pretty printing (e.g.
lib.debug.traceIf
) [2] - lib.asserts.*: assert functions (e.g.
lib.asserts.assertMsg
)
These facilities also expose their attributes directly via lib.*
(e.g. lib.throwIf
).
Nixpkgs also has a debugging facility like nix's break
: the breakpointHook.
NixOS
The NixOS module system again wraps these library functions and makes them available via module options (see NixOS manual: Assertions/Warnings): [3]
config.warnings = [];
config.assertions = [];
An example for a debugging facility in NixOS is running NixOS tests interactively.
Debugging
To summarise debugging approaches discussed in this article, you can use break
to debug nix code, breakpointHook
to debug nix builds and interactive tools to debug NixOS tests.