Panic messages for humans. Handles panics by calling
std::panic::set_hook
to make errors nice for humans.
When you're building a CLI, polish is super important. Even though Rust is pretty great at safety, it's not unheard of to access the wrong index in a vector or have an assert fail somewhere.
When an error eventually occurs, you probably will want to know about it. So instead of just providing an error message on the command line, we can create a call to action for people to submit a report.
This should empower people to engage in communication, lowering the chances people might get frustrated. And making it easier to figure out what might be causing bugs.
thread 'main' panicked at 'oops', examples/main.rs:2:3
note: Run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` for a backtrace.
Well, this is embarrassing.
human-panic had a problem and crashed. To help us diagnose the problem you can send us a crash report.
We have generated a report file at "/var/folders/zw/bpfvmq390lv2c6gn_6byyv0w0000gn/T/report-8351cad6-d2b5-4fe8-accd-1fcbf4538792.toml". Submit an issue or email with the subject of "human-panic Crash Report" and include the report as an attachment.
- Homepage: https://github.com/rust-cli/human-panic
- Authors: Yoshua Wuyts <[email protected]>
We take privacy seriously, and do not perform any automated error collection. In order to improve the software, we rely on people to submit reports.
Thank you kindly!
The error dump file generated by human-panic
contains the following fields.
name = 'single-panic-test'
operating_system = 'unix:Unknown'
crate_version = '0.1.0'
explanation = '''
Cause: OMG EVERYTHING IS ON FIRE!!!. Panic occurred in file 'tests/single-panic/src/main.rs' at line 8
'''
method = 'Panic'
backtrace = '''
stack backtrace:
0: 0x55fa0ed4c1b4 - backtrace::backtrace::libunwind::trace::h69e50feca54bfb84
at /home/spacekookie/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/backtrace-0.3.6/src/backtrace/libunwind.rs:53
- backtrace::backtrace::trace::h42967341e0b01ccc
at /home/spacekookie/.cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/backtrace-0.3.6/src/backtrace/mod.rs:42
# ...
8: 0x55fa0ebaac8d - single_panic_test::main::h56a3d326bcecfc36
at tests/single-panic/src/main.rs:8
9: 0x55fa0ebaae91 - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::h09d28d8540038bf8
at /checkout/src/libstd/rt.rs:74
10: 0x55fa0ed732f7 - std::rt::lang_start_internal::{{closure}}::h2e4baf0a27c956a3
at libstd/rt.rs:59
- std::panicking::try::do_call::h73f98ed0647c7274
at libstd/panicking.rs:305
11: 0x55fa0ed8551e - __rust_maybe_catch_panic
at libpanic_unwind/lib.rs:101
12: 0x55fa0ed6f7f5 - std::panicking::try::h18fbb145180d4cd9
at libstd/panicking.rs:284
- std::panic::catch_unwind::hc4b6a212a30b4bc5
at libstd/panic.rs:361
- std::rt::lang_start_internal::h8b001b4244930d51
at libstd/rt.rs:58
13: 0x55fa0ebaae71 - std::rt::lang_start::h1b1de624209f414a
at /checkout/src/libstd/rt.rs:74
14: 0x55fa0ebaacbd - main
15: 0x7f9946132f29 - __libc_start_main
16: 0x55fa0eba9b79 - _start
17: 0x0 - <unknown>'''
use human_panic::setup_panic;
fn main() {
setup_panic!();
println!("A normal log message");
panic!("OMG EVERYTHING IS ON FIRE!!!")
}
It only displays a human-friendly panic message in release mode:
$ cargo run --release
$ cargo add human-panic
MIT OR Apache-2.0