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diagnostics.go
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diagnostics.go
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package tfdiags
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"github.com/hashicorp/errwrap"
multierror "github.com/hashicorp/go-multierror"
"github.com/hashicorp/hcl2/hcl"
)
// Diagnostics is a list of diagnostics. Diagnostics is intended to be used
// where a Go "error" might normally be used, allowing richer information
// to be conveyed (more context, support for warnings).
//
// A nil Diagnostics is a valid, empty diagnostics list, thus allowing
// heap allocation to be avoided in the common case where there are no
// diagnostics to report at all.
type Diagnostics []Diagnostic
// Append is the main interface for constructing Diagnostics lists, taking
// an existing list (which may be nil) and appending the new objects to it
// after normalizing them to be implementations of Diagnostic.
//
// The usual pattern for a function that natively "speaks" diagnostics is:
//
// // Create a nil Diagnostics at the start of the function
// var diags diag.Diagnostics
//
// // At later points, build on it if errors / warnings occur:
// foo, err := DoSomethingRisky()
// if err != nil {
// diags = diags.Append(err)
// }
//
// // Eventually return the result and diagnostics in place of error
// return result, diags
//
// Append accepts a variety of different diagnostic-like types, including
// native Go errors and HCL diagnostics. It also knows how to unwrap
// a multierror.Error into separate error diagnostics. It can be passed
// another Diagnostics to concatenate the two lists. If given something
// it cannot handle, this function will panic.
func (diags Diagnostics) Append(new ...interface{}) Diagnostics {
for _, item := range new {
if item == nil {
continue
}
switch ti := item.(type) {
case Diagnostic:
diags = append(diags, ti)
case Diagnostics:
diags = append(diags, ti...) // flatten
case diagnosticsAsError:
diags = diags.Append(ti.Diagnostics) // unwrap
case hcl.Diagnostics:
for _, hclDiag := range ti {
diags = append(diags, hclDiagnostic{hclDiag})
}
case *hcl.Diagnostic:
diags = append(diags, hclDiagnostic{ti})
case *multierror.Error:
for _, err := range ti.Errors {
diags = append(diags, nativeError{err})
}
case error:
switch {
case errwrap.ContainsType(ti, Diagnostics(nil)):
// If we have an errwrap wrapper with a Diagnostics hiding
// inside then we'll unpick it here to get access to the
// individual diagnostics.
diags = diags.Append(errwrap.GetType(ti, Diagnostics(nil)))
case errwrap.ContainsType(ti, hcl.Diagnostics(nil)):
// Likewise, if we have HCL diagnostics we'll unpick that too.
diags = diags.Append(errwrap.GetType(ti, hcl.Diagnostics(nil)))
default:
diags = append(diags, nativeError{ti})
}
default:
panic(fmt.Errorf("can't construct diagnostic(s) from %T", item))
}
}
// Given the above, we should never end up with a non-nil empty slice
// here, but we'll make sure of that so callers can rely on empty == nil
if len(diags) == 0 {
return nil
}
return diags
}
// HasErrors returns true if any of the diagnostics in the list have
// a severity of Error.
func (diags Diagnostics) HasErrors() bool {
for _, diag := range diags {
if diag.Severity() == Error {
return true
}
}
return false
}
// ForRPC returns a version of the receiver that has been simplified so that
// it is friendly to RPC protocols.
//
// Currently this means that it can be serialized with encoding/gob and
// subsequently re-inflated. It may later grow to include other serialization
// formats.
//
// Note that this loses information about the original objects used to
// construct the diagnostics, so e.g. the errwrap API will not work as
// expected on an error-wrapped Diagnostics that came from ForRPC.
func (diags Diagnostics) ForRPC() Diagnostics {
ret := make(Diagnostics, len(diags))
for i := range diags {
ret[i] = makeRPCFriendlyDiag(diags[i])
}
return ret
}
// Err flattens a diagnostics list into a single Go error, or to nil
// if the diagnostics list does not include any error-level diagnostics.
//
// This can be used to smuggle diagnostics through an API that deals in
// native errors, but unfortunately it will lose naked warnings (warnings
// that aren't accompanied by at least one error) since such APIs have no
// mechanism through which to report these.
//
// return result, diags.Error()
func (diags Diagnostics) Err() error {
if !diags.HasErrors() {
return nil
}
return diagnosticsAsError{diags}
}
type diagnosticsAsError struct {
Diagnostics
}
func (dae diagnosticsAsError) Error() string {
diags := dae.Diagnostics
switch {
case len(diags) == 0:
// should never happen, since we don't create this wrapper if
// there are no diagnostics in the list.
return "no errors"
case len(diags) == 1:
desc := diags[0].Description()
if desc.Detail == "" {
return desc.Summary
}
return fmt.Sprintf("%s: %s", desc.Summary, desc.Detail)
default:
var ret bytes.Buffer
fmt.Fprintf(&ret, "%d problems:\n", len(diags))
for _, diag := range dae.Diagnostics {
desc := diag.Description()
if desc.Detail == "" {
fmt.Fprintf(&ret, "\n- %s", desc.Summary)
} else {
fmt.Fprintf(&ret, "\n- %s: %s", desc.Summary, desc.Detail)
}
}
return ret.String()
}
}
// WrappedErrors is an implementation of errwrap.Wrapper so that an error-wrapped
// diagnostics object can be picked apart by errwrap-aware code.
func (dae diagnosticsAsError) WrappedErrors() []error {
var errs []error
for _, diag := range dae.Diagnostics {
if wrapper, isErr := diag.(nativeError); isErr {
errs = append(errs, wrapper.err)
}
}
return errs
}