| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age |
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When an error is printed, if that error has a source, print the source. Then repeat that process until there are no more sources.
For an error with no source:
the error message
For an error with a single source:
the error message
caused by:
the source's error message
For an error message with chained sources:
the error message
caused by:
the immediate source's error message
the first transitive source's error message
the second transitive source's error message
…
the ultimate source's error message
That is, sources are printed from the outermost inwards, terminating with the lowest-level source.
This printing occurs in two places: when pilcrow starts, and whenever it processes an internal server error. For internal server errors, the error message is prefixed with the error ID, as before, to allow operators to correlate log messages with responses if they choose to do so:
[E1234] the error message
caused by:
the immediate source's error message
the first transitive source's error message
the second transitive source's error message
…
the ultimate source's error message
Both call sites lock stderr to try to prevent interleaving messages. No promises about how well it works.
I've not made any effort to ensure that multi-line error messages are correctly indented. So far as I know, pilcrow never emits a multi-line error message (except for long messages which are wrapped), so this likely isn't necessary. It's also surprisingly hard to do well, though there is [a crate for it][indenter].
[indenter]: https://docs.rs/indenter/latest/indenter/
There's a widespread convention for unix tools to prefix stderr output with the name of the program. For example, cat on my system prints the following when asked to open a nonexistent file:
cat: nope: No such file or directory
I've opted not to do that for Pilcrow. By my understanding, that convention is intended to help users identify which of several programs emitted a message when several programs share a stderr channel, for example when a program is used as part of a shell pipeline.
Programs that are largely intended to be freestanding do not consistently follow the same convention - Cargo, clang, and gcc all write diagnostics to stderr with no prefix, for example. Pilcrow is, similarly, meant to be run in isolation, either as the single thing a user is running interactively, or because it's being run as a service. In either case, the prefix is not necessary to identify Pilcrow as the source of a message.
I debated making the new `Exit` type crate-private, and having `cli::Args::run` return `impl Termination` to handle the interface between the crate and the outside world. For now, I've opted to instead return a result, so that any ill-advised callers trying to use Pilcrow as a library can at least attempt to understand the structure of its return value; this entails making `Exit` public as well, so that the CLI entry point (`main.rs`) can import it.
This is an enabling change, with little immediate impact on its own. It probably makes some error messages print less than perfectly, but Pilcrow generates errors so rarely in development that it's hard to check. I'll be revising individual errors in later
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This is based heavily on the work done for normalized strings, in `crate::normalize`. The key realization in that module is that the logic distinguishing one kind of thing (normalized strings in that case, IDs, in this case) can be packaged up as a type token, and that doing so may reduce the overall complexity. This implementation for ID also borrows heavily from the implementation for normalized strings.
It's less flexible: an ID implemented this way can't expose _less_ of `crate::id::ID`'s interface, whereas newtype wrappers can, for example. However, our code doesn't use that flexiblity on purpose anywhere and we're relatively unlikely to change that. In return, the individual ID types require substantially less code - they do not, for example, need to re-implement `Display` for themselves.
I very nearly made the trait `Prefix`:
```rust
pub trait Prefix {
const PREFIX: &str;
}
```
however, I think having an effectively-constant method is less surprising overall.
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This'll catch style issues, mostly.
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This silences some `-Wclippy::pedantic` warning, and it's just a good thing to do.
I've made the choice to have the docs comment face programmers, and to provide `hi --help` and `hi -h` content via Clap attributes instead of inferring it from the docs comment.
Internal (private) "rustdoc" comments have been converted to regular comments until I learn how to write better rustdoc.
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This is a beefy change, as it adds a TON of smaller pieces needed to make this all function:
* A database migration.
* A ton of new crates for things like password validation, timekeeping, and HTML generation.
* A first cut at a module structure for routes, templates, repositories.
* A family of ID types, for identifying various kinds of domain thing.
* AppError, which _doesn't_ implement Error but can be sent to clients.
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