util/vizerror: add WrapWithMessage

Thus new function allows constructing vizerrors that combine a message
appropriate for display to users with a wrapped underlying error.

Updates tailscale/corp#23781

Signed-off-by: Percy Wegmann <percy@tailscale.com>
pull/13755/head
Percy Wegmann 2 weeks ago committed by Percy Wegmann
parent 910b4e8e6a
commit 2cadb80fb2

@ -12,35 +12,67 @@ import (
// Error is an error that is safe to display to end users.
type Error struct {
err error
publicErr error // visible to end users
wrapped error // internal
}
// Error implements the error interface.
// Error implements the error interface. The returned string is safe to display
// to end users.
func (e Error) Error() string {
return e.err.Error()
return e.publicErr.Error()
}
// New returns an error that formats as the given text. It always returns a vizerror.Error.
func New(text string) error {
return Error{errors.New(text)}
func New(publicMsg string) error {
err := errors.New(publicMsg)
return Error{
publicErr: err,
wrapped: err,
}
}
// Errorf returns an Error with the specified format and values. It always returns a vizerror.Error.
func Errorf(format string, a ...any) error {
return Error{fmt.Errorf(format, a...)}
// Errorf returns an Error with the specified publicMsgFormat and values. It always returns a vizerror.Error.
//
// Warning: avoid using an error as one of the format arguments, as this will cause the text
// of that error to be displayed to the end user (which is probably not what you want).
func Errorf(publicMsgFormat string, a ...any) error {
err := fmt.Errorf(publicMsgFormat, a...)
return Error{
publicErr: err,
wrapped: err,
}
}
// Unwrap returns the underlying error.
//
// If the Error was constructed using [WrapWithMessage], this is the wrapped (internal) error
// and not the user-visible error message.
func (e Error) Unwrap() error {
return e.err
return e.wrapped
}
// Wrap wraps err with a vizerror.Error.
func Wrap(err error) error {
if err == nil {
// Wrap wraps publicErr with a vizerror.Error.
//
// Deprecated: this is almost always the wrong thing to do. Are you really sure
// you know exactly what err.Error() will stringify to and be safe to show to
// users? [WrapWithMessage] is probably what you want.
func Wrap(publicErr error) error {
if publicErr == nil {
return nil
}
return Error{err}
return Error{publicErr: publicErr, wrapped: publicErr}
}
// WrapWithMessage wraps the given error with a message that's safe to display
// to end users. The text of the wrapped error will not be displayed to end
// users.
//
// WrapWithMessage should almost always be preferred to [Wrap].
func WrapWithMessage(wrapped error, publicMsg string) error {
return Error{
publicErr: errors.New(publicMsg),
wrapped: wrapped,
}
}
// As returns the first vizerror.Error in err's chain.

@ -42,3 +42,25 @@ func TestAs(t *testing.T) {
t.Errorf("As() returned error %v, want %v", got, verr)
}
}
func TestWrap(t *testing.T) {
wrapped := errors.New("wrapped")
err := Wrap(wrapped)
if err.Error() != "wrapped" {
t.Errorf(`Wrap(wrapped).Error() = %q, want %q`, err.Error(), "wrapped")
}
if errors.Unwrap(err) != wrapped {
t.Errorf("Unwrap = %q, want %q", errors.Unwrap(err), wrapped)
}
}
func TestWrapWithMessage(t *testing.T) {
wrapped := errors.New("wrapped")
err := WrapWithMessage(wrapped, "safe")
if err.Error() != "safe" {
t.Errorf(`WrapWithMessage(wrapped, "safe").Error() = %q, want %q`, err.Error(), "safe")
}
if errors.Unwrap(err) != wrapped {
t.Errorf("Unwrap = %q, want %q", errors.Unwrap(err), wrapped)
}
}

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