errorme

1.3.3 • Public • Published

NSP Status Build Status

Overview

This node module helps you to create your own errors with your defined error codes and handle them within classes in a proper way.

Features

  • Creating errors objects instance of Error class from the self-defined error codes
  • Throw the created error any time with informative error message/code and error stack
  • Parse any error to HTTP error codes and messages
  • Usage with express middleware
  • See custom and informative error messages in the client-side of the REST in development environment

ECMAScript support

ES6 only

Installation

$ npm install errorme

API

Check the JSDoc here.

Installation

npm install errorme --save

Usage

You can add your custom errors or use the default errors.

//defining our custom errors
const errors = {
    "ValidationError": {
        "CODE": 100,
        "DEFAULT_MESSAGE": "The provided data is not valid",
        "HTTP_CODE": 400
    },
    "ServiceError": {
        "CODE": 101,
        "DEFAULT_MESSAGE": "Error happend related to the third party service",
        "HTTP_CODE": 500
    },
}
//overwriting defaults errors and requiring to show logs once an error created
let options = { overwrite: true, showLogs: true }
//requiring module
let errorme = require('errorme')(errors, options)
 
//getting error
let code = 100, customMessage = "The provided data is invalid"; 
let err = errorme.getError(code, customMessage) //custom message will be visible if process.env.DEV=true
console.log(err instanceof Error) //true
//parsing error to http
let httpErr = err.parseTo('http')
console.log(httpErr.code) //400
console.log(httpErr.definedCode) //100
console.log(httpErr.message) //"Bad request"
 
//create http error
let newHttpErr = errorme.getHttpError(100);
console.log(newHttpErr.code == httpErr.code) //true
console.log(newHttpErr.message == httpErr.message) //true
 

Examples

To understand the real use case it will be better to see it with async module, especially with async/waterfall

let waterfall = require('async/waterfall');
let errorme = require('errorme')();
 
let someFunction = (params, callback)=>{
    waterfall([
        (_calllback)=>{
            //suppose here we are doing some database query
            //and it might fail
            let err;
            let data;
            if(Math.floor((Math.random() * 5)) == 0){
                //suppose here we've got  error
                err = errorme.getError(102, "Our database query unfortunately failed")
            }else{
                data = "Some data retrieved from database"
            } 
            _calllback(err, data) //err will be undefined if the if block is not executed
        },
        (data, _calllback)=>{
            //if this callback is being executed then it means the previous is not failed
            //and now we want to check our data which might not to meet to our criteria 
            let err;
            if(Math.floor((Math.random() * 5)) == 1){
                //data doesn't meet to our criteria
                //and we want to provide the corresponding error
                err = errorme.getError(100, "Data doesn't meet to our criteria")
                data = null;
            } 
            _calllback(err, data) //err will be undefined if the if block is not executed
        },
        (data, _calllback)=>{
            //soppose here we want to make a call to some external service which also can be failed
            let err;
            let dataOfExternalService;
            if(Math.floor((Math.random() * 5)) == 2){
                err = errorme.getError(101); //if don't pass message then the error message will be the default error message
            }else{
                dataOfExternalService = "Data from external service";
            } 
            _calllback(err, dataOfExternalService) //err will be undefined if the if block is not executed
        },
    ], (error, data)=>{
        //here we can do our final operations 
        //and finally parse the error to http and send to the client
        // if(error)
        //  error = error.parseTo('http');
        
        //we don't have anything to do in this final block then we could parse the error into http
        //in the above callbacks and as a callback we could just give the top most callback
        //lets say we don't want to parse to http. We just pass the pure error to the callback
        callback(error, data);
    })
    
}
 
someFunction("some paramas", (error, data)=>{
    if(error){
        console.log('Error occured. Code: ' + error.code + ', message: ' + error.message);
    }
    if(data){
        console.log('Data: ' + data);
    }
});

Using with express

let express = require('express');
let app = express();
let errorme = require('errorme')();
 
//creates middleware
errorme.middleware(app);
 
app.get('/', function (req, res) {
    let data = {
        foo: "Foo data"
    }
    let err;
    
    // uncoment below if you want to send http error message (data argument will be ignored)
    // err = errorme.getError(100);
    res.errormeSend(err, data);
});
 
app.listen(3000);

Next features

  • Will be ability to add other "error languages"
  • Optimization for working with error codes defined by external service providers

License

MIT

Dependencies (0)

    Dev Dependencies (3)

    Package Sidebar

    Install

    npm i errorme

    Weekly Downloads

    4

    Version

    1.3.3

    License

    ISC

    Last publish

    Collaborators

    • kmanaseryan