Skip to main content

A centralized error handler for aiohttp servers

Project description

aiohttp-catcher

CI Job PyPI version

aiohttp-catcher is a centralized error handler for aiohttp servers. It enables consistent error handling across your web server or API, so your code can raise Python exceptions that will be mapped to consistent, user-friendly error messages.



Quickstart

Install aiohttp-catcher:

pip install aiohttp-catcher

Start catching errors in your aiohttp-based web server:

from aiohttp import web
from aiohttp_catcher import catch, Catcher

async def divide(request):
  quotient = 1 / 0
  return web.Response(text=f"1 / 0 = {quotient}")


async def main():
  # Add a catcher:
  catcher = Catcher()

  # Register error-handling scenarios:
  await catcher.add_scenario(
    catch(ZeroDivisionError).with_status_code(400).and_return("Zero division makes zero sense")
  )

  # Register your catcher as an aiohttp middleware:
  app = web.Application(middlewares=[catcher.middleware])
  app.add_routes([web.get("/divide-by-zero", divide)])
  web.run_app(app)

Making a request to /divide-by-zero will return a 400 status code with the following body:

{"code": 400, "message": "Zero division makes zero sense"}

What's New in 0.3.0?

  • Canned Scenarios: You can now use a canned list of scenarios, capturing all of aiohttp's web exceptions out of the box.
  • More flexible Callables and Awaitables: Callables and Awaitables are now invoked with a second argument,
    the aiohttp Request instance, to add more flexibility to custom messages.

Key Features

Return a Constant

In case you want some exceptions to return a constant message across your application, you can do so by using the and_return("some value") method:

await catcher.add_scenario(
  catch(ZeroDivisionError).with_status_code(400).and_return("Zero division makes zero sense")
)

Stringify the Exception

In some cases, you would want to return a stringified version of your exception, should it entail user-friendly information.

class EntityNotFound(Exception):
  def __init__(self, entity_id, *args, **kwargs):
    super(EntityNotFound, self).__init__(*args, **kwargs)
    self.entity_id = entity_id

  def __str__(self):
    return f"Entity {self.entity_id} could not be found"


@routes.get("/user/{user_id}")
async def get_user(request):
  user_id = request.match_info.get("user_id")
  if user_id not in user_db:
    raise EntityNotFound(entity_id=user_id)
  return user_db[user_id]

# Your catcher can be directed to stringify particular exceptions:

await catcher.add_scenario(
  catch(EntityNotFound).with_status_code(404).and_stringify()
)

Canned HTTP 4xx and 5xx Errors (aiohttp Exceptions)

As of version 0.3.0, you can register all of aiohttp's web exceptions. This is particularly useful when you want to ensure all possible HTTP errors are handled consistently.

Register the canned HTTP errors in the following way:

from aiohttp import web
from aiohttp_catcher import Catcher
from aiohttp_catcher.canned import AIOHTTP_SCENARIOS


async def main():
  # Add a catcher:
  catcher = Catcher()
  # Register aiohttp web errors:
  await catcher.add_scenario(*AIOHTTP_SCENARIOS)
  # Register your catcher as an aiohttp middleware:
  app = web.Application(middlewares=[catcher.middleware])
  web.run_app(app)

Once you've registered the canned errors, you can rely on aiohttp-catcher to convert errors raised by aiohttp to user-friendly error messages. For example, curling a non-existent route in your server will return the following error out of the box:

{"code": 404, "message": "HTTPNotFound"}

Callables and Awaitables

In some cases, you'd want the message returned by your server for some exceptions to call a custom function. This function can either be a synchronous function or an awaitable one. Your function should expect two arguments:

  1. The exception being raised by handlers.
  2. The request object - an instance of aiohttp.web.Request.
from aiohttp.web import Request
from aiohttp_catcher import catch, Catcher

# Can be a synchronous function:
async def write_message(exc: Exception, request: Request):
  return "Whoops"

catcher = Catcher()
await catcher.add_scenarios(
  catch(MyCustomException2).with_status_code(401).and_call(write_message),
  catch(MyCustomException2).with_status_code(403).and_call(lambda exc: str(exc))
)

Handle Several Exceptions Similarly

You can handle several exceptions in the same manner by adding them to the same scenario:

await catcher.add_scenario(
  catch(
    MyCustomException1,
    MyCustomException2,
    MyCustomException3
  ).with_status_code(418).and_return("User-friendly error message")
)

Scenarios as Dictionaries

You can register your scenarios as dictionaries as well:

await catcher.add_scenarios(
  {
    "exceptions": [ZeroDivisionError],
    "constant": "Zero division makes zero sense",
    "status_code": 400,
  },
  {
    "exceptions": [EntityNotFound],
    "stringify_exception": True,
    "status_code": 404,
  },
  {
    "exceptions": [IndexError],
    "func": lambda exc: f"Out of bound: {str(exc)}",
    "status_code": 418,
  },
)

Additional Fields

You can enrich your error responses with additional fields. You can provide additional fields using literal dictionaries or with callables. Your function should expect two arguments:

  1. The exception being raised by handlers.
  2. The request object - an instance of aiohttp.web.Request.
# Using a literal dictionary:
await catcher.add_scenario(
  catch(EntityNotFound).with_status_code(404).and_stringify().with_additional_fields({"error_code": "ENTITY_NOT_FOUND"})
)

# Using a function (or an async function):
await catcher.add_scenario(
  catch(EntityNotFound).with_status_code(404).and_stringify().with_additional_fields(
    lambda exc, req: {"error_code": e.error_code, "method": req.method}
  )
)

Default for Unhandled Exceptions

Exceptions that aren't registered with scenarios in your Catcher will default to 500, with a payload similar to the following:

{"code": 500, "message": "Internal server error"}

Development

Contributions are warmly welcomed. Before submitting your PR, please run the tests using the following Make target:

make ci

Alternatively, you can run each test separately:

Unit tests:

make test/py

Linting with pylint:

make pylint

Static security checks with bandit:

make pybandit

Project details


Download files

Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.

Source Distribution

aiohttp-catcher-0.3.0.tar.gz (7.6 kB view details)

Uploaded Source

Built Distribution

aiohttp_catcher-0.3.0-py3-none-any.whl (7.2 kB view details)

Uploaded Python 3

File details

Details for the file aiohttp-catcher-0.3.0.tar.gz.

File metadata

  • Download URL: aiohttp-catcher-0.3.0.tar.gz
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 7.6 kB
  • Tags: Source
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.0.0 CPython/3.8.12 Linux/5.11.0-1022-azure

File hashes

Hashes for aiohttp-catcher-0.3.0.tar.gz
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 7678932ae161f27adbe6ebba6d401fe7a9845c4ce71f16c746180ad982bdecdf
MD5 d5cffa260f5388baadf46a54d58a5aeb
BLAKE2b-256 71cfd09866e5c34320f8293f6517e8aca28315b6c97788d917aa9603c5f9e9ff

See more details on using hashes here.

File details

Details for the file aiohttp_catcher-0.3.0-py3-none-any.whl.

File metadata

  • Download URL: aiohttp_catcher-0.3.0-py3-none-any.whl
  • Upload date:
  • Size: 7.2 kB
  • Tags: Python 3
  • Uploaded using Trusted Publishing? No
  • Uploaded via: poetry/1.0.0 CPython/3.8.12 Linux/5.11.0-1022-azure

File hashes

Hashes for aiohttp_catcher-0.3.0-py3-none-any.whl
Algorithm Hash digest
SHA256 5a2e29413ff255c50e1b4743e308a48b19e129b08b1480280321dbabee391f68
MD5 af6dc11bbab566791f2a84f6dfe97a27
BLAKE2b-256 d421d041bdff426b6027f7a61f9f7d31ed7f2a281f0f31c799dfe90f81e295cf

See more details on using hashes here.

Supported by

AWS AWS Cloud computing and Security Sponsor Datadog Datadog Monitoring Fastly Fastly CDN Google Google Download Analytics Microsoft Microsoft PSF Sponsor Pingdom Pingdom Monitoring Sentry Sentry Error logging StatusPage StatusPage Status page