Module snafu::guide::upgrading[][src]

Expand description

Upgrading from previous releases

Version 0.6 → 0.7

Upgrading should be a tedious but straightforward process. To assist upgrading your code, you can use the snafu-upgrade-assistant, which attempts to automatically update breaking changes.

Context selector names have changed

Previously, context selector names for enum errors exactly matched their corresponding enum variant names. This caused a large amount of confusion for people new to SNAFU. It was also inconsistent with context selector names for struct errors.

Now, context selectors for both enum and struct errors use the Snafu suffix. Any existing Error suffix is removed before Snafu is added.

Before
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
struct StructError;

#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum EnumError {
    VariantError,
}

ensure!(false, StructContext);
ensure!(false, VariantError);
After
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
struct StructError;

#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum EnumError {
    VariantError,
}

ensure!(false, StructSnafu);
ensure!(false, VariantSnafu);

with_context takes an argument

ResultExt::with_context, TryFutureExt::with_context, and TryStreamExt::with_context now pass the error into the closure.

Before
some_result.with_context(|| ContextSelector);
After
some_result.with_context(|_| ContextSelector);

String attribute parsing is no longer supported

Previously, SNAFU allowed an alternate attribute specification format to support versions of Rust before 1.34. Since the minimum version has been increased, this format is no longer required. Use the parenthesized format instead:

Before
#[snafu(display = r#"("a format string with arguments: {}", info)"#)]
After
#[snafu(display("a format string with arguments: {}", info))]

Minimum supported version of Rust is now 1.34

If you are writing a library, you will need to increase your minimum supported version of Rust to 1.34 or better. If you are writing an application, you should be able to upgrade your installed compiler by the same mechanism that you installed it.

Version 0.5 → 0.6

Minimum supported version of Rust is now 1.31

If you are writing a library, you will need to increase your minimum supported version of Rust to 1.31 or better. If you are writing an application, you should be able to upgrade your installed compiler by the same mechanism that you installed it.

Backtraces

The Backtrace type is now always available, so it is encouraged to make liberal use of it in your errors. If you are writing an application that displays backtraces, make sure to enable the backtrace feature flag so that backtraces are populated when they are created.

Implementations of Backtrace::default and Backtrace::new have been removed and replaced with GenerateBacktrace::generate.

The backtrace-crate feature flag has been renamed to backtraces-impl-backtrace-crate. The backtrace returned by ErrorCompat::backtrace is now the backtrace::Backtrace type when this flag is enabled, so the implementation of AsRef has been removed.

Futures

Support for the standard library features has been stabilized, so the feature flag has been renamed from unstable-futures to futures.

Version 0.4 → 0.5

backtrace(delegate) replaced with backtrace

Previously, if you wanted to delegate backtrace creation to another error, you would specify #[snafu(backtrace(delegate))] on the source field that references the other error.

Now, you specify the simpler #[snafu(backtrace)]. Since source fields must be error types, and backtrace fields must be Backtrace types, this is unambiguous and simplifies the API.

Before
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum Error {
    MyVariant {
        #[snafu(backtrace(delegate))]
        source: OtherError,
    },
}
After
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum Error {
    MyVariant {
        #[snafu(backtrace)]
        source: OtherError,
    },
}

source(from) implies source

Previously, if you had wanted to treat a field that wasn’t named “source” as a source field, and you wanted to transform the field from another type, you had to specify both #[snafu(source)] and #[snafu(source(from(...)))].

Now, #[snafu(source(from(...)))] implies #[snafu(source)] – it automatically treats the field as a source field regardless of its name, so you can remove the #[snafu(source)] attribute.

Before
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum Error {
    CauseIsAnError {
        #[snafu(source)]
        #[snafu(source(from(Error, Box::new)))]
        cause: Box<Error>,
    },
}
After
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum Error {
    CauseIsAnError {
        #[snafu(source(from(Error, Box::new)))]
        cause: Box<Error>,
    },
}

New errors for attribute misuse and duplication

Previously, SNAFU would ignore #[snafu(...)] attributes that were used in invalid locations. If attributes were duplicated, either the first or last would apply (depending on the attribute) and the rest would be ignored.

One example is specifying #[snafu(source(from(...)))] on an enum variant instead of the source field in that variant:

#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum Error {
    // This used to be ignored, and will now cause an error:
    #[snafu(source(from(Error, Box::new)))]
    MyVariant {
        source: Box<Error>,
    },
}

Now, compiler errors will be emitted that point to any misused or duplicated attributes.

Version 0.3 → 0.4

Context vs. IntoError

The Context type and related From implementations have been removed in favor of the IntoError trait. If you were making use of this for custom conversions, you will need to update your trait bounds:

Before
fn example<C, E>(context: C) -> MyType<E>
where
    snafu::Context<SomeError, C>: Into<E>;
After
fn example<C, E>(context: C) -> MyType<E>
where
    C: snafu::IntoError<E, Source = SomeError>,
    E: std::error::Error + snafu::ErrorCompat;

Borrow<std::error::Error>

SNAFU no longer generates Borrow<std::error::Error> implementations for SNAFU error types (sorry for the whiplash if you were affected by this when upgrading to 0.3).

Version 0.2 → 0.3

Minimal changes should be required: if you previously implemented Borrow<std::error::Error> for a SNAFU error type, you should remove that implementation and allow SNAFU to implement it for you.

Version 0.1 → 0.2

Support for the snafu::display attribute was removed as this type of attribute was never intended to be supported. Since this required a SemVer-incompatible version, the attribute format has also been updated and normalized.

  1. Attributes have been renamed

    • snafu_display and snafu::display became snafu(display).
    • snafu_visibility became snafu(visibility)
    • snafu_backtrace became snafu(backtrace)
  2. Support for snafu_display with individually-quoted format arguments was removed. Migrate to either the “clean” or “all one string” styles, depending on what version of Rust you are targeting.

Before

#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum DisplayUpdate {
    #[snafu::display("Format and {}", argument)]
    CleanStyle { argument: i32 },

    #[snafu_display("Format and {}", "argument")]
    QuotedArgumentStyle { argument: i32 },

    #[snafu_display = r#"("Format and {}", argument)"#]
    AllOneStringStyle { argument: i32 },
}
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum VisibilityUpdate {
    #[snafu_visibility(pub(crate))]
    CleanStyle,

    #[snafu_visibility = "pub(crate)"]
    AllOneStringStyle,
}

After

#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum DisplayUpdate {
    #[snafu(display("Format and {}", argument))]
    CleanStyle { argument: i32 },

    #[snafu(display = r#"("Format and {}", argument)"#)]
    QuotedArgumentStyle { argument: i32 },

    #[snafu(display = r#"("Format and {}", argument)"#)]
    AllOneStringStyle { argument: i32 },
}
#[derive(Debug, Snafu)]
enum VisibilityUpdate {
    #[snafu(visibility(pub(crate)))]
    CleanStyle,

    #[snafu(visibility = "pub(crate)")]
    AllOneStringStyle,
}