| Exceptions |
| ########## |
| |
| Built-in exception translation |
| ============================== |
| |
| When C++ code invoked from Python throws an ``std::exception``, it is |
| automatically converted into a Python ``Exception``. pybind11 defines multiple |
| special exception classes that will map to different types of Python |
| exceptions: |
| |
| .. tabularcolumns:: |p{0.5\textwidth}|p{0.45\textwidth}| |
| |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | C++ exception type | Python exception type | |
| +======================================+==============================+ |
| | :class:`std::exception` | ``RuntimeError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`std::bad_alloc` | ``MemoryError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`std::domain_error` | ``ValueError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`std::invalid_argument` | ``ValueError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`std::length_error` | ``ValueError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`std::out_of_range` | ``ValueError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`std::range_error` | ``ValueError`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`pybind11::stop_iteration` | ``StopIteration`` (used to | |
| | | implement custom iterators) | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`pybind11::index_error` | ``IndexError`` (used to | |
| | | indicate out of bounds | |
| | | accesses in ``__getitem__``, | |
| | | ``__setitem__``, etc.) | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`pybind11::value_error` | ``ValueError`` (used to | |
| | | indicate wrong value passed | |
| | | in ``container.remove(...)`` | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`pybind11::key_error` | ``KeyError`` (used to | |
| | | indicate out of bounds | |
| | | accesses in ``__getitem__``, | |
| | | ``__setitem__`` in dict-like | |
| | | objects, etc.) | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| | :class:`pybind11::error_already_set` | Indicates that the Python | |
| | | exception flag has already | |
| | | been initialized | |
| +--------------------------------------+------------------------------+ |
| |
| When a Python function invoked from C++ throws an exception, it is converted |
| into a C++ exception of type :class:`error_already_set` whose string payload |
| contains a textual summary. |
| |
| There is also a special exception :class:`cast_error` that is thrown by |
| :func:`handle::call` when the input arguments cannot be converted to Python |
| objects. |
| |
| Registering custom translators |
| ============================== |
| |
| If the default exception conversion policy described above is insufficient, |
| pybind11 also provides support for registering custom exception translators. |
| To register a simple exception conversion that translates a C++ exception into |
| a new Python exception using the C++ exception's ``what()`` method, a helper |
| function is available: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cpp |
| |
| py::register_exception<CppExp>(module, "PyExp"); |
| |
| This call creates a Python exception class with the name ``PyExp`` in the given |
| module and automatically converts any encountered exceptions of type ``CppExp`` |
| into Python exceptions of type ``PyExp``. |
| |
| When more advanced exception translation is needed, the function |
| ``py::register_exception_translator(translator)`` can be used to register |
| functions that can translate arbitrary exception types (and which may include |
| additional logic to do so). The function takes a stateless callable (e.g. a |
| function pointer or a lambda function without captured variables) with the call |
| signature ``void(std::exception_ptr)``. |
| |
| When a C++ exception is thrown, the registered exception translators are tried |
| in reverse order of registration (i.e. the last registered translator gets the |
| first shot at handling the exception). |
| |
| Inside the translator, ``std::rethrow_exception`` should be used within |
| a try block to re-throw the exception. One or more catch clauses to catch |
| the appropriate exceptions should then be used with each clause using |
| ``PyErr_SetString`` to set a Python exception or ``ex(string)`` to set |
| the python exception to a custom exception type (see below). |
| |
| To declare a custom Python exception type, declare a ``py::exception`` variable |
| and use this in the associated exception translator (note: it is often useful |
| to make this a static declaration when using it inside a lambda expression |
| without requiring capturing). |
| |
| |
| The following example demonstrates this for a hypothetical exception classes |
| ``MyCustomException`` and ``OtherException``: the first is translated to a |
| custom python exception ``MyCustomError``, while the second is translated to a |
| standard python RuntimeError: |
| |
| .. code-block:: cpp |
| |
| static py::exception<MyCustomException> exc(m, "MyCustomError"); |
| py::register_exception_translator([](std::exception_ptr p) { |
| try { |
| if (p) std::rethrow_exception(p); |
| } catch (const MyCustomException &e) { |
| exc(e.what()); |
| } catch (const OtherException &e) { |
| PyErr_SetString(PyExc_RuntimeError, e.what()); |
| } |
| }); |
| |
| Multiple exceptions can be handled by a single translator, as shown in the |
| example above. If the exception is not caught by the current translator, the |
| previously registered one gets a chance. |
| |
| If none of the registered exception translators is able to handle the |
| exception, it is handled by the default converter as described in the previous |
| section. |
| |
| .. seealso:: |
| |
| The file :file:`tests/test_exceptions.cpp` contains examples |
| of various custom exception translators and custom exception types. |
| |
| .. note:: |
| |
| You must call either ``PyErr_SetString`` or a custom exception's call |
| operator (``exc(string)``) for every exception caught in a custom exception |
| translator. Failure to do so will cause Python to crash with ``SystemError: |
| error return without exception set``. |
| |
| Exceptions that you do not plan to handle should simply not be caught, or |
| may be explicity (re-)thrown to delegate it to the other, |
| previously-declared existing exception translators. |