Files
addr2line
ahash
aho_corasick
arrayref
arrayvec
artemis_asset
artemis_core
artemis_erc20_app
artemis_eth_app
artemis_ethereum
backtrace
base58
bip39
bitmask
bitvec
blake2_rfc
block_buffer
block_padding
byte_slice_cast
byte_tools
byteorder
cfg_if
clear_on_drop
const_random
const_random_macro
constant_time_eq
crunchy
crypto_mac
curve25519_dalek
derive_more
digest
ed25519_dalek
either
environmental
ethabi_decode
ethbloom
ethereum_types
failure
failure_derive
fake_simd
fixed_hash
frame_metadata
frame_support
frame_support_procedural
frame_support_procedural_tools
frame_support_procedural_tools_derive
frame_system
futures
futures_channel
futures_core
futures_executor
futures_io
futures_macro
futures_sink
futures_task
futures_util
async_await
future
io
lock
sink
stream
task
generic_array
getrandom
gimli
hash256_std_hasher
hash_db
hashbrown
hex
hex_literal
hmac
hmac_drbg
impl_codec
impl_rlp
impl_serde
impl_trait_for_tuples
inflector
cases
camelcase
case
classcase
kebabcase
pascalcase
screamingsnakecase
sentencecase
snakecase
tablecase
titlecase
traincase
numbers
deordinalize
ordinalize
string
constants
deconstantize
demodulize
pluralize
singularize
suffix
foreignkey
integer_sqrt
itertools
keccak
lazy_static
libc
lock_api
log
memchr
memory_db
memory_units
merlin
nodrop
num_bigint
num_cpus
num_integer
num_rational
num_traits
object
once_cell
opaque_debug
pallet_bridge
pallet_verifier
parity_scale_codec
parity_scale_codec_derive
parity_util_mem
parity_util_mem_derive
parity_wasm
parking_lot
parking_lot_core
paste
paste_impl
pbkdf2
pin_project
pin_project_internal
pin_utils
ppv_lite86
primitive_types
proc_macro2
proc_macro_crate
proc_macro_hack
proc_macro_nested
quote
radium
rand
rand_chacha
rand_core
rand_pcg
ref_cast
ref_cast_impl
regex
regex_syntax
rental
rental_impl
rlp
rustc_demangle
rustc_hash
rustc_hex
schnorrkel
scopeguard
secp256k1
serde
serde_derive
sha2
slab
smallvec
sp_application_crypto
sp_arithmetic
sp_core
sp_debug_derive
sp_externalities
sp_inherents
sp_io
sp_panic_handler
sp_runtime
sp_runtime_interface
sp_runtime_interface_proc_macro
sp_state_machine
sp_std
sp_storage
sp_tracing
sp_trie
sp_version
sp_wasm_interface
stable_deref_trait
static_assertions
substrate_bip39
subtle
syn
synstructure
thread_local
tiny_keccak
toml
tracing
tracing_attributes
tracing_core
trie_db
trie_root
twox_hash
typenum
uint
unicode_normalization
unicode_xid
wasmi
wasmi_validation
zeroize
zeroize_derive
  1
  2
  3
  4
  5
  6
  7
  8
  9
 10
 11
 12
 13
 14
 15
 16
 17
 18
 19
 20
 21
 22
 23
 24
 25
 26
 27
 28
 29
 30
 31
 32
 33
 34
 35
 36
 37
 38
 39
 40
 41
 42
 43
 44
 45
 46
 47
 48
 49
 50
 51
 52
 53
 54
 55
 56
 57
 58
 59
 60
 61
 62
 63
 64
 65
 66
 67
 68
 69
 70
 71
 72
 73
 74
 75
 76
 77
 78
 79
 80
 81
 82
 83
 84
 85
 86
 87
 88
 89
 90
 91
 92
 93
 94
 95
 96
 97
 98
 99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
//! An experimental new error-handling library. Guide-style introduction
//! is available [here](https://boats.gitlab.io/failure/).
//!
//! The primary items exported by this library are:
//!
//! - `Fail`: a new trait for custom error types in Rust.
//! - `Error`: a wrapper around `Fail` types to make it easy to coalesce them
//!   at higher levels.
//!
//! As a general rule, library authors should create their own error types and
//! implement `Fail` for them, whereas application authors should primarily
//! deal with the `Error` type. There are exceptions to this rule, though, in
//! both directions, and users should do whatever seems most appropriate to
//! their situation.
//!
//! ## Backtraces
//!
//! Backtraces are disabled by default. To turn backtraces on, enable
//! the `backtrace` Cargo feature and set the `RUST_BACKTRACE` environment
//! variable to a non-zero value (this also enables backtraces for panics).
//! Use the `RUST_FAILURE_BACKTRACE` variable to enable or disable backtraces
//! for `failure` specifically.
#![cfg_attr(not(feature = "std"), no_std)]
#![deny(missing_docs)]
#![deny(warnings)]
#![cfg_attr(feature = "small-error", feature(extern_types, allocator_api))]

macro_rules! with_std { ($($i:item)*) => ($(#[cfg(feature = "std")]$i)*) }
macro_rules! without_std { ($($i:item)*) => ($(#[cfg(not(feature = "std"))]$i)*) }

// Re-export libcore using an alias so that the macros can work without
// requiring `extern crate core` downstream.
#[doc(hidden)]
pub extern crate core as _core;

mod as_fail;
mod backtrace;
#[cfg(feature = "std")]
mod box_std;
mod compat;
mod context;
mod result_ext;

use core::any::TypeId;
use core::fmt::{Debug, Display};

pub use as_fail::AsFail;
pub use backtrace::Backtrace;
pub use compat::Compat;
pub use context::Context;
pub use result_ext::ResultExt;

#[cfg(feature = "failure_derive")]
#[allow(unused_imports)]
#[macro_use]
extern crate failure_derive;

#[cfg(feature = "failure_derive")]
#[doc(hidden)]
pub use failure_derive::*;

with_std! {
    extern crate core;

    mod sync_failure;
    pub use sync_failure::SyncFailure;

    mod error;

    use std::error::Error as StdError;

    pub use error::Error;

    /// A common result with an `Error`.
    pub type Fallible<T> = Result<T, Error>;

    mod macros;
    mod error_message;
    pub use error_message::err_msg;
}

/// The `Fail` trait.
///
/// Implementors of this trait are called 'failures'.
///
/// All error types should implement `Fail`, which provides a baseline of
/// functionality that they all share.
///
/// `Fail` has no required methods, but it does require that your type
/// implement several other traits:
///
/// - `Display`: to print a user-friendly representation of the error.
/// - `Debug`: to print a verbose, developer-focused representation of the
///   error.
/// - `Send + Sync`: Your error type is required to be safe to transfer to and
///   reference from another thread
///
/// Additionally, all failures must be `'static`. This enables downcasting.
///
/// `Fail` provides several methods with default implementations. Two of these
/// may be appropriate to override depending on the definition of your
/// particular failure: the `cause` and `backtrace` methods.
///
/// The `failure_derive` crate provides a way to derive the `Fail` trait for
/// your type. Additionally, all types that already implement
/// `std::error::Error`, and are also `Send`, `Sync`, and `'static`, implement
/// `Fail` by a blanket impl.
pub trait Fail: Display + Debug + Send + Sync + 'static {
    /// Returns the "name" of the error.
    /// 
    /// This is typically the type name. Not all errors will implement
    /// this. This method is expected to be most useful in situations
    /// where errors need to be reported to external instrumentation systems 
    /// such as crash reporters.
    fn name(&self) -> Option<&str> {
        None
    }

    /// Returns a reference to the underlying cause of this failure, if it
    /// is an error that wraps other errors.
    ///
    /// Returns `None` if this failure does not have another error as its
    /// underlying cause. By default, this returns `None`.
    ///
    /// This should **never** return a reference to `self`, but only return
    /// `Some` when it can return a **different** failure. Users may loop
    /// over the cause chain, and returning `self` would result in an infinite
    /// loop.
    fn cause(&self) -> Option<&dyn Fail> {
        None
    }

    /// Returns a reference to the `Backtrace` carried by this failure, if it
    /// carries one.
    ///
    /// Returns `None` if this failure does not carry a backtrace. By
    /// default, this returns `None`.
    fn backtrace(&self) -> Option<&Backtrace> {
        None
    }

    /// Provides context for this failure.
    ///
    /// This can provide additional information about this error, appropriate
    /// to the semantics of the current layer. That is, if you have a
    /// lower-level error, such as an IO error, you can provide additional context
    /// about what that error means in the context of your function. This
    /// gives users of this function more information about what has gone
    /// wrong.
    ///
    /// This takes any type that implements `Display`, as well as
    /// `Send`/`Sync`/`'static`. In practice, this means it can take a `String`
    /// or a string literal, or another failure, or some other custom context-carrying
    /// type.
    fn context<D>(self, context: D) -> Context<D>
    where
        D: Display + Send + Sync + 'static,
        Self: Sized,
    {
        Context::with_err(context, self)
    }

    /// Wraps this failure in a compatibility wrapper that implements
    /// `std::error::Error`.
    ///
    /// This allows failures  to be compatible with older crates that
    /// expect types that implement the `Error` trait from `std::error`.
    fn compat(self) -> Compat<Self>
    where
        Self: Sized,
    {
        Compat { error: self }
    }

    #[doc(hidden)]
    #[deprecated(since = "0.1.2", note = "please use the 'iter_chain()' method instead")]
    fn causes(&self) -> Causes
    where
        Self: Sized,
    {
        Causes { fail: Some(self) }
    }

    #[doc(hidden)]
    #[deprecated(
        since = "0.1.2",
        note = "please use the 'find_root_cause()' method instead"
    )]
    fn root_cause(&self) -> &dyn Fail
    where
        Self: Sized,
    {
        find_root_cause(self)
    }

    #[doc(hidden)]
    fn __private_get_type_id__(&self) -> TypeId {
        TypeId::of::<Self>()
    }
}

impl dyn Fail {
    /// Attempts to downcast this failure to a concrete type by reference.
    ///
    /// If the underlying error is not of type `T`, this will return `None`.
    pub fn downcast_ref<T: Fail>(&self) -> Option<&T> {
        if self.__private_get_type_id__() == TypeId::of::<T>() {
            unsafe { Some(&*(self as *const dyn Fail as *const T)) }
        } else {
            None
        }
    }

    /// Attempts to downcast this failure to a concrete type by mutable
    /// reference.
    ///
    /// If the underlying error is not of type `T`, this will return `None`.
    pub fn downcast_mut<T: Fail>(&mut self) -> Option<&mut T> {
        if self.__private_get_type_id__() == TypeId::of::<T>() {
            unsafe { Some(&mut *(self as *mut dyn Fail as *mut T)) }
        } else {
            None
        }
    }

    /// Returns the "root cause" of this `Fail` - the last value in the
    /// cause chain which does not return an underlying `cause`.
    ///
    /// If this type does not have a cause, `self` is returned, because
    /// it is its own root cause.
    ///
    /// This is equivalent to iterating over `iter_causes()` and taking
    /// the last item.
    pub fn find_root_cause(&self) -> &dyn Fail {
        find_root_cause(self)
    }

    /// Returns a iterator over the causes of this `Fail` with the cause
    /// of this fail as the first item and the `root_cause` as the final item.
    ///
    /// Use `iter_chain` to also include the fail itself.
    pub fn iter_causes(&self) -> Causes {
        Causes { fail: self.cause() }
    }

    /// Returns a iterator over all fails up the chain from the current
    /// as the first item up to the `root_cause` as the final item.
    ///
    /// This means that the chain also includes the fail itself which
    /// means that it does *not* start with `cause`.  To skip the outermost
    /// fail use `iter_causes` instead.
    pub fn iter_chain(&self) -> Causes {
        Causes { fail: Some(self) }
    }

    /// Deprecated alias to `find_root_cause`.
    #[deprecated(
        since = "0.1.2",
        note = "please use the 'find_root_cause()' method instead"
    )]
    pub fn root_cause(&self) -> &dyn Fail {
        find_root_cause(self)
    }

    /// Deprecated alias to `iter_chain`.
    #[deprecated(since = "0.1.2", note = "please use the 'iter_chain()' method instead")]
    pub fn causes(&self) -> Causes {
        Causes { fail: Some(self) }
    }
}

#[cfg(feature = "std")]
impl<E: StdError + Send + Sync + 'static> Fail for E {}

#[cfg(feature = "std")]
impl Fail for Box<dyn Fail> {
    fn cause(&self) -> Option<&dyn Fail> {
        (**self).cause()
    }

    fn backtrace(&self) -> Option<&Backtrace> {
        (**self).backtrace()
    }
}

/// A iterator over the causes of a `Fail`
pub struct Causes<'f> {
    fail: Option<&'f dyn Fail>,
}

impl<'f> Iterator for Causes<'f> {
    type Item = &'f dyn Fail;
    fn next(&mut self) -> Option<&'f dyn Fail> {
        self.fail.map(|fail| {
            self.fail = fail.cause();
            fail
        })
    }
}

fn find_root_cause(mut fail: &dyn Fail) -> &dyn Fail {
    while let Some(cause) = fail.cause() {
        fail = cause;
    }

    fail
}