arrow-down
    1. Overview
    2. Core concepts
    3. Using docs
    4. Intro Videos
    5. Tutorials
    1. Intro
    2. GraphQL API
    3. Media API
    4. Extending the API
    5. Component API
    1. Content Studio
      1. Branches
    2. Layers
      1. Lifecycle
      2. Media
      3. Attachments
      4. X-data
        1. Page templates
        2. Fragments
      5. Variants
      6. Permissions
      7. Versions
    3. Sites
      1. Visual editor
    4. Publishing
    1. Introduction
      1. Controllers
      2. Globals
      3. Events
      4. HTTP Request
      5. HTTP Response
      6. Error handler
      7. Filters
      8. Templating
      9. Localization
      10. Websocket
      11. Tasks
      12. Main controller
      13. Java bridge
      1. Admin Lib
      2. Application Lib
      3. Auditlog Lib
      4. Authentication Lib
      5. Cluster Lib
      6. Common Lib
      7. Content Lib
      8. Context Lib
      9. Event Lib
      10. Export Lib
      11. Grid Lib
      12. I18N Lib
      13. IO Lib
      14. Mail Lib
      15. Node Lib
      16. Portal Lib
      17. Project Lib
      18. Repo Lib
      19. Scheduler Lib
      20. Schema Lib
      21. Tasks Lib
      22. Value Lib
      23. VHost Lib
      24. Websocket Lib
    2. Other Libraries
      1. CLI
      2. Sandboxes
      3. Code
      4. Building
      5. Configuration
      6. TypeScript
    3. Building APIs
      1. Mappings
      2. Components
      3. Processors
      4. Contributions
    4. Building Webapps
      1. ID providers
      2. Admin Apps
      3. Admin Widgets
    1. Architecture
      1. TODO
      1. Navigating
      2. Users
      3. Applications
      4. Data management
      5. System info
      6. Audit Logs
      7. Task management
      1. Portal
      2. IDprovider
      3. Management
      4. Statistics
      1. Nodes and repos
      2. Properties
      3. Indexing
      4. Branches
      5. Editors
      1. DSL Queries
      2. NoQL Queries
      3. Filters
      4. Aggregations
      5. Highlighting
      1. ID providers
      2. System ID provider
      3. Users and groups
      4. Roles
      1. Strategies
      2. Distributions
      3. Docker
      4. Kubernetes
      5. Systemd
      6. Vhosts
      7. Configuration
      8. Backup & restore
      9. Clustering
      10. Observability
      1. Notes
      2. Upgrade
      3. Upgrading Apps
        1. Asset service
        2. HTTP service
        3. Image service
    1. Best practice
        1. AttachmentUploader
        2. Checkbox
        3. Combobox
        4. ContentSelector
        5. ContentTypeFilter
        6. CustomSelector
        7. Date
        8. DateTime
        9. Double
        10. GeoPoint
        11. HtmlArea
        12. ImageSelector
        13. Long
        14. MediaSelector
        15. Radiobutton
        16. Tag
        17. TextArea
        18. TextLine
        19. Time
        1. Field set
        2. Item set
        3. Option set
      1. Mixins
      2. Localization
      3. Styles
    2. Content Types
    3. X-data
    4. Macros
      1. Pages
      2. Regions
      3. Part component
      4. Layout component
      5. Text component
      6. Component Filtering
      7. Component Indexing
    1. Marketplace
    2. Market guidelines

HTTP Error handler

Contents

The framework supports the definition of custom error handlers.

Introduction

Enonic XP ships with a default error handler that will produce a stack trace whenever an error occurs. Stack traces may not be the best way to greet your users. By implementing an error handler this will effectively replace the default error handler.

error.js

You may add an error handler to your application by creating the file src/main/resources/site/error/error.js.

Starting from v7.2, you may add a generic error handler by creating the file src/main/resources/error/error.js. This error handled will also handle errors that are not site related (admin tools, widgets, …​).

When an error occurs in the request processing pipeline, the XP framework will look for an error handler to execute. For sites specifically, it will (iteratively, in order) go through all applications added to the site, and attempt to execute the handler functions until an HTTP response object is returned. This essentially means that developers may choose not to handle particular errors explicitly. If the error is not properly handled, it will fallback to the default XP error handler.

Should an error occur inside an error handler, the framework will take over and fallback to the default error handler.

Rather than exporting HTTP methods like controllers and filters, the error handler exports "error code handlers".

For instance, if the current error is a 404, the framework will first attempt to execute the export handle404. If not found, it will attempt to execute the fallback export handleError.

Basic error handler example
exports.handle404 = function (err) {
  return {
    contentType: 'text/html',
    body: `
<html>
  <body>
      <h1>No page for you!</h1>
  </body>
</html>
`
  }
};

exports.handleError = function (err) {
  return {
    contentType: 'text/html',
    body: `
<html>
  <body>
      <h1>Error code "${err.status}" </h1>
  </body>
</html>
`
  }
};

Error handlers should be implemented to execute as fast as possible, and preferably without additional API requests, i.e. fetching content. The reason for this is that the error handler itself may then recursively fail. Also, slow error pages may impact the performance of a node negatively if errors occur frequently. You can choose different handling based on the type of error. A 404 might for instance be handled differently than other errors.

The Error object

The input parameter for handler functions is an error JSON object. The object contains the status code, error message, Exception object, and the original HTTP request object:

Sample error object
{
    "status": 404,
    "message": "Some error message",
    "exception": "<the actual exception object in Java>",
    "request": "<original request JSON>"
}

Contents

Contents

AI-powered search

Juke AI