The intl extension has particular conventions regarding error reporting. These conventions are enumerated in this document.
The global error code can be obtained in userland with intl_get_error_code()
.
This is a U_*
error code defined by ICU, but it does not have necessarily to
be returned obtained after a call to an ICU function. That is to say, the
internal PHP wrapper functions can set these error codes when appropriate. For
instance, in response to bad arguments (e.g. zend_parse_parameters()
failure),
the PHP wrapper function should set the global error code to
U_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT_ERROR
).
The error code (an integer) can be converter to the corresponding enum name
string in userland with intl_error_name()
.
The associated message can be obtained with intl_get_error_message()
. This is
a message set by the PHP wrapping code, not by ICU. The message should include
the name of the function that failed in order to make debugging easier (though
if you activate warnings with intl.error_level
or exceptions with
intl.use_exceptions
you get more fine-grained information about where the
error occurred).
The internal PHP code can set the global last error with:
void intl_error_set_code(intl_error* err, UErrorCode err_code);
void intl_error_set_custom_msg(intl_error* err, char* msg, int copyMsg);
void intl_error_set(intl_error* err, UErrorCode code, char* msg, int copyMsg);
and by passing NULL
as the first parameter. The last function is a combination
of the first two. If the message is not a static buffer, copyMsg
should be 1.
This makes the message string be copied and freed when no longer needed. There's
no way to pass ownership of the string without it being copied.
Objects store an intl_error structed in their private data. For instance:
typedef struct {
zend_object zo;
intl_error err;
Calendar* ucal;
} Calendar_object;
The global error and the object error can be SIMULTANEOUSLY set with these functions:
void intl_errors_set_custom_msg(intl_error* err, char* msg, int copyMsg);
void intl_errors_set_code(intl_error* err, UErrorCode err_code);
void intl_errors_set(intl_error* err, UErrorCode code, char* msg, int copyMsg);
by passing a pointer to the object's intl_error
structed as the first parameter.
Node the extra s
in the functions' names (errors
, not error
).
Static methods should only set the global error.
::getErrorCode()
and
getErrorMessage()
methods.These methods are used to retrieve the error codes stored in the object's
private intl_error
structured and mirror the global intl_get_error_code()
and intl_get_error_message()
.
FALSE
on error (even argument
parsing errors), not NULL
. Constructors and factory methods are the
exception; these should return NULL
, not FALSE
.Not that constructors in Intl generally (always?) don't throws exceptions. They
instead destroy the object to that the result of new IntlClass()
can be
NULL
. This may be surprising.
Errors should be lost after a function call. This is different from the way ICU operates, where functions return immediately if an error is set.
Error resetting can be done with:
void intl_error_reset(NULL); /* reset global error */
void intl_errors_reset(intl_error* err); /* reset global and object error */
In practice, intl_errors_reset()
is not used because most classes have also
plain functions mapped to the same internal functions as their instance methods.
Fetching of the object is done with zend_parse_method_parameters()
instead of
directly using getThis()
. Therefore, no reference to object is obtained until
the arguments are fully parsed. Without a reference to the object, there's no
way to reset the object's internal error code. Instead, resetting of the
object's internal error code is done upon fetching the object from its zval.
Example:
U_CFUNC PHP_FUNCTION(breakiter_set_text)
{
/* ... variable declarations ... */
BREAKITER_METHOD_INIT_VARS; /* macro also resets global error */
object = getThis();
if (zend_parse_parameters(ZEND_NUM_ARGS(), "s",
&text, &text_len) == FAILURE) {
intl_error_set(NULL, U_ILLEGAL_ARGUMENT_ERROR,
"breakiter_set_text: bad arguments", 0);
RETURN_THROWS();
}
/* ... */
BREAKITER_METHOD_FETCH_OBJECT; /* macro also resets object's error */
/* ... */
}
Implementations of ::getErrorCode()
and ::getErrorMessage()
should not reset
the object's error code.