935
votes

Ryan Davis’s Ruby QuickRef says (without explanation):

Don’t rescue Exception. EVER. or I will stab you.

Why not? What’s the right thing to do?

6
Then you probably could write your own? :)Sergio Tulentsev
I'm very uncomfortable with the call to violence here. It's just programming.Darth Egregious
Take a look at this article in Ruby Exception with a nice Ruby Exception Hierarchy.Atul Khanduri
Because Ryan Davis will stab you. So kids. Never rescue Exceptions.Mugen
@DarthEgregious I can't really tell if you're joking or not. But I think it's hilarious. (And it's obviously not a serious threat). Now every time I think about catching Exception, I consider if it' worth being stabbed by some random guy on the Internet.Steve Sether

6 Answers

1412
votes

TL;DR: Use StandardError instead for general exception catching. When the original exception is re-raised (e.g. when rescuing to log the exception only), rescuing Exception is probably okay.


Exception is the root of Ruby's exception hierarchy, so when you rescue Exception you rescue from everything, including subclasses such as SyntaxError, LoadError, and Interrupt.

Rescuing Interrupt prevents the user from using CTRLC to exit the program.

Rescuing SignalException prevents the program from responding correctly to signals. It will be unkillable except by kill -9.

Rescuing SyntaxError means that evals that fail will do so silently.

All of these can be shown by running this program, and trying to CTRLC or kill it:

loop do
  begin
    sleep 1
    eval "djsakru3924r9eiuorwju3498 += 5u84fior8u8t4ruyf8ihiure"
  rescue Exception
    puts "I refuse to fail or be stopped!"
  end
end

Rescuing from Exception isn't even the default. Doing

begin
  # iceberg!
rescue
  # lifeboats
end

does not rescue from Exception, it rescues from StandardError. You should generally specify something more specific than the default StandardError, but rescuing from Exception broadens the scope rather than narrowing it, and can have catastrophic results and make bug-hunting extremely difficult.


If you have a situation where you do want to rescue from StandardError and you need a variable with the exception, you can use this form:

begin
  # iceberg!
rescue => e
  # lifeboats
end

which is equivalent to:

begin
  # iceberg!
rescue StandardError => e
  # lifeboats
end

One of the few common cases where it’s sane to rescue from Exception is for logging/reporting purposes, in which case you should immediately re-raise the exception:

begin
  # iceberg?
rescue Exception => e
  # do some logging
  raise # not enough lifeboats ;)
end
85
votes

The real rule is: Don't throw away exceptions. The objectivity of the author of your quote is questionable, as evidenced by the fact that it ends with

or I will stab you

Of course, be aware that signals (by default) throw exceptions, and normally long-running processes are terminated through a signal, so catching Exception and not terminating on signal exceptions will make your program very hard to stop. So don't do this:

#! /usr/bin/ruby

while true do
  begin
    line = STDIN.gets
    # heavy processing
  rescue Exception => e
    puts "caught exception #{e}! ohnoes!"
  end
end

No, really, don't do it. Don't even run that to see if it works.

However, say you have a threaded server and you want all exceptions to not:

  1. be ignored (the default)
  2. stop the server (which happens if you say thread.abort_on_exception = true).

Then this is perfectly acceptable in your connection handling thread:

begin
  # do stuff
rescue Exception => e
  myLogger.error("uncaught #{e} exception while handling connection: #{e.message}")
    myLogger.error("Stack trace: #{backtrace.map {|l| "  #{l}\n"}.join}")
end

The above works out to a variation of Ruby's default exception handler, with the advantage that it doesn't also kill your program. Rails does this in its request handler.

Signal exceptions are raised in the main thread. Background threads won't get them, so there is no point in trying to catch them there.

This is particularly useful in a production environment, where you do not want your program to simply stop whenever something goes wrong. Then you can take the stack dumps in your logs and add to your code to deal with specific exception further down the call chain and in a more graceful manner.

Note also that there is another Ruby idiom which has much the same effect:

a = do_something rescue "something else"

In this line, if do_something raises an exception, it is caught by Ruby, thrown away, and a is assigned "something else".

Generally, don't do that, except in special cases where you know you don't need to worry. One example:

debugger rescue nil

The debugger function is a rather nice way to set a breakpoint in your code, but if running outside a debugger, and Rails, it raises an exception. Now theoretically you shouldn't be leaving debug code lying around in your program (pff! nobody does that!) but you might want to keep it there for a while for some reason, but not continually run your debugger.

Note:

  1. If you've run someone else's program that catches signal exceptions and ignores them, (say the code above) then:

    • in Linux, in a shell, type pgrep ruby, or ps | grep ruby, look for your offending program's PID, and then run kill -9 <PID>.
    • in Windows, use the Task Manager (CTRL-SHIFT-ESC), go to the "processes" tab, find your process, right click it and select "End process".
  2. If you are working with someone else's program which is, for whatever reason, peppered with these ignore-exception blocks, then putting this at the top of the mainline is one possible cop-out:

    %W/INT QUIT TERM/.each { |sig| trap sig,"SYSTEM_DEFAULT" }
    

    This causes the program to respond to the normal termination signals by immediately terminating, bypassing exception handlers, with no cleanup. So it could cause data loss or similar. Be careful!

  3. If you need to do this:

    begin
      do_something
    rescue Exception => e
      critical_cleanup
      raise
    end
    

    you can actually do this:

    begin
      do_something
    ensure
      critical_cleanup
    end
    

    In the second case, critical cleanup will be called every time, whether or not an exception is thrown.

73
votes

TL;DR

Don't rescue Exception => e (and not re-raise the exception) - or you might drive off a bridge.


Let's say you are in a car (running Ruby). You recently installed a new steering wheel with the over-the-air upgrade system (which uses eval), but you didn't know one of the programmers messed up on syntax.

You are on a bridge, and realize you are going a bit towards the railing, so you turn left.

def turn_left
  self.turn left:
end

oops! That's probably Not Good™, luckily, Ruby raises a SyntaxError.

The car should stop immediately - right?

Nope.

begin
  #...
  eval self.steering_wheel
  #...
rescue Exception => e
  self.beep
  self.log "Caught #{e}.", :warn
  self.log "Logged Error - Continuing Process.", :info
end

beep beep

Warning: Caught SyntaxError Exception.

Info: Logged Error - Continuing Process.

You notice something is wrong, and you slam on the emergency breaks (^C: Interrupt)

beep beep

Warning: Caught Interrupt Exception.

Info: Logged Error - Continuing Process.

Yeah - that didn't help much. You're pretty close to the rail, so you put the car in park (killing: SignalException).

beep beep

Warning: Caught SignalException Exception.

Info: Logged Error - Continuing Process.

At the last second, you pull out the keys (kill -9), and the car stops, you slam forward into the steering wheel (the airbag can't inflate because you didn't gracefully stop the program - you terminated it), and the computer in the back of your car slams into the seat in front of it. A half-full can of Coke spills over the papers. The groceries in the back are crushed, and most are covered in egg yolk and milk. The car needs serious repair and cleaning. (Data Loss)

Hopefully you have insurance (Backups). Oh yeah - because the airbag didn't inflate, you're probably hurt (getting fired, etc).


But wait! There's more reasons why you might want to use rescue Exception => e!

Let's say you're that car, and you want to make sure the airbag inflates if the car is exceeding its safe stopping momentum.

 begin 
    # do driving stuff
 rescue Exception => e
    self.airbags.inflate if self.exceeding_safe_stopping_momentum?
    raise
 end

Here's the exception to the rule: You can catch Exception only if you re-raise the exception. So, a better rule is to never swallow Exception, and always re-raise the error.

But adding rescue is both easy to forget in a language like Ruby, and putting a rescue statement right before re-raising an issue feels a little non-DRY. And you do not want to forget the raise statement. And if you do, good luck trying to find that error.

Thankfully, Ruby is awesome, you can just use the ensure keyword, which makes sure the code runs. The ensure keyword will run the code no matter what - if an exception is thrown, if one isn't, the only exception being if the world ends (or other unlikely events).

 begin 
    # do driving stuff
 ensure
    self.airbags.inflate if self.exceeding_safe_stopping_momentum?
 end

Boom! And that code should run anyways. The only reason you should use rescue Exception => e is if you need access to the exception, or if you only want code to run on an exception. And remember to re-raise the error. Every time.

Note: As @Niall pointed out, ensure always runs. This is good because sometimes your program can lie to you and not throw exceptions, even when issues occur. With critical tasks, like inflating airbags, you need to make sure it happens no matter what. Because of this, checking every time the car stops, whether an exception is thrown or not, is a good idea. Even though inflating airbags is a bit of an uncommon task in most programming contexts, this is actually pretty common with most cleanup tasks.

48
votes

Because this captures all exceptions. It's unlikely that your program can recover from any of them.

You should handle only exceptions that you know how to recover from. If you don't anticipate a certain kind of exception, don't handle it, crash loudly (write details to the log), then diagnose logs and fix code.

Swallowing exceptions is bad, don't do this.

12
votes

That's a specific case of the rule that you shouldn't catch any exception you don't know how to handle. If you don't know how to handle it, it's always better to let some other part of the system catch and handle it.

1
votes

This blog post explains it perfectly: Ruby's Exception vs StandardError: What's the difference?

Why you shouldn't rescue Exception

The problem with rescuing Exception is that it actually rescues every exception that inherits from Exception. Which is....all of them!

That's a problem because there are some exceptions that are used internally by Ruby. They don't have anything to do with your app, and swallowing them will cause bad things to happen.

Here are a few of the big ones:

  • SignalException::Interrupt - If you rescue this, you can't exit your app by hitting control-c.

  • ScriptError::SyntaxError - Swallowing syntax errors means that things like puts("Forgot something) will fail silently.

  • NoMemoryError - Wanna know what happens when your program keeps running after it uses up all the RAM? Me neither.

begin
  do_something()
rescue Exception => e
  # Don't do this. This will swallow every single exception. Nothing gets past it. 
end

I'm guessing that you don't really want to swallow any of these system-level exceptions. You only want to catch all of your application level errors. The exceptions caused YOUR code.

Luckily, there's an easy way to to this.

Rescue StandardError Instead

All of the exceptions that you should care about inherit from StandardError. These are our old friends:

NoMethodError - raised when you try to invoke a method that doesn't exist

TypeError - caused by things like 1 + ""

RuntimeError - who could forget good old RuntimeError?

To rescue errors like these, you'll want to rescue StandardError. You COULD do it by writing something like this:

begin
  do_something()
rescue StandardError => e
  # Only your app's exceptions are swallowed. Things like SyntaxErrror are left alone. 
end

But Ruby has made it much easier for use.

When you don't specify an exception class at all, ruby assumes you mean StandardError. So the code below is identical to the above code:

begin
  do_something()
rescue => e
  # This is the same as rescuing StandardError
end