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# Using the internal/errors.js Module
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## What is internal/errors.js
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The `require('internal/errors')` module is an internal-only module that can be
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used to produce `Error`, `TypeError` and `RangeError` instances that use a
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static, permanent error code and an optionally parameterized message.
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The intent of the module is to allow errors provided by Node.js to be assigned a
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permanent identifier. Without a permanent identifier, userland code may need to
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inspect error messages to distinguish one error from another. An unfortunate
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result of that practice is that changes to error messages result in broken code
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in the ecosystem. For that reason, Node.js has considered error message changes
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to be breaking changes. By providing a permanent identifier for a specific
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error, we reduce the need for userland code to inspect error messages.
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*Note*: Switching an existing error to use the `internal/errors` module must be
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considered a `semver-major` change.
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## Using internal/errors.js
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The `internal/errors` module exposes three custom `Error` classes that
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are intended to replace existing `Error` objects within the Node.js source.
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For instance, an existing `Error` such as:
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```js
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const err = new TypeError(`Expected string received ${type}`);
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```
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Can be replaced by first adding a new error key into the `internal/errors.js`
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file:
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```js
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E('FOO', 'Expected string received %s');
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```
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Then replacing the existing `new TypeError` in the code:
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```js
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const errors = require('internal/errors');
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// ...
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const err = new errors.TypeError('FOO', type);
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```
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## Adding new errors
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New static error codes are added by modifying the `internal/errors.js` file
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and appending the new error codes to the end using the utility `E()` method.
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```js
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E('EXAMPLE_KEY1', 'This is the error value');
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E('EXAMPLE_KEY2', (a, b) => `${a} ${b}`);
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```
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The first argument passed to `E()` is the static identifier. The second
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argument is either a String with optional `util.format()` style replacement
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tags (e.g. `%s`, `%d`), or a function returning a String. The optional
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additional arguments passed to the `errors.message()` function (which is
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used by the `errors.Error`, `errors.TypeError` and `errors.RangeError` classes),
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will be used to format the error message.
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## Documenting new errors
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Whenever a new static error code is added and used, corresponding documentation
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for the error code should be added to the `doc/api/errors.md` file. This will
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give users a place to go to easily look up the meaning of individual error
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codes.
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## Testing new errors
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When adding a new error, corresponding test(s) for the error message
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formatting may also be required. If the message for the error is a
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constant string then no test is required for the error message formatting
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as we can trust the error helper implementation. An example of this kind of
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error would be:
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```js
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E('ERR_SOCKET_ALREADY_BOUND', 'Socket is already bound');
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```
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If the error message is not a constant string then tests to validate
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the formatting of the message based on the parameters used when
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creating the error should be added to
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`test/parallel/test-internal-errors.js`. These tests should validate
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all of the different ways parameters can be used to generate the final
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message string. A simple example is:
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```js
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// Test ERR_TLS_CERT_ALTNAME_INVALID
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assert.strictEqual(
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errors.message('ERR_TLS_CERT_ALTNAME_INVALID', ['altname']),
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'Hostname/IP does not match certificate\'s altnames: altname');
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```
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In addition, there should also be tests which validate the use of the
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error based on where it is used in the codebase. For these tests, except in
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special cases, they should only validate that the expected code is received
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and NOT validate the message. This will reduce the amount of test change
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required when the message for an error changes.
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For example:
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```js
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assert.throws(() => {
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socket.bind();
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}, common.expectsError({
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code: 'ERR_SOCKET_ALREADY_BOUND',
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type: Error
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}));
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```
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Avoid changing the format of the message after the error has been created.
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If it does make sense to do this for some reason, then additional tests
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validating the formatting of the error message for those cases will
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likely be required.
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## API
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### Class: errors.Error(key[, args...])
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* `key` {String} The static error identifier
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* `args...` {Any} Zero or more optional arguments
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```js
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const errors = require('internal/errors');
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const arg1 = 'foo';
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const arg2 = 'bar';
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const myError = new errors.Error('KEY', arg1, arg2);
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throw myError;
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```
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The specific error message for the `myError` instance will depend on the
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associated value of `KEY` (see "Adding new errors").
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The `myError` object will have a `code` property equal to the `key` and a
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`name` property equal to `` `Error [${key}]` ``.
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### Class: errors.TypeError(key[, args...])
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* `key` {String} The static error identifier
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* `args...` {Any} Zero or more optional arguments
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```js
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const errors = require('internal/errors');
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const arg1 = 'foo';
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const arg2 = 'bar';
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const myError = new errors.TypeError('KEY', arg1, arg2);
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throw myError;
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```
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The specific error message for the `myError` instance will depend on the
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associated value of `KEY` (see "Adding new errors").
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The `myError` object will have a `code` property equal to the `key` and a
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`name` property equal to `` `TypeError [${key}]` ``.
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### Class: errors.RangeError(key[, args...])
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* `key` {String} The static error identifier
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* `args...` {Any} Zero or more optional arguments
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```js
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const errors = require('internal/errors');
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const arg1 = 'foo';
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const arg2 = 'bar';
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const myError = new errors.RangeError('KEY', arg1, arg2);
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throw myError;
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```
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The specific error message for the `myError` instance will depend on the
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associated value of `KEY` (see "Adding new errors").
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The `myError` object will have a `code` property equal to the `key` and a
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`name` property equal to `` `RangeError [${key}]` ``.
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### Method: errors.message(key, args)
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* `key` {String} The static error identifier
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* `args` {Array} Zero or more optional arguments passed as an Array
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* Returns: {String}
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Returns the formatted error message string for the given `key`.
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