Yii provides a complete error handling framework based on the PHP 5 exception mechanism. When the application is created to handle an incoming user request, it registers its handleError method to handle PHP warnings and notices; and it registers its handleException method to handle uncaught PHP exceptions. Consequently, if a PHP warning/notice or an uncaught exception occurs during the application execution, one of the error handlers will take over the control and start the necessary error handling procedure.
Tip: The registration of error handlers is done in the application's constructor by calling PHP functions set_exception_handler and set_error_handler. If you do not want Yii to handle the errors and exceptions, you may define constant
YII_ENABLE_ERROR_HANDLER
andYII_ENABLE_EXCEPTION_HANDLER
to be false in the entry script.
By default, handleError (or handleException) will raise an onError event (or onException event). If the error (or exception) is not handled by any event handler, it will call for help from the errorHandler application component.
Raising exceptions in Yii is not different from raising a normal PHP exception. One uses the following syntax to raise an exception when needed:
throw new ExceptionClass('ExceptionMessage');
Yii defines three exception classes: CException, CDbException and CHttpException. CException is a generic exception class. CDbException represents an exception that is caused by some DB-related operations. CHttpException represents an exception that should be displayed to end users and carries a statusCode property representing an HTTP status code. The class of an exception determines how it should be displayed, as we will explain next.
Tip: Raising a CHttpException exception is a simple way of reporting errors caused by user misoperation. For example, if the user provides an invalid post ID in the URL, we can simply do the following to show a 404 error (page not found):
// if post ID is invalid
throw new CHttpException(404,'The specified post cannot be found.');
When an error is forwarded to the CErrorHandler application component,
it chooses an appropriate view to display the error. If the error is meant
to be displayed to end users, such as a CHttpException, it will use a
view named errorXXX
, where XXX
stands for the HTTP status code (e.g.
400, 404, 500). If the error is an internal one and should only be
displayed to developers, it will use a view named exception
. In the
latter case, complete call stack as well as the error line information will
be displayed.
Info: When the application runs in production mode, all errors including those internal ones will be displayed using view
errorXXX
. This is because the call stack of an error may contain sensitive information. In this case, developers should rely on the error logs to determine what is the real cause of an error.
CErrorHandler searches for the view file corresponding to a view in the following order:
WebRoot/themes/ThemeName/views/system
: this is the system
view
directory under the currently active theme.
WebRoot/protected/views/system
: this is the default system
view
directory for an application.
yii/framework/views
: this is the standard system view directory
provided by the Yii framework.
Therefore, if we want to customize the error display, we can simply create
error view files under the system view directory of our application or
theme. Each view file is a normal PHP script consisting of mainly HTML
code. For more details, please refer to the default view files under the
framework's view
directory.
Yii allows using a controller action to handle the error display work. To do so, we should configure the error handler in the application configuration as follows:
return array(
......
'components'=>array(
'errorHandler'=>array(
'errorAction'=>'site/error',
),
),
);
In the above, we configure the CErrorHandler::errorAction property to be the route
site/error
which refers to the error
action in SiteController
. We may use a different
route if needed.
We can write the error
action like the following:
public function actionError()
{
if($error=Yii::app()->errorHandler->error)
$this->render('error', $error);
}
In the action, we first retrieve the detailed error information from CErrorHandler::error.
If it is not empty, we render the error
view together with the error information.
The error information returned from CErrorHandler::error is an array with the following fields:
code
: the HTTP status code (e.g. 403, 500);type
: the error type (e.g. CHttpException, PHP Error
);message
: the error message;file
: the name of the PHP script file where the error occurs;line
: the line number of the code where the error occurs;trace
: the call stack of the error;source
: the context source code where the error occurs.Tip: The reason we check if CErrorHandler::error is empty or not is because the
error
action may be directly requested by an end user, in which case there is no error. Since we are passing the$error
array to the view, it will be automatically expanded to individual variables. As a result, in the view we can access directly the variables such as$code
,$type
.
A message of level error
will always be logged when an error occurs. If
the error is caused by a PHP warning or notice, the message will be logged
with category php
; if the error is caused by an uncaught exception, the
category would be exception.ExceptionClassName
(for CHttpException its
statusCode will also be appended to the
category). One can thus exploit the logging
feature to monitor errors happened during application execution.
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