// Copyright 2020 The Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. package mvs import ( "fmt" "strings" "golang.org/x/mod/module" ) // BuildListError decorates an error that occurred gathering requirements // while constructing a build list. BuildListError prints the chain // of requirements to the module where the error occurred. type BuildListError struct { Err error stack []buildListErrorElem } type buildListErrorElem struct { m module.Version // nextReason is the reason this module depends on the next module in the // stack. Typically either "requires", or "updating to". nextReason string } // NewBuildListError returns a new BuildListError wrapping an error that // occurred at a module found along the given path of requirements and/or // upgrades, which must be non-empty. // // The isVersionChange function reports whether a path step is due to an // explicit upgrade or downgrade (as opposed to an existing requirement in a // go.mod file). A nil isVersionChange function indicates that none of the path // steps are due to explicit version changes. func NewBuildListError(err error, path []module.Version, isVersionChange func(from, to module.Version) bool) *BuildListError { stack := make([]buildListErrorElem, 0, len(path)) for len(path) > 1 { reason := "requires" if isVersionChange != nil && isVersionChange(path[0], path[1]) { reason = "updating to" } stack = append(stack, buildListErrorElem{ m: path[0], nextReason: reason, }) path = path[1:] } stack = append(stack, buildListErrorElem{m: path[0]}) return &BuildListError{ Err: err, stack: stack, } } // Module returns the module where the error occurred. If the module stack // is empty, this returns a zero value. func (e *BuildListError) Module() module.Version { if len(e.stack) == 0 { return module.Version{} } return e.stack[len(e.stack)-1].m } func (e *BuildListError) Error() string { b := &strings.Builder{} stack := e.stack // Don't print modules at the beginning of the chain without a // version. These always seem to be the main module or a // synthetic module ("target@"). for len(stack) > 0 && stack[0].m.Version == "" { stack = stack[1:] } if len(stack) == 0 { b.WriteString(e.Err.Error()) } else { for _, elem := range stack[:len(stack)-1] { fmt.Fprintf(b, "%s %s\n\t", elem.m, elem.nextReason) } // Ensure that the final module path and version are included as part of the // error message. m := stack[len(stack)-1].m if mErr, ok := e.Err.(*module.ModuleError); ok { actual := module.Version{Path: mErr.Path, Version: mErr.Version} if v, ok := mErr.Err.(*module.InvalidVersionError); ok { actual.Version = v.Version } if actual == m { fmt.Fprintf(b, "%v", e.Err) } else { fmt.Fprintf(b, "%s (replaced by %s): %v", m, actual, mErr.Err) } } else { fmt.Fprintf(b, "%v", module.VersionError(m, e.Err)) } } return b.String() } func (e *BuildListError) Unwrap() error { return e.Err }