Remove error_on_non_2xx. (#272)

After the recent changes in #257, it's probably not necessary. It's now
quite easy to use a match statement to extract responses for certain
status codes, or all status codes.

Add documentation on how to turn a status code error back into a
Response.
This commit is contained in:
Jacob Hoffman-Andrews
2020-12-18 22:10:55 -08:00
committed by GitHub
7 changed files with 38 additions and 25 deletions

View File

@@ -72,6 +72,12 @@ Ureq supports sending and receiving json, if you enable the "json" feature:
.into_string()?;
```
### Error handling
ureq returns errors via `Result<T, ureq::Error>`. That includes I/O errors,
protocol errors, and status code errors (when the server responded 4xx or
5xx). More details on the [Error] type.
### Features
To enable a minimal dependency tree, some features are off by default.
@@ -192,6 +198,7 @@ If ureq is not what you're looking for, check out these other Rust HTTP clients:
[post()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/fn.post.html
[put()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/fn.put.html
[Request]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html
[Error]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/enum.Error.html
[Request::call()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html#method.call
[Request::send()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html#method.send
[Request::send_bytes()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html#method.send_bytes

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@@ -12,6 +12,7 @@
[post()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/fn.post.html
[put()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/fn.put.html
[Request]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html
[Error]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/enum.Error.html
[Request::call()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html#method.call
[Request::send()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html#method.send
[Request::send_bytes()]: https://docs.rs/ureq/latest/ureq/struct.Request.html#method.send_bytes

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@@ -417,13 +417,13 @@ impl AgentBuilder {
/// let result = ureq::builder()
/// .redirects(1)
/// .build()
/// # ;
/// # let result = ureq::agent()
/// .get("http://httpbin.org/status/301")
/// .error_on_non_2xx(false)
/// .call()?;
/// assert_ne!(result.status(), 301);
///
/// let result = ureq::post("http://httpbin.org/status/307")
/// .error_on_non_2xx(false)
/// .send_bytes(b"some data")?;
/// assert_eq!(result.status(), 307);
/// # Ok(())

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@@ -42,6 +42,23 @@ use crate::Response;
/// ureq::get(url).call()
/// }
/// ```
///
/// If you'd like to treat all status code errors as normal, successful responses,
/// you can use [Result::or_else](std::result::Result::or_else) like this:
///
/// ```
/// use ureq::Error::Status;
/// # fn main() -> std::result::Result<(), ureq::Error> {
/// # ureq::is_test(true);
/// let resp = ureq::get("http://example.com/")
/// .call()
/// .or_else(|e| match e {
/// Status(_, r) => Ok(r), // turn status errors into Ok Responses.
/// _ => Err(e),
/// })?;
/// # Ok(())
/// # }
/// ```
#[derive(Debug)]
pub enum Error {
/// A response was successfully received but had status code >= 400.

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@@ -82,6 +82,12 @@
//! # fn main() {}
//! ```
//!
//! ## Error handling
//!
//! ureq returns errors via `Result<T, ureq::Error>`. That includes I/O errors,
//! protocol errors, and status code errors (when the server responded 4xx or
//! 5xx). More details on the [Error] type.
//!
//! ## Features
//!
//! To enable a minimal dependency tree, some features are off by default.

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@@ -120,7 +120,7 @@ impl Request {
let unit = Unit::new(&self.agent, &self.method, &url, &self.headers, &reader);
let response = unit::connect(unit, true, reader, None).map_err(|e| e.url(url.clone()))?;
if self.error_on_non_2xx && response.status() >= 400 {
if response.status() >= 400 {
Err(Error::Status(response.status(), response))
} else {
Ok(response)
@@ -336,26 +336,6 @@ impl Request {
.push((param.to_string(), value.to_string()));
self
}
/// By default, if a response's status is anything but a 2xx or 3xx,
/// call()/send() and related methods will return an Error. If you want
/// to handle such responses as non-errors, set this to `false`.
///
/// Example:
/// ```
/// # fn main() -> Result<(), ureq::Error> {
/// # ureq::is_test(true);
/// let response = ureq::get("http://httpbin.org/status/500")
/// .error_on_non_2xx(false)
/// .call()?;
/// assert_eq!(response.status(), 500);
/// # Ok(())
/// # }
/// ```
pub fn error_on_non_2xx(mut self, value: bool) -> Self {
self.error_on_non_2xx = value;
self
}
}
#[test]

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@@ -17,6 +17,8 @@ pub(crate) fn test_agent() -> Agent {
let headers = read_request(&stream);
if headers.0.is_empty() {
// no headers probably means it's the initial request to check test server is up.
} else if headers.path() == "/status/200" {
stream.write_all(b"HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n\r\n")?;
} else if headers.path() == "/status/500" {
stream.write_all(b"HTTP/1.1 500 Server Internal Error\r\n\r\n")?;
} else if headers.path() == "/bytes/100" {
@@ -30,11 +32,11 @@ pub(crate) fn test_agent() -> Agent {
stream.write_all(br#"{"hello": "world"}"#)?;
} else if headers.path() == "/status/301" {
stream.write_all(b"HTTP/1.1 301 Found\r\n")?;
stream.write_all(b"Location: /redirect/3\r\n")?;
stream.write_all(b"Location: /status/200\r\n")?;
stream.write_all(b"\r\n")?;
} else if headers.path() == "/status/307" {
stream.write_all(b"HTTP/1.1 307 Found\r\n")?;
stream.write_all(b"Location: /redirect/3\r\n")?;
stream.write_all(b"Location: /status/200\r\n")?;
stream.write_all(b"\r\n")?;
} else {
stream.write_all(b"HTTP/1.1 200 OK\r\n")?;