Exception::getTraceAsString
(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0)
Exception::getTraceAsString — Gets the stack trace as a string
Description
final public string Exception::getTraceAsString
( void
)
Returns the Exception stack trace as a string.
Parameters
This function has no parameters.
Return Values
Returns the Exception stack trace as a string.
Examples
Example #1 Exception::getTraceAsString() example
<?php
function test() {
throw new Exception;
}
try {
test();
} catch(Exception $e) {
echo $e->getTraceAsString();
}
?>
The above example will output something similar to:
#0 /home/bjori/tmp/ex.php(7): test() #1 {main}
- Функция Exception::__construct() - Создать исключение
- Функция Exception::getMessage() - Получает сообщение исключения
- Функция Exception::getPrevious() - Возвращает предыдущее исключение
- Функция Exception::getCode() - Получает код исключения
- Функция Exception::getFile() - Получает файл, в котором возникло исключение
- Функция Exception::getLine() - Получает строку, в которой возникло исключение
- Функция Exception::getTrace() - Получает трассировку стека
- Функция Exception::getTraceAsString() - Получает трассировку стека в виде строки
- Функция Exception::__toString() - Строковое представление исключения
- Функция Exception::__clone() - Клонировать исключение
Коментарии
Honestly, Exception::getTraceAsString() simply sucks, listing only the called method (below, for example, on line 89 function fail2() gets called, but there's no information that you have the originator is fail1()). The fact that, in the example below, the exception gets thrown on line 78, is completely omitted from the trace and only available within the exception. Chained exceptions are not supported as well.
Example:
#0 /var/htdocs/websites/sbdevel/public/index.php(70): seabird\test\C->exc()
#1 /var/htdocs/websites/sbdevel/public/index.php(85): seabird\test\C->doexc()
#2 /var/htdocs/websites/sbdevel/public/index.php(89): seabird\test\fail2()
#3 /var/htdocs/websites/sbdevel/public/index.php(93): seabird\test\fail1()
#4 {main}
jTraceEx() provides a much better java-like stack trace that includes support for chained exceptions:
Exception: Thrown from class C
at seabird.test.C.exc(index.php:78)
at seabird.test.C.doexc(index.php:70)
at seabird.test.fail2(index.php:85)
at seabird.test.fail1(index.php:89)
at (main)(index.php:93)
Caused by: Exception: Thrown from class B
at seabird.test.B.exc(index.php:64)
at seabird.test.C.exc(index.php:75)
... 4 more
Caused by: Exception: Thrown from class A
at seabird.test.A.exc(index.php:46)
at seabird.test.B.exc(index.php:61)
... 5 more
(see at the end for the example code)
<?php
/**
* jTraceEx() - provide a Java style exception trace
* @param $exception
* @param $seen - array passed to recursive calls to accumulate trace lines already seen
* leave as NULL when calling this function
* @return array of strings, one entry per trace line
*/
function jTraceEx($e, $seen=null) {
$starter = $seen ? 'Caused by: ' : '';
$result = array();
if (!$seen) $seen = array();
$trace = $e->getTrace();
$prev = $e->getPrevious();
$result[] = sprintf('%s%s: %s', $starter, get_class($e), $e->getMessage());
$file = $e->getFile();
$line = $e->getLine();
while (true) {
$current = "$file:$line";
if (is_array($seen) && in_array($current, $seen)) {
$result[] = sprintf(' ... %d more', count($trace)+1);
break;
}
$result[] = sprintf(' at %s%s%s(%s%s%s)',
count($trace) && array_key_exists('class', $trace[0]) ? str_replace('\\', '.', $trace[0]['class']) : '',
count($trace) && array_key_exists('class', $trace[0]) && array_key_exists('function', $trace[0]) ? '.' : '',
count($trace) && array_key_exists('function', $trace[0]) ? str_replace('\\', '.', $trace[0]['function']) : '(main)',
$line === null ? $file : basename($file),
$line === null ? '' : ':',
$line === null ? '' : $line);
if (is_array($seen))
$seen[] = "$file:$line";
if (!count($trace))
break;
$file = array_key_exists('file', $trace[0]) ? $trace[0]['file'] : 'Unknown Source';
$line = array_key_exists('file', $trace[0]) && array_key_exists('line', $trace[0]) && $trace[0]['line'] ? $trace[0]['line'] : null;
array_shift($trace);
}
$result = join("\n", $result);
if ($prev)
$result .= "\n" . jTraceEx($prev, $seen);
return $result;
}
?>
Here's the example code:
<?php
class A {
public function exc() {
throw new \Exception('Thrown from class A'); // <-- line 46
}
}
class B {
public function exc() {
try {
$a = new A;
$a->exc(); // <-- line 61
}
catch(\Exception $e1) {
throw new \Exception('Thrown from class B', 0, $e1); // <-- line 64
}
}
}
class C {
public function doexc() {
$this->exc(); // <-- line 70
}
public function exc() {
try {
$b = new B;
$b->exc(); // <-- line 75
}
catch(\Exception $e1) {
throw new \Exception('Thrown from class C', 0, $e1); // <-- line 78
}
}
}
function fail2() {
$c = new C;
$c->doexc(); // <-- line 85
}
function fail1() {
fail2(); // <-- line 89
}
try {
fail1(); // <-- line 93
}
catch(\Exception $e) {
echo jTraceEx($e);
}
?>
this method uses \n for new line (i expected PHP_EOL but well ...).
if you want to log the string as one single line use something like:
<?php
$separator = ', ';
$one_line = str_replace("\n", $separator, $e->getTraceAsString());
?>