terraform/vendor/github.com/mitchellh/panicwrap/README.md

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# panicwrap
panicwrap is a Go library that re-executes a Go binary and monitors stderr
output from the binary for a panic. When it finds a panic, it executes a
user-defined handler function. Stdout, stderr, stdin, signals, and exit
codes continue to work as normal, making the existence of panicwrap mostly
invisible to the end user until a panic actually occurs.
Since a panic is truly a bug in the program meant to crash the runtime,
globally catching panics within Go applications is not supposed to be possible.
Despite this, it is often useful to have a way to know when panics occur.
panicwrap allows you to do something with these panics, such as writing them
to a file, so that you can track when panics occur.
panicwrap is ***not a panic recovery system***. Panics indicate serious
problems with your application and _should_ crash the runtime. panicwrap
is just meant as a way to monitor for panics. If you still think this is
the worst idea ever, read the section below on why.
## Features
* **SIMPLE!**
* Works with all Go applications on all platforms Go supports
* Custom behavior when a panic occurs
* Stdout, stderr, stdin, exit codes, and signals continue to work as
expected.
## Usage
Using panicwrap is simple. It behaves a lot like `fork`, if you know
how that works. A basic example is shown below.
Because it would be sad to panic while capturing a panic, it is recommended
that the handler functions for panicwrap remain relatively simple and well
tested. panicwrap itself contains many tests.
```go
package main
import (
"fmt"
"github.com/mitchellh/panicwrap"
"os"
)
func main() {
exitStatus, err := panicwrap.BasicWrap(panicHandler)
if err != nil {
// Something went wrong setting up the panic wrapper. Unlikely,
// but possible.
panic(err)
}
// If exitStatus >= 0, then we're the parent process and the panicwrap
// re-executed ourselves and completed. Just exit with the proper status.
if exitStatus >= 0 {
os.Exit(exitStatus)
}
// Otherwise, exitStatus < 0 means we're the child. Continue executing as
// normal...
// Let's say we panic
panic("oh shucks")
}
func panicHandler(output string) {
// output contains the full output (including stack traces) of the
// panic. Put it in a file or something.
fmt.Printf("The child panicked:\n\n%s\n", output)
os.Exit(1)
}
```
## How Does it Work?
panicwrap works by re-executing the running program (retaining arguments,
environmental variables, etc.) and monitoring the stderr of the program.
Since Go always outputs panics in a predictable way with a predictable
exit code, panicwrap is able to reliably detect panics and allow the parent
process to handle them.
## WHY?! Panics should CRASH!
Yes, panics _should_ crash. They are 100% always indicative of bugs and having
information on a production server or application as to what caused the panic is critical.
### User Facing
In user-facing programs (programs like
[Packer](http://github.com/mitchellh/packer) or
[Docker](http://github.com/dotcloud/docker)), it is up to the user to
report such panics. This is unreliable, at best, and it would be better if the
program could have a way to automatically report panics. panicwrap provides
a way to do this.
### Server
For backend applications, it is easier to detect crashes (since the application exits)
and having an idea as to why the crash occurs is equally important;
particularly on a production server.
At [HashiCorp](http://www.hashicorp.com),
we use panicwrap to log panics to timestamped files with some additional
data (configuration settings at the time, environmental variables, etc.)
The goal of panicwrap is _not_ to hide panics. It is instead to provide
a clean mechanism for capturing them and ultimately crashing.