I'm working on a mail-sending library, and I want to be able to catch exceptions produced by the senders (SMTP, Google AppEngine, etc.) and wrap them in easily catchable exceptions specific to my library (ConnectionError, MessageSendError, etc.), with the original traceback intact so it can be debugged. What is the best way to do this in Python 2?
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3 Answers
30
The simplest way would be to reraise with the old trace object. The following example shows this:
import sys
def a():
def b():
raise AssertionError("1")
b()
try:
a()
except AssertionError: # some specific exception you want to wrap
trace = sys.exc_info()[2]
raise Exception("error description"), None, trace
Check the documentation of the raise statement for details of the three parameters. My example would print:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "C:\...\test.py", line 9, in <module>
a()
File "C:\...\test.py", line 6, in a
b()
File "C:\...\test.py", line 5, in b
raise AssertionError("1")
Exception: error description
For completeness, in Python 3 you'd use the raise MyException(...) from e
syntax.

AndiDog
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1`raise Exception("error description"), None, trace` has the side effect of losing the original error message. Anyone know a way around this? – James McMahon Jul 23 '13 at 17:25
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1I ended up using the message from original exception and concatenate it into the new message. – James McMahon Jul 23 '13 at 18:27
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3I do it like this: `raise Exception("error description\nCaused by: {}: {}".format(type(e).__name__, str(e))), None, sys.exc_info()[2]` – Dan Fabulich Mar 03 '16 at 17:30
7
Use raise_from
from the future.utils
package.
Relevant example copied below:
from future.utils import raise_from
class FileDatabase:
def __init__(self, filename):
try:
self.file = open(filename)
except IOError as exc:
raise_from(DatabaseError('failed to open'), exc)
Within that package, raise_from
is implemented as follows:
def raise_from(exc, cause):
"""
Equivalent to:
raise EXCEPTION from CAUSE
on Python 3. (See PEP 3134).
"""
# Is either arg an exception class (e.g. IndexError) rather than
# instance (e.g. IndexError('my message here')? If so, pass the
# name of the class undisturbed through to "raise ... from ...".
if isinstance(exc, type) and issubclass(exc, Exception):
e = exc()
# exc = exc.__name__
# execstr = "e = " + _repr_strip(exc) + "()"
# myglobals, mylocals = _get_caller_globals_and_locals()
# exec(execstr, myglobals, mylocals)
else:
e = exc
e.__suppress_context__ = False
if isinstance(cause, type) and issubclass(cause, Exception):
e.__cause__ = cause()
e.__suppress_context__ = True
elif cause is None:
e.__cause__ = None
e.__suppress_context__ = True
elif isinstance(cause, BaseException):
e.__cause__ = cause
e.__suppress_context__ = True
else:
raise TypeError("exception causes must derive from BaseException")
e.__context__ = sys.exc_info()[1]
raise e

Jonathan Jin
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6
This answer is probably a little bit late, but you can wrap the function in a python decorator.
Here is a simple cheatsheet on how different decorators.
Here is some sample code of how to do this. Just change the decorator
to catch different errors in the different ways that you need.
def decorator(wrapped_function):
def _wrapper(*args, **kwargs):
try:
# do something before the function call
result = wrapped_function(*args, **kwargs)
# do something after the function call
except TypeError:
print("TypeError")
except IndexError:
print("IndexError")
# return result
return _wrapper
@decorator
def type_error():
return 1 / 'a'
@decorator
def index_error():
return ['foo', 'bar'][5]
type_error()
index_error()

Aaron Lelevier
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