In Node.js, a common pattern for dealing with asynchronous behavior is called the callback pattern. This pattern expects an Error
object or null
as the first argument of the callback. Forgetting to handle these errors can lead to some really strange behavior in your application.
function loadData (err, data) { doSomething(); // forgot to handle error }
This rule expects that when you’re using the callback pattern in Node.js you’ll handle the error.
The rule takes a single string option: the name of the error parameter. The default is "err"
.
Examples of incorrect code for this rule with the default "err"
parameter name:
/*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/ function loadData (err, data) { doSomething(); }
Examples of correct code for this rule with the default "err"
parameter name:
/*eslint handle-callback-err: "error"*/ function loadData (err, data) { if (err) { console.log(err.stack); } doSomething(); } function generateError (err) { if (err) {} }
Examples of correct code for this rule with a sample "error"
parameter name:
/*eslint handle-callback-err: ["error", "error"]*/ function loadData (error, data) { if (error) { console.log(error.stack); } doSomething(); }
Sometimes (especially in big projects) the name of the error variable is not consistent across the project, so you need a more flexible configuration to ensure that the rule reports all unhandled errors.
If the configured name of the error variable begins with a ^
it is considered to be a regexp pattern.
"^(err|error|anySpecificError)$"
, the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name can be err
, error
or anySpecificError
."^.+Error$"
, the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name ends with Error
(for example, connectionError
or validationError
will match)."^.*(e|E)rr"
, the rule reports unhandled errors where the parameter name matches any string that contains err
or Err
(for example, err
, error
, anyError
, some_err
will match).There are cases where it may be safe for your application to ignore errors, however only ignore errors if you are confident that some other form of monitoring will help you catch the problem.
This rule was introduced in ESLint 0.4.5.
© JS Foundation and other contributors
Licensed under the MIT License.
https://eslint.org/docs/rules/handle-callback-err