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2013-10-14-nserror.md

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title author category tags excerpt status
NSError
Mattt
Cocoa
nshipster
NSError is the unsung hero of the Foundation framework. Passed gallantly in and out of perilous method calls, it is the messenger by which we are able to contextualize our failures.
swift
n/a

To err is human. To NSError is Cocoa.

All programs on a Unix system are a child process of another process, forking all the way from the original process, the unmoved mover: pid 1 (which in the case of OS X is launchd). When the executable finishes, it communicates a status code between 0 and 255 to its parent, as a way to communicate why or how the process exited. 0 means "everything exited normally; nothing to report here", while any non-zero value indicates something that the parent process should be aware of. Exit status codes may be used to indicate whether the process crashed, or terminated prematurely. By some conventions, the higher the return value, the more severe the cause of the error.

In an OO paradigm processes are, for the most part, abstracted away, leaving only objects and the messages they pass between one another. That distinction between success and failure (and between different varieties of failure) is still useful in object-oriented programming. But considering that methods are often wont to return values other than BOOL, this can create something of a predicament.

Languages more drama-prone and trigger-happy than Objective-C reconcile this by abusing the hell out of exceptions, raising at even the slightest breach in contract. To our good fortune as Cocoanauts, however, Objective-C takes a more civilized approach when it comes to giving us bad news, and that approach is NSError.


NSError is the unsung hero of the Foundation framework. Passed gallantly in and out of perilous method calls, it is the messenger by which we are able to contextualize our failures. No news is good news, when it comes to such matters, but passing a nil pointer to an NSError ** isn't going to do you any favors.

NSError is toll-free bridged with CFError, but it's unlikely that you'll ever find a reason to dip down to its Core Foundation counterpart.

Each NSError object encodes three critical pieces of information: a status code, corresponding to a particular error domain, as well as additional context provided by a userInfo dictionary.

code & domain

Like exit status codes, an NSError -code signals the nature of the problem. These status codes are defined within a particular error domain, in order to avoid overlap and confusion. These status codes are generally defined by constants in an enum.

For example, in the NSCocoaErrorDomain, the status code for an error caused by NSFileManager attempting to access a non-existant file is 4, as defined by NSFileNoSuchFileError. However, 4 in NSPOSIXErrorDomain refers to a POSIX EINTR, or "interupted function" error.

Now, anyone coming from a systems programming background may have just had a vision of a switch statement with smatterings of printf to translate numeric constants into something human-readable. NSError is way ahead of you.

userInfo

What gives NSError its particular charm is everyone's favorite grab bag property: userInfo. As a convention throughout Cocoa, userInfo is a dictionary that contains arbitrary key-value pairs that, whether for reasons of subclassing or schematic sparsity, are not suited to full-fledged properties in and of themselves. In the case of NSError, there are several special keys that correspond to readonly properties.

Three are generally useful:

  • localizedDescription (NSLocalizedDescriptionKey): A localized description of the error.
  • localizedRecoverySuggestion (NSLocalizedRecoverySuggestionErrorKey): A localized recovery suggestion for the error.
  • localizedFailureReason (NSLocalizedFailureReasonErrorKey): A localized explanation of the reason for the error.

...whereas three others are specific to OS X:

  • localizedRecoveryOptions (NSLocalizedRecoveryOptionsErrorKey): An array containing the localized titles of buttons appropriate for displaying in an alert panel
  • recoveryAttempter (NSRecoveryAttempterErrorKey)
  • helpAnchor (NSHelpAnchorErrorKey): Used by an alert panel by a help anchor button.

Here's how to construct NSError with a userInfo dictionary:

NSDictionary *userInfo = @{
  NSLocalizedDescriptionKey: NSLocalizedString(@"Operation was unsuccessful.", nil),
  NSLocalizedFailureReasonErrorKey: NSLocalizedString(@"The operation timed out.", nil),
  NSLocalizedRecoverySuggestionErrorKey: NSLocalizedString(@"Have you tried turning it off and on again?", nil)
                          };
NSError *error = [NSError errorWithDomain:NSHipsterErrorDomain
                                     code:-57
                                 userInfo:userInfo];

The advantage of encapsulating this information in an object like NSError, as opposed to, say, throwing exceptions willy-nilly, is that these error objects can be easily passed between different objects and contexts.

For example, a controller that calls a method that populates an NSError ** (as discussed in the next section) might pass that error into an alert view:

[[[UIAlertView alloc] initWithTitle:error.localizedDescription
                            message:error.localizedRecoverySuggestion
                           delegate:nil
                  cancelButtonTitle:NSLocalizedString(@"OK", nil)
                  otherButtonTitles:nil, nil] show];

As a brief non-sequitur: one clever hack used by C functions to communicate errors is to encode 4-letter ASCII sequences in the 32 bit return type. It's no localizedDescription, but it's better than cross-referencing error codes from a table every time!

For sake of completeness: here is a list of the standard NSError userInfo keys:

  • NSLocalizedDescriptionKey
  • NSLocalizedFailureReasonErrorKey
  • NSLocalizedRecoverySuggestionErrorKey
  • NSLocalizedRecoveryOptionsErrorKey
  • NSFilePathErrorKey
  • NSStringEncodingErrorKey
  • NSUnderlyingErrorKey
  • NSRecoveryAttempterErrorKey
  • NSHelpAnchorErrorKey

Using NSError

There are two ways in which you will encounter NSError: as a consumer and as a producer.

Consuming

As a consumer, you are primarily concerned with methods that have a final parameter of type NSError **. Again, this is to get around the single return value constraint of Objective-C; by passing a pointer to an uninitialized NSError * variable, that variable will be populated with any error the method encounters:

NSError *error = nil;
BOOL success = [[NSFileManager defaultManager] moveItemAtPath:@"/path/to/target"
                                                       toPath:@"/path/to/destination"
                                                        error:&error];
if (!success) {
    NSLog(@"%@", error);
}

According to Cocoa conventions, methods returning BOOL to indicate success or failure are encouraged to have a final NSError ** parameter if there are multiple failure conditions to distinguish between. A good guideline is whether you could imagine that NSError bubbling up, and being presented to the user.

Another way NSError objects are passed is the inclusion of an NSError * argument in completionHandler blocks. This gets around both a constraint on single value returns as well as one on that value being returned synchronously. This has become especially popular with newer Foundation APIs, like NSURLSession:

NSURL *URL = [NSURL URLWithString:@"http://example.com"];
NSURLRequest *request = [NSURLRequest requestWithURL:URL];
NSURLSession *session = [NSURLSession sessionWithConfiguration:[NSURLSessionConfiguration defaultSessionConfiguration]];
[[session dataTaskWithRequest:request
            completionHandler:^(NSData *data, NSURLResponse *response, NSError *error) {
    if (!data) {
        NSLog(@"%@", error);
    } else {
        <#...#>
    }
}] resume];

Producing

One would be well-advised to follow the same conventions for error handling as other Foundation classes. In situations where a custom method invokes a method with an NSError ** parameter, it is usually a good idea to similarly pass that NSError ** parameter into the signature of the custom method. More substantial apps or libraries are encouraged to define their own error domains and error code constants as suitable.

To pass an error to an NSError ** parameter, do the following:

- (BOOL)validateObject:(id)object
                 error:(NSError * __autoreleasing *)outError
{
    // call another API, passing &error into its (NSError **) parameter
    NSError *error = nil;
    BOOL success = ...; 

    if (!success) {
        if (outError) {
            *outError = [NSError errorWithDomain:NSHipsterErrorDomain
                                            code:-42
                                        userInfo:@{NSUnderlyingErrorKey: error}];
        }
    }

    return success;
}

The root error, if one exists, should be returned as part of your custom error's userInfo dictionary as the value for NSUnderlyingErrorKey.

NSURLErrorDomain & CFNetworkErrors

The greatest source of failure in iOS apps is networking. Between radios, transport, data roaming policies, proxies, security, authentication, and any number of protocol-specific negotiation, there is a lot that can go wrong.

On the plus side, the Foundation URL Loading system is incredibly mature, and takes care of most of that for you. The only negative is that the documentation for all of the various things that can go wrong is scattered across different programming guides and headers. If you get a request failing with error -1004, it can be surprisingly difficult to figure out exactly what that means.

As such, here is an exhaustive, well-formatted table at your disposal:

Code Description
-1
NSURLErrorUnknown
1
kCFHostErrorHostNotFound
Indicates that the DNS lookup failed.
2
kCFHostErrorUnknown
An unknown error occurred (a name server failure, for example). For additional information, query the kCFGetAddrInfoFailureKey to get the value returned from getaddrinfo; lookup in netdb.h
100
kCFSOCKSErrorUnknownClientVersion
The SOCKS server rejected access because it does not support connections with the requested SOCKS version.Query kCFSOCKSStatusCodeKey to recover the status code returned by the server.
101
kCFSOCKSErrorUnsupportedServerVersion
The version of SOCKS requested by the server is not supported. Query kCFSOCKSStatusCodeKey to recover the status code returned by the server.

Query the kCFSOCKSVersionKey to find the version requested by the server.

SOCKS4 Errors

Code Description
110
kCFSOCKS4ErrorRequestFailed
Request rejected or failed by the server.
111
kCFSOCKS4ErrorIdentdFailed
Request rejected because SOCKS server cannot connect to identd on the client.
112
kCFSOCKS4ErrorIdConflict
Request rejected because the client program and identd report different user-ids.
113
kCFSOCKS4ErrorUnknownStatusCode
The status code returned by the server is unknown.

SOCKS5 Errors

Code Description
120
kCFSOCKS5ErrorBadState
The stream is not in a state that allows the requested operation.
121
kCFSOCKS5ErrorBadResponseAddr
The address type returned is not supported.
122
kCFSOCKS5ErrorBadCredentials
The SOCKS server refused the client connection because of bad login credentials.
123
kCFSOCKS5ErrorUnsupportedNegotiationMethod
The requested method is not supported. Query kCFSOCKSNegotiationMethodKey to find the method requested.
124
kCFSOCKS5ErrorNoAcceptableMethod
The client and server could not find a mutually agreeable authentication method.

FTP Errors

Code Description
200
kCFFTPErrorUnexpectedStatusCode
The server returned an unexpected status code. Query the kCFFTPStatusCodeKey to get the status code returned by the server

HTTP Errors

Code Description
300
kCFErrorHTTPAuthenticationTypeUnsupported
The client and server could not agree on a supported authentication type.
301
kCFErrorHTTPBadCredentials
The credentials provided for an authenticated connection were rejected by the server.
302
kCFErrorHTTPConnectionLost
The connection to the server was dropped. This usually indicates a highly overloaded server.
303
kCFErrorHTTPParseFailure
The HTTP server response could not be parsed.
304
kCFErrorHTTPRedirectionLoopDetected
Too many HTTP redirects occurred before reaching a page that did not redirect the client to another page. This usually indicates a redirect loop.
305
kCFErrorHTTPBadURL
The requested URL could not be retrieved.
306
kCFErrorHTTPProxyConnectionFailure
A connection could not be established to the HTTP proxy.
307
kCFErrorHTTPBadProxyCredentials
The authentication credentials provided for logging into the proxy were rejected.
308
kCFErrorPACFileError
An error occurred with the proxy autoconfiguration file.
309
kCFErrorPACFileAuth
The authentication credentials provided by the proxy autoconfiguration file were rejected.
310
kCFErrorHTTPSProxyConnectionFailure
A connection could not be established to the HTTPS proxy.
311
kCFStreamErrorHTTPSProxyFailureUnexpectedResponseToCONNECTMethod
The HTTPS proxy returned an unexpected status code, such as a 3xx redirect.

CFURLConnection & CFURLProtocol Errors

Code Description
-998
kCFURLErrorUnknown
An unknown error occurred.
-999
kCFURLErrorCancelled
NSURLErrorCancelled
The connection was cancelled.
-1000
kCFURLErrorBadURL
NSURLErrorBadURL
The connection failed due to a malformed URL.
-1001
kCFURLErrorTimedOut
NSURLErrorTimedOut
The connection timed out.
-1002
kCFURLErrorUnsupportedURL
NSURLErrorUnsupportedURL
The connection failed due to an unsupported URL scheme.
-1003
kCFURLErrorCannotFindHost
NSURLErrorCannotFindHost
The connection failed because the host could not be found.
-1004
kCFURLErrorCannotConnectToHost
NSURLErrorCannotConnectToHost
The connection failed because a connection cannot be made to the host.
-1005
kCFURLErrorNetworkConnectionLost
NSURLErrorNetworkConnectionLost
The connection failed because the network connection was lost.
-1006
kCFURLErrorDNSLookupFailed
NSURLErrorDNSLookupFailed
The connection failed because the DNS lookup failed.
-1007
kCFURLErrorHTTPTooManyRedirects
NSURLErrorHTTPTooManyRedirects
The HTTP connection failed due to too many redirects.
-1008
kCFURLErrorResourceUnavailable
NSURLErrorResourceUnavailable
The connection’s resource is unavailable.
-1009
kCFURLErrorNotConnectedToInternet
NSURLErrorNotConnectedToInternet
The connection failed because the device is not connected to the internet.
-1010
kCFURLErrorRedirectToNonExistentLocation
NSURLErrorRedirectToNonExistentLocation
The connection was redirected to a nonexistent location.
-1011
kCFURLErrorBadServerResponse
NSURLErrorBadServerResponse
The connection received an invalid server response.
-1012
kCFURLErrorUserCancelledAuthentication
NSURLErrorUserCancelledAuthentication
The connection failed because the user cancelled required authentication.
-1013
kCFURLErrorUserAuthenticationRequired
NSURLErrorUserAuthenticationRequired
The connection failed because authentication is required.
-1014
kCFURLErrorZeroByteResource
NSURLErrorZeroByteResource
The resource retrieved by the connection is zero bytes.
-1015
kCFURLErrorCannotDecodeRawData
NSURLErrorCannotDecodeRawData
The connection cannot decode data encoded with a known content encoding.
-1016
kCFURLErrorCannotDecodeContentData
NSURLErrorCannotDecodeContentData
The connection cannot decode data encoded with an unknown content encoding.
-1017
kCFURLErrorCannotParseResponse
NSURLErrorCannotParseResponse
The connection cannot parse the server’s response.
-1018
kCFURLErrorInternationalRoamingOff
The connection failed because international roaming is disabled on the device.
-1019
kCFURLErrorCallIsActive
The connection failed because a call is active.
-1020
kCFURLErrorDataNotAllowed
The connection failed because data use is currently not allowed on the device.
-1021
kCFURLErrorRequestBodyStreamExhausted
The connection failed because its request’s body stream was exhausted.

File Errors

Code Description
-1100
kCFURLErrorFileDoesNotExist
NSURLErrorFileDoesNotExist
The file operation failed because the file does not exist.
-1101
kCFURLErrorFileIsDirectory
NSURLErrorFileIsDirectory
The file operation failed because the file is a directory.
-1102
kCFURLErrorNoPermissionsToReadFile
NSURLErrorNoPermissionsToReadFile
The file operation failed because it does not have permission to read the file.
-1103
kCFURLErrorDataLengthExceedsMaximum
NSURLErrorDataLengthExceedsMaximum
The file operation failed because the file is too large.

SSL Errors

Code Description
-1200
kCFURLErrorSecureConnectionFailed
NSURLErrorSecureConnectionFailed
The secure connection failed for an unknown reason.
-1201
kCFURLErrorServerCertificateHasBadDate
NSURLErrorServerCertificateHasBadDate
The secure connection failed because the server’s certificate has an invalid date.
-1202
kCFURLErrorServerCertificateUntrusted
NSURLErrorServerCertificateUntrusted
The secure connection failed because the server’s certificate is not trusted.
-1203
kCFURLErrorServerCertificateHasUnknownRoot
NSURLErrorServerCertificateHasUnknownRoot
The secure connection failed because the server’s certificate has an unknown root.
-1204
kCFURLErrorServerCertificateNotYetValid
NSURLErrorServerCertificateNotYetValid
The secure connection failed because the server’s certificate is not yet valid.
-1205
kCFURLErrorClientCertificateRejected
NSURLErrorClientCertificateRejected
The secure connection failed because the client’s certificate was rejected.
-1206
kCFURLErrorClientCertificateRequired
NSURLErrorClientCertificateRequired
The secure connection failed because the server requires a client certificate.

Download and File I/O Errors

Code Description
-2000
kCFURLErrorCannotLoadFromNetwork
NSURLErrorCannotLoadFromNetwork
The connection failed because it is being required to return a cached resource, but one is not available.
-3000
kCFURLErrorCannotCreateFile
NSURLErrorCannotCreateFile
The file cannot be created.
-3001
kCFURLErrorCannotOpenFile
NSURLErrorCannotOpenFile
The file cannot be opened.
-3002
kCFURLErrorCannotCloseFile
NSURLErrorCannotCloseFile
The file cannot be closed.
-3003
kCFURLErrorCannotWriteToFile
NSURLErrorCannotWriteToFile
The file cannot be written.
-3004
kCFURLErrorCannotRemoveFile
NSURLErrorCannotRemoveFile
The file cannot be removed.
-3005
kCFURLErrorCannotMoveFile
NSURLErrorCannotMoveFile
The file cannot be moved.
-3006
kCFURLErrorDownloadDecodingFailedMidStream
NSURLErrorDownloadDecodingFailedMidStream
The download failed because decoding of the downloaded data failed mid-stream.
-3007
kCFURLErrorDownloadDecodingFailedToComplete
NSURLErrorDownloadDecodingFailedToComplete
The download failed because decoding of the downloaded data failed to complete.

Cookie errors

Code Description
-4000
kCFHTTPCookieCannotParseCookieFile
The cookie file cannot be parsed.

CFNetServices Errors

Code Description
-72000L
kCFNetServiceErrorUnknown
An unknown error occurred.
-72001L
kCFNetServiceErrorCollision
An attempt was made to use a name that is already in use.
-72002L
kCFNetServiceErrorNotFound
Not used.
-72003L
kCFNetServiceErrorInProgress
A new search could not be started because a search is already in progress.
-72004L
kCFNetServiceErrorBadArgument
A required argument was not provided or was not valid.
-72005L
kCFNetServiceErrorCancel
The search or service was cancelled.
-72006L
kCFNetServiceErrorInvalid
Invalid data was passed to a CFNetServices function.
-72007L
kCFNetServiceErrorTimeout
A search failed because it timed out.
-73000L
kCFNetServiceErrorDNSServiceFailure
An error from DNS discovery; look at kCFDNSServiceFailureKey to get the error number and interpret using dnssd.h

Having scrolled down through that huge table, you might be expecting the usual NSHipster philosophical wrap-up. Not this week. Do you have any idea how long it took to compile that table? It's all, like, NSRepetitiveStrainInjury up in here.

Such are the error of my ways.

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