"Inner exception" (with traceback) in Python?

PythonExceptionError Handling

Python Problem Overview


My background is in C# and I've just recently started programming in Python. When an exception is thrown I typically want to wrap it in another exception that adds more information, while still showing the full stack trace. It's quite easy in C#, but how do I do it in Python?

Eg. in C# I would do something like this:

try
{
  ProcessFile(filePath);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
  throw new ApplicationException("Failed to process file " + filePath, ex);
}

In Python I can do something similar:

try:
  ProcessFile(filePath)
except Exception as e:
  raise Exception('Failed to process file ' + filePath, e)

...but this loses the traceback of the inner exception!

Edit: I'd like to see both exception messages and both stack traces and correlate the two. That is, I want to see in the output that exception X occurred here and then exception Y there - same as I would in C#. Is this possible in Python 2.6? Looks like the best I can do so far (based on Glenn Maynard's answer) is:

try:
  ProcessFile(filePath)
except Exception as e:
  raise Exception('Failed to process file' + filePath, e), None, sys.exc_info()[2]

This includes both the messages and both the tracebacks, but it doesn't show which exception occurred where in the traceback.

Python Solutions


Solution 1 - Python

Python 3

In python 3 you can do the following:

try:
    raise MyExceptionToBeWrapped("I have twisted my ankle")

except MyExceptionToBeWrapped as e:

    raise MyWrapperException("I'm not in a good shape") from e

This will produce something like this:

   Traceback (most recent call last):
   ...
   MyExceptionToBeWrapped: ("I have twisted my ankle")

The above exception was the direct cause of the following exception:

   Traceback (most recent call last):
   ...
   MyWrapperException: ("I'm not in a good shape")

Solution 2 - Python

Python 2

It's simple; pass the traceback as the third argument to raise.

import sys
class MyException(Exception): pass

try:
    raise TypeError("test")
except TypeError, e:
    raise MyException(), None, sys.exc_info()[2]

Always do this when catching one exception and re-raising another.

Solution 3 - Python

Python 3 has the raise ... from clause to chain exceptions. Glenn's answer is great for Python 2.7, but it only uses the original exception's traceback and throws away the error message and other details. Here are some examples in Python 2.7 that add context information from the current scope into the original exception's error message, but keep other details intact.

Known Exception Type

try:
    sock_common = xmlrpclib.ServerProxy(rpc_url+'/common')
    self.user_id = sock_common.login(self.dbname, username, self.pwd)
except IOError:
    _, ex, traceback = sys.exc_info()
    message = "Connecting to '%s': %s." % (config['connection'],
                                           ex.strerror)
    raise IOError, (ex.errno, message), traceback

That flavour of raise statement takes the exception type as the first expression, the exception class constructor arguments in a tuple as the second expression, and the traceback as the third expression. If you're running earlier than Python 2.2, see the warnings on sys.exc_info().

Any Exception Type

Here's another example that's more general purpose if you don't know what kind of exceptions your code might have to catch. The downside is that it loses the exception type and just raises a RuntimeError. You have to import the traceback module.

except Exception:
    extype, ex, tb = sys.exc_info()
    formatted = traceback.format_exception_only(extype, ex)[-1]
    message = "Importing row %d, %s" % (rownum, formatted)
    raise RuntimeError, message, tb

Modify the Message

Here's another option if the exception type will let you add context to it. You can modify the exception's message and then reraise it.

import subprocess

try:
    final_args = ['lsx', '/home']
    s = subprocess.check_output(final_args)
except OSError as ex:
    ex.strerror += ' for command {}'.format(final_args)
    raise

That generates the following stack trace:

Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "/mnt/data/don/workspace/scratch/scratch.py", line 5, in <module>
    s = subprocess.check_output(final_args)
  File "/usr/lib/python2.7/subprocess.py", line 566, in check_output
    process = Popen(stdout=PIPE, *popenargs, **kwargs)
  File "/usr/lib/python2.7/subprocess.py", line 710, in __init__
    errread, errwrite)
  File "/usr/lib/python2.7/subprocess.py", line 1327, in _execute_child
    raise child_exception
OSError: [Errno 2] No such file or directory for command ['lsx', '/home']

You can see that it shows the line where check_output() was called, but the exception message now includes the command line.

Solution 4 - Python

In Python 3.x:

raise Exception('Failed to process file ' + filePath).with_traceback(e.__traceback__)

or simply

except Exception:
    raise MyException()

which will propagate MyException but print both exceptions if it will not be handled.

In Python 2.x:

raise Exception, 'Failed to process file ' + filePath, e

You can prevent printing both exceptions by killing the __context__ attribute. Here I write a context manager using that to catch and change your exception on the fly: (see http://docs.python.org/3.1/library/stdtypes.html for expanation of how they work)

try: # Wrap the whole program into the block that will kill __context__.

    class Catcher(Exception):
        '''This context manager reraises an exception under a different name.'''

        def __init__(self, name):
            super().__init__('Failed to process code in {!r}'.format(name))
            
        def __enter__(self):
            return self
        
        def __exit__(self, exc_type, exc_val, exc_tb):
            if exc_type is not None:
                self.__traceback__ = exc_tb
                raise self
    
    ...

    
    with Catcher('class definition'):
        class a:
            def spam(self):
                # not really pass, but you get the idea
                pass
    
            lut = [1,
                   3,
                   17,
                   [12,34],
                   5,
                   _spam]
    
    
        assert a().lut[-1] == a.spam
       
    ...
    

except Catcher as e:
    e.__context__ = None
    raise

Solution 5 - Python

I don't think you can do this in Python 2.x, but something similar to this functionality is part of Python 3. From PEP 3134:

> In today's Python implementation, exceptions are composed of three parts: the type, the value, and the traceback. The 'sys' module, exposes the current exception in three parallel variables, exc_type, exc_value, and exc_traceback, the sys.exc_info() function returns a tuple of these three parts, and the 'raise' statement has a three-argument form accepting these three parts. Manipulating exceptions often requires passing these three things in parallel, which can be tedious and error-prone. Additionally, the 'except' statement can only provide access to the value, not the traceback. Adding the 'traceback' attribute to exception values makes all the exception information accessible from a single place.

Comparison to C#:

> Exceptions in C# contain a read-only 'InnerException' property that may point to another exception. Its documentation [10] says that "When an exception X is thrown as a direct result of a previous exception Y, the InnerException property of X should contain a reference to Y." This property is not set by the VM automatically; rather, all exception constructors take an optional 'innerException' argument to set it explicitly. The 'cause' attribute fulfills the same purpose as InnerException, but this PEP proposes a new form of 'raise' rather than extending the constructors of all exceptions. C# also provides a GetBaseException method that jumps directly to the end of the InnerException chain; this PEP proposes no analog.

Note also that Java, Ruby and Perl 5 don't support this type of thing either. Quoting again:

> As for other languages, Java and Ruby both discard the original exception when another exception occurs in a 'catch'/'rescue' or 'finally'/'ensure' clause. Perl 5 lacks built-in structured exception handling. For Perl 6, RFC number 88 [9] proposes an exception mechanism that implicitly retains chained exceptions in an array named @@.

Solution 6 - Python

For maximum compatibility between Python 2 and 3, you can use raise_from in the six library. https://six.readthedocs.io/#six.raise_from . Here is your example (slightly modified for clarity):

import six

try:
  ProcessFile(filePath)
except Exception as e:
  six.raise_from(IOError('Failed to process file ' + repr(filePath)), e)

Solution 7 - Python

You could use my CausedException class to chain exceptions in Python 2.x (and even in Python 3 it can be useful in case you want to give more than one caught exception as cause to a newly raised exception). Maybe it can help you.

Solution 8 - Python

Maybe you could grab the relevant information and pass it up? I'm thinking something like:

import traceback
import sys
import StringIO

class ApplicationError:
    def __init__(self, value, e):
        s = StringIO.StringIO()
        traceback.print_exc(file=s)
        self.value = (value, s.getvalue())
        
    def __str__(self):
        return repr(self.value)

try:
    try:
        a = 1/0
    except Exception, e:
        raise ApplicationError("Failed to process file", e)
except Exception, e:
    print e

Solution 9 - Python

Assuming:

  • you need a solution, which works for Python 2 (for pure Python 3 see raise ... from solution)
  • just want to enrich the error message, e.g. providing some additional context
  • need the full stack trace

you can use a simple solution from the docs https://docs.python.org/3/tutorial/errors.html#raising-exceptions:

try:
    raise NameError('HiThere')
except NameError:
    print 'An exception flew by!' # print or log, provide details about context
    raise # reraise the original exception, keeping full stack trace

The output:

An exception flew by!
Traceback (most recent call last):
  File "<stdin>", line 2, in ?
NameError: HiThere

It looks like the key piece is the simplified 'raise' keyword that stands alone. That will re-raise the Exception in the except block.

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Content TypeOriginal AuthorOriginal Content on Stackoverflow
QuestionEMPView Question on Stackoverflow
Solution 1 - PythonAlexei TenitskiView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 2 - PythonGlenn MaynardView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 3 - PythonDon KirkbyView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 4 - Pythonilya n.View Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 5 - Pythonire_and_cursesView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 6 - PythonLexHView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 7 - PythonAlfeView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 8 - PythonbroolView Answer on Stackoverflow
Solution 9 - PythonatreatView Answer on Stackoverflow