MongoDB::Error - MongoDB Driver Error classes
version v1.3.2
use MongoDB::Error; MongoDB::Error->throw("a generic error"); MongoDB::DatabaseError->throw( message => $string, result => $hashref, );
This class defines a heirarchy of exception objects.
Unless otherwise explictly documented, all driver methods throw exceptions if an error occurs.
To catch and handle errors, the Try::Tiny and Safe::Isa modules are recommended:
use Try::Tiny; use Safe::Isa; # provides $_isa try { $coll->insert( $doc ) } catch { if ( $_->$_isa("MongoDB::DuplicateKeyError" ) ) { ... } else { ... } };
To retry failures automatically, consider using Try::Tiny::Retry.
MongoDB::Error | |->MongoDB::AuthError | |->MongoDB::ConnectionError | | | |->MongoDB::HandshakeError | | | |->MongoDB::NetworkError | |->MongoDB::CursorNotFoundError | |->MongoDB::DatabaseError | | | |->MongoDB::DuplicateKeyError | | | |->MongoDB::NotMasterError | | | |->MongoDB::WriteError | | | |->MongoDB::WriteConcernError | |->MongoDB::DecodingError | |->MongoDB::DocumentError | |->MongoDB::GridFSError | |->MongoDB::InternalError | |->MongoDB::ProtocolError | |->MongoDB::SelectionError | |->MongoDB::TimeoutError | | | |->MongoDB::ExecutionTimeout | | | |->MongoDB::NetworkTimeout | |->MongoDB::UsageError
All classes inherit from MongoDB::Error.
MongoDB::Error
All error classes have the attribute:
message — a text representation of the error
This error indicates a problem with authentication, either in the underlying mechanism or a problem authenticating with the server.
Errors related to network connections.
This error is thrown when a connection has been made, but SSL or authentication handshakes fail.
This error is thrown when a socket error occurs, when the wrong number of bytes are read, or other wire-related errors occur.
This error indicates that a cursor timed out on a server.
Errors related to database operations. Specifically, when an error of this type occurs, the driver has received an error condition from the server.
Attributes include:
result — response from a database command; this must impliement the last_errmsg method
last_errmsg
code — numeric error code; see "ERROR CODES"; if no code was provided by the database, the UNKNOWN_ERROR code will be substituted instead
UNKNOWN_ERROR
This error indicates that a write attempted to create a document with a duplicate key in a collection with a unique index. The result attribute is a result object.
result
This error indicates that a write or other state-modifying operation was attempted on a server that was not a primary. The result attribute is a MongoDB::CommandResult object.
Errors indicating failure of a write command. The result attribute is a result object.
Errors indicating failure of a write concern. The result attribute is a result object.
This error indicates a problem during BSON decoding; it wraps the error provided by the underlying BSON encoder. Note: Encoding errors will be thrown as a "MongoDB::DocumentError".
This error indicates a problem with a document to be inserted or replaced into the database, or used as an update document.
document — the document that caused the error
Errors related to GridFS operations, such a corrupted file.
Errors that indicate problems in the driver itself, typically when something unexpected is detected. These should be reported as potential bugs.
Errors related to the MongoDB wire protocol, typically problems parsing a database response packet.
When server selection fails for a given operation, this is thrown. For example, attempting a write when no primary is available or reading with a specific mode and tag set and no servers match.
These errors indicate a user-specified timeout has been exceeded.
This error is thrown when a query or command fails because max_time_ms has been reached. The result attribute is a MongoDB::CommandResult object.
max_time_ms
This error is thrown when a network operation exceeds a timeout, typically connect_timeout_ms or socket_timeout_ms.
connect_timeout_ms
socket_timeout_ms
Indicates invalid arguments or configuration options. Not all usage errors will throw this — only ones originating directly from the MongoDB::* library files. Some type and usage errors will originate from the Type::Tiny library if the objects are used incorrectly.
The following error code constants are automatically exported by this module.
BAD_VALUE => 2, UNKNOWN_ERROR => 8, NAMESPACE_NOT_FOUND => 26, EXCEEDED_TIME_LIMIT => 50, COMMAND_NOT_FOUND => 59, WRITE_CONCERN_ERROR => 64, NOT_MASTER => 10107, DUPLICATE_KEY => 11000, DUPLICATE_KEY_UPDATE => 11001, # legacy before 2.6 DUPLICATE_KEY_CAPPED => 12582, # legacy before 2.6 UNRECOGNIZED_COMMAND => 13390, # mongos error before 2.4 NOT_MASTER_NO_SLAVE_OK => 13435, NOT_MASTER_OR_SECONDARY => 13436, CANT_OPEN_DB_IN_READ_LOCK => 15927,
This is a very, very small subset of error codes possible from the server, but covers some of the more common ones seen by drivers.
Note:
Only MongoDB::DatabaseError objects have a code attribute.
MongoDB::DatabaseError
code
The database uses multiple write concern error codes. The driver maps them all to WRITE_CONCERN_ERROR for consistency and convenience.
David Golden <david@mongodb.com>
Mike Friedman <friedo@friedo.com>
Kristina Chodorow <k.chodorow@gmail.com>
Florian Ragwitz <rafl@debian.org>
This software is Copyright (c) 2016 by MongoDB, Inc..
This is free software, licensed under:
The Apache License, Version 2.0, January 2004
To install MongoDB, copy and paste the appropriate command in to your terminal.
cpanm
cpanm MongoDB
CPAN shell
perl -MCPAN -e shell install MongoDB
For more information on module installation, please visit the detailed CPAN module installation guide.