Notice: You are browsing the documentation for PrestaShop 9, which is currently in development.
You might want to read the documentation for the current version, PrestaShop 8. Read the current version of this page
With introduction of domain driven design in PrestaShop, a new way of error handling in the code is seeing the daylight.
The code in PrestaShop\PrestaShop\Core\Domain
namespace started to utilize domain exceptions.
Let’s see how domain exceptions look like in the code.
For this example, let’s look at Category
domain:
.
├── Command
├── CommandHandler
├── Exception
│  ├── CannotAddCategoryException.php
│  ├── CannotDeleteImageException.php
│  ├── CannotDeleteRootCategoryForShopException.php
│  ├── CannotEditCategoryException.php
│  ├── CannotUpdateCategoryStatusException.php
│  ├── CategoryConstraintException.php
│  ├── CategoryException.php
│  ├── CategoryNotFoundException.php
│  ├── FailedToDeleteCategoryException.php
│  └── MenuThumbnailsLimitException.php
├── Query
├── QueryHandler
├── QueryResult
└── ValueObject
We can see the Exception
directory, which contains all category domain exceptions.
All domain exceptions are extending a base exception class.
In case of categories, all category exceptions are extending CategoryException
, which defines the Category
domain,
and CategoryException
extends PrestaShop\PrestaShop\Core\Domain\Exception\DomainException
,
which defines the PrestaShop’s domain.
Let’s analyze one exception from Category
domain, CannotEditCategoryException
:
<?php
namespace PrestaShop\PrestaShop\Core\Domain\Category\Exception;
/**
* Class CannotEditCategoryException is thrown when editing category fails.
*/
class CannotEditCategoryException extends CategoryException
{
}
As we can guess from the comment in the code, this exception is supposed to be thrown when editing a category fails. Let’s see a real usage in a command handler:
<?php
// src/Adapter/Category/CommandHandler/EditCategoryHandler.php
private function updateCategoryFromCommandData(Category $category, EditCategoryCommand $command)
{
// ...
if (false === $category->update()) {
throw new CannotEditCategoryException(
sprintf('Failed to edit Category with id "%s".', $category->id)
);
}
}
We can see in the code above, that if category update fails, it will throw a CannotEditCategoryException
.
The exception then needs to be handled in the upper layers of the code.
In our example all category domain exceptions are handled in the CategoryController
:
<?php
// src/PrestaShopBundle/Controller/Admin/Sell/Catalog/CategoryController.php
public function editAction($categoryId, Request $request)
{
try {
$editableCategory = $this->getQueryBus()->handle(new GetCategoryForEditing((int) $categoryId));
} catch (CategoryException $e) {
// Catching all exceptions from category domain
// and showing a specific error message for every exception type.
$this->addFlash('error', $this->getErrorMessageForException($e, $this->getErrorMessages()));
}
// ...
}
So now, if we are editing a category and it fails for some reason (e.g. the database is not responding),
the controller will catch the CannotEditCategoryException
(which is a child of CategoryException
) and display a specific error message to the user.
Having many different exception classes means that developers can easily recognize specific failures in the system. Just as we recognized category editing failure in our example, we can catch any particular exception and it will tell us what exactly failed in the runtime.
For example, catching a CategoryNotFoundException
lets us know when category is not found,
or catching CannotAddCategoryException
means that a category cannot be added. These exceptions carry accurate information that makes it easier to debug the issue or to handle the use case gracefully by displaying the right error message for example.
If we expand our previous example with a better overview with different exception types:
<?php
public function editAction($categoryId, Request $request)
{
try {
$editableCategory = $this->getQueryBus()->handle(new GetCategoryForEditing((int) $categoryId));
} catch (CannotEditCategoryException $e) {
// Here we handle the case when category cannot be edited, like display a specific error message and suggestions to fix it.
$this->addFlash('error', 'Something went wrong when editing category.');
} catch (CategoryNotFoundException $e) {
// Here we can do specific actions if the user is trying to edit a category that cannot be found, like redirect to category listing.
$this->addFlash('error', 'Category cannot be found!');
}
// ...
}