View Source Mint.HTTPError exception (Mint v1.4.2)
An HTTP error.
This exception struct is used to represent HTTP errors of all sorts and for both HTTP/1 and HTTP/2.
A Mint.HTTPError
struct is an exception, so it can be raised as any
other exception.
struct
Struct
The Mint.HTTPError
struct is opaque, that is, not all of its fields are public.
The list of public fields is:
:reason
- the error reason. Can be one of:a term of type
Mint.HTTP1.error_reason/0
. See its documentation for more information.a term of type
Mint.HTTP2.error_reason/0
. See its documentation for more information.{:proxy, reason}
, which is used when an HTTP error happens when connecting to a tunnel proxy.reason
can be::tunnel_timeout
- when the tunnel times out.{:unexpected_status, status}
- when the proxy returns an unexpected statusstatus
.{:unexpected_trailing_responses, responses}
- when the proxy returns unexpected responses (responses
).
message-representation
Message representation
If you want to convert an error reason to a human-friendly message (for example
for using in logs), you can use Exception.message/1
:
iex> {:error, %Mint.HTTPError{} = error} = Mint.HTTP.connect(:http, "badresponse.com", 80)
iex> Exception.message(error)
"the response contains two or more Content-Length headers"
Link to this section Summary
Functions
Callback implementation for Exception.message/1
.
Link to this section Types
@type proxy_reason() :: {:proxy, Mint.HTTP1.error_reason() | Mint.HTTP2.error_reason() | :tunnel_timeout | {:unexpected_status, non_neg_integer()} | {:unexpected_trailing_responses, list()}}
@type t() :: %Mint.HTTPError{ __exception__: term(), module: term(), reason: Mint.HTTP1.error_reason() | Mint.HTTP2.error_reason() | proxy_reason() | term() }
Link to this section Functions
Callback implementation for Exception.message/1
.