JavaScript global event mechanism
sophisticated error handling
If your error handling is very sophisticated and therefore might throw an error itself, it is useful to add a flag indicating if you are already in "errorHandling-Mode". Like so:
var appIsHandlingError = false;
window.onerror = function() {
if (!appIsHandlingError) {
appIsHandlingError = true;
handleError();
}
};
function handleError() {
// graceful error handling
// if successful: appIsHandlingError = false;
}
Otherwise you could find yourself in an infinite loop.
Does this help you:
<script type="text/javascript">
window.onerror = function() {
alert("Error caught");
};
xxx();
</script>
I'm not sure how it handles Flash errors though...
Update: it doesn't work in Opera, but I'm hacking Dragonfly right now to see what it gets. Suggestion about hacking Dragonfly came from this question:
Mimic Window. onerror in Opera using javascript
How to Catch Unhandled Javascript Errors
Assign the window.onerror
event to an event handler like:
<script type="text/javascript">
window.onerror = function(msg, url, line, col, error) {
// Note that col & error are new to the HTML 5 spec and may not be
// supported in every browser. It worked for me in Chrome.
var extra = !col ? '' : '\ncolumn: ' + col;
extra += !error ? '' : '\nerror: ' + error;
// You can view the information in an alert to see things working like this:
alert("Error: " + msg + "\nurl: " + url + "\nline: " + line + extra);
// TODO: Report this error via ajax so you can keep track
// of what pages have JS issues
var suppressErrorAlert = true;
// If you return true, then error alerts (like in older versions of
// Internet Explorer) will be suppressed.
return suppressErrorAlert;
};
</script>
As commented in the code, if the return value of window.onerror
is true
then the browser should suppress showing an alert dialog.
When does the window.onerror Event Fire?
In a nutshell, the event is raised when either 1.) there is an uncaught exception or 2.) a compile time error occurs.
uncaught exceptions
- throw "some messages"
- call_something_undefined();
- cross_origin_iframe.contentWindow.document;, a security exception
compile error
<script>{</script>
<script>for(;)</script>
<script>"oops</script>
setTimeout("{", 10);
, it will attempt to compile the first argument as a script
Browsers supporting window.onerror
- Chrome 13+
- Firefox 6.0+
- Internet Explorer 5.5+
- Opera 11.60+
- Safari 5.1+
Screenshot:
Example of the onerror code above in action after adding this to a test page:
<script type="text/javascript">
call_something_undefined();
</script>
Example for AJAX error reporting
var error_data = {
url: document.location.href,
};
if(error != null) {
error_data['name'] = error.name; // e.g. ReferenceError
error_data['message'] = error.line;
error_data['stack'] = error.stack;
} else {
error_data['msg'] = msg;
error_data['filename'] = filename;
error_data['line'] = line;
error_data['col'] = col;
}
var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
xhr.open('POST', '/ajax/log_javascript_error');
xhr.setRequestHeader('X-Requested-With', 'XMLHttpRequest');
xhr.setRequestHeader('Content-Type', 'application/json');
xhr.onload = function() {
if (xhr.status === 200) {
console.log('JS error logged');
} else if (xhr.status !== 200) {
console.error('Failed to log JS error.');
console.error(xhr);
console.error(xhr.status);
console.error(xhr.responseText);
}
};
xhr.send(JSON.stringify(error_data));
JSFiddle:
https://jsfiddle.net/nzfvm44d/
References:
- Mozilla Developer Network :: window.onerror
- MSDN :: Handling and Avoiding Web Page Errors Part 2: Run-Time Errors
- Back to Basics – JavaScript onerror Event
- DEV.OPERA :: Better error handling with window.onerror
- Window onError Event
- Using the onerror event to suppress JavaScript errors
- SO :: window.onerror not firing in Firefox