Thursday, 13 March 2014

ASP.NET Error Handling



Overview

ASP.NET applications must be able to handle errors that occur during execution in a consistent manner. ASP.NET uses the common language runtime (CLR), which provides a way of notifying applications of errors in a uniform way. When an error occurs, an exception is thrown. An exception is any error, condition, or unexpected behavior that an application encounters.
In the .NET Framework, an exception is an object that inherits from the System.Exception class. An exception is thrown from an area of code where a problem has occurred. The exception is passed up the call stack to a place where the application provides code to handle the exception. If the application does not handle the exception, the browser is forced to display the error details.
As a best practice, handle errors in at the code level in Try/Catch/Finally blocks within your code. Try to place these blocks so that the user can correct problems in the context in which they occur. If the error handling blocks are too far away from where the error occurred, it becomes more difficult to provide users with the information they need to fix the problem.

Exception Class

The Exception class is the base class from which exceptions inherit. Most exception objects are instances of some derived class of the Exception class, such as the SystemException class, the IndexOutOfRangeException class, or the ArgumentNullException class. The Exception class has properties, such as the StackTrace property, the InnerException property, and the Message property, that provide specific information about the error that has occurred.

Exception Inheritance Hierarchy

The runtime has a base set of exceptions deriving from the SystemException class that the runtime throws when an exception is encountered. Most of the classes that inherit from the Exception class, such as the IndexOutOfRangeException class and the ArgumentNullException class, do not implement additional members. Therefore, the most important information for an exception can be found in the hierarchy of exceptions, the exception name, and the information contained in the exception.

Exception Handling Hierarchy

In an ASP.NET Web Forms application, exceptions can be handled based on a specific handling hierarchy. An exception can be handled at the following levels:
  • Application level
  • Page level
  • Code level
When an application handles exceptions, additional information about the exception that is inherited from the Exception class can often be retrieved and displayed to the user. In addition to application, page, and code level, you can also handle exceptions at the HTTP module level and by using an IIS custom handler.

Application Level Error Handling

You can handle default errors at the application level either by modifying your application’s configuration or by adding an Application_Error handler in the Global.asax file of your application.
You can handle default errors and HTTP errors by adding a customErrors section to the Web.config file. The customErrors section allows you to specify a default page that users will be redirected to when an error occurs. It also allows you to specify individual pages for specific status code errors.
<configuration>
  <system.web>
    <customErrors mode="On" defaultRedirect="ErrorPage.aspx?handler=customErrors%20section%20-%20Web.config">
      <error statusCode="404" redirect="ErrorPage.aspx?msg=404&amp;handler=customErrors%20section%20-%20Web.config"/>
    </customErrors>
  </system.web>
</configuration>
Unfortunately, when you use the configuration to redirect the user to a different page, you do not have the details of the error that occurred.
However, you can trap errors that occur anywhere in your application by adding code to the Application_Error handler in the Global.asax file.
void Application_Error(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    Exception exc = Server.GetLastError();

    if (exc is HttpUnhandledException)
    {
        // Pass the error on to the error page.
        Server.Transfer("ErrorPage.aspx?handler=Application_Error%20-%20Global.asax", true);
    }
}

Page Level Error Event Handling

A page-level handler returns the user to the page where the error occurred, but because instances of controls are not maintained, there will no longer be anything on the page. To provide the error details to the user of the application, you must specifically write the error details to the page.
You would typically use a page-level error handler to log unhandled errors or to take the user to a page that can display helpful information.
This code example shows a handler for the Error event in an ASP.NET Web page. This handler catches all exceptions that are not already handled within try/catch blocks in the page.
        private void Page_Error(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            Exception exc = Server.GetLastError();

            // Handle specific exception.
            if (exc is HttpUnhandledException)
            {
                ErrorMsgTextBox.Text = "An error occurred on this page. Please verify your " +                  
                "information to resolve the issue."
            }
            // Clear the error from the server.
            Server.ClearError();
        }
After you handle an error, you must clear it by calling the ClearError method of the Server object (HttpServerUtility class), otherwise you will see an error that has previously occurred.

Code Level Error Handling

The try-catch statement consists of a try block followed by one or more catch clauses, which specify handlers for different exceptions. When an exception is thrown, the common language runtime (CLR) looks for the catch statement that handles this exception. If the currently executing method does not contain a catch block, the CLR looks at the method that called the current method, and so on, up the call stack. If no catch block is found, then the CLR displays an unhandled exception message to the user and stops execution of the program.
The following code example shows a common way of using try/catch/finally to handle errors.
    try
    {
        file.ReadBlock(buffer, index, buffer.Length);
    }
    catch (FileNotFoundException e)
    {
        Server.Transfer("NoFileErrorPage.aspx", true);
    }
    catch (System.IO.IOException e)
    {
        Server.Transfer("IOErrorPage.aspx", true);
    }

    finally
    {
        if (file != null)
        {
            file.Close();
        }
    }
In the above code, the try block contains the code that needs to be guarded against a possible exception. The block is executed until either an exception is thrown or the block is completed successfully. If either a FileNotFoundException exception or an IOException exception occurs, the execution is transferred to a different page. Then, the code contained in the finally block is executed, whether an error occurred or not.

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