defmodule Mint.TransportError do @moduledoc """ Represents an error with the transport used by an HTTP connection. A `Mint.TransportError` struct is an exception, so it can be raised as any other exception. ## Struct fields This exception represents an error with the transport (TCP or SSL) used by an HTTP connection. The exception struct itself is opaque, that is, not all fields are public. The following are the public fields: * `:reason` - a term representing the error reason. The value of this field can be: * `:timeout` - if there's a timeout in interacting with the socket. * `:closed` - if the connection has been closed. * `:protocol_not_negotiated` - if the ALPN protocol negotiation failed. * `{:bad_alpn_protocol, protocol}` - when the ALPN protocol is not one of the supported protocols, which are `http/1.1` and `h2`. * `t::inet.posix/0` - if there's any other error with the socket, such as `:econnrefused` or `:nxdomain`. * `t::ssl.error_alert/0` - if there's an SSL error. ## 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.TransportError{} = error} = Mint.HTTP.connect(:http, "nonexistent", 80) iex> Exception.message(error) "non-existing domain" """ reason_type = quote do :timeout | :closed | :protocol_not_negotiated | {:bad_alpn_protocol, String.t()} | :inet.posix() end reason_type = if System.otp_release() >= "21" do quote do: unquote(reason_type) | :ssl.error_alert() else reason_type end @type t() :: %__MODULE__{reason: unquote(reason_type) | term()} defexception [:reason] def message(%__MODULE__{reason: reason}) do format_reason(reason) end ## Our reasons. defp format_reason(:protocol_not_negotiated) do "ALPN protocol not negotiated" end defp format_reason({:bad_alpn_protocol, protocol}) do "bad ALPN protocol #{inspect(protocol)}, supported protocols are \"http/1.1\" and \"h2\"" end defp format_reason(:closed) do "socket closed" end defp format_reason(:timeout) do "timeout" end # :ssl.format_error/1 falls back to :inet.format_error/1 when the error is not an SSL-specific # error (at least since OTP 19+), so we can just use that. defp format_reason(reason) do case :ssl.format_error(reason) do 'Unexpected error:' ++ _ -> inspect(reason) message -> List.to_string(message) end end end