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Cmdlet error reporting

Cmdlets should report errors differently depending on whether the errors are terminating errors or non-terminating errors. Terminating errors are errors that cause the pipeline to be terminated immediately, or errors that occur when there's no reason to continue processing. Non-terminating errors are those errors that report a current error condition, but the cmdlet can continue to process input objects. With non-terminating errors, the user is typically notified of the problem, but the cmdlet continues to process the next input object.

Unless specified otherwise, all classes and methods mentioned in this document come from the System.Management.Automation namespace.

Terminating and non-terminating errors

The following guidelines can be used to determine if an error condition is a terminating error or a non-terminating error.

  • Does the error condition prevent your cmdlet from successfully processing any further input objects? If so, this is a terminating error.

  • Is the error condition related to a specific input object or a subset of input objects? If so, this is a non-terminating error.

  • Does the cmdlet accept multiple input objects, such that processing may succeed on another input object? If so, this is a non-terminating error.

  • Cmdlets that can accept multiple input objects should decide between what are terminating and non-terminating errors, even when a particular situation applies to only a single input object.

  • Cmdlets can receive any number of input objects and send any number of success or error objects before throwing a terminating exception. There's no relationship between the number of input objects received and the number of success and error objects sent.

  • Cmdlets that can accept only 0-1 input objects and generate only 0-1 output objects should treat errors as terminating errors and generate terminating exceptions.

Reporting non-terminating errors

The reporting of a non-terminating error should always be done within the cmdlet's implementation of the following methods:

These types of errors are reported by calling the Cmdlet.WriteError method that in turn sends an error record to the error stream.

Reporting terminating errors

Terminating errors are reported by throwing exceptions or by calling the Cmdlet.ThrowTerminatingError method. Be aware that cmdlets can also catch and rethrow exceptions such as OutOfMemory, however, they aren't required to rethrow exceptions as the PowerShell runtime will catch them as well.

You can also define your own exceptions for issues specific to your situation, or add additional information to an existing exception using its error record.

Error records

PowerShell describes a non-terminating error condition with ErrorRecord objects. Each object provides error category information, an optional target object, and details about the error condition.

Error identifiers

The error identifier is a simple string that identifies the error condition within the cmdlet. PowerShell combines this identifier with a cmdlet identifier to create a fully qualified error identifier that can be used later when filtering error streams or logging errors, when responding to specific errors, or with other user-specific activities.

The following guidelines should be followed when specifying error identifiers:

  • Assign different, highly specific, error identifiers to different code paths. Each code path that calls Cmdlet.WriteError or Cmdlet.ThrowTerminatingError should have its own error identifier.

  • Error identifiers should be unique to Common Language Runtime (CLR) exception types for both terminating and non-terminating errors.

  • Don't change the semantics of an error identifier between versions of your cmdlet or PowerShell provider. After the semantics of an error identifier is established, it should remain constant throughout the lifecycle of your cmdlet.

  • For terminating errors, use a unique error identifier for a particular CLR exception type. If the exception type changes, use a new error identifier.

  • For non-terminating errors, use a specific error identifier for a specific input object.

  • Choose text for the identifier that tersely corresponds to the error being reported. Don't use white space or punctuation.

  • Don't generate error identifiers that aren't reproducible. For example, don't generate identifiers that include a process identifier. Error identifiers are useful only when they correspond to identifiers that are seen by other users who are experiencing the same problem.

Error categories

Error categories are used to group errors for the user. PowerShell defines these categories and cmdlets and PowerShell providers must choose between them when generating the error record.

For a description of the error categories that are available, see the ErrorCategory enumeration. In general, you should avoid using NoError, UndefinedError, and GenericError whenever possible.

Users can view errors based on category when they set $ErrorView to CategoryView.

See also