Question

I'm trying to catch exceptions from a set of tests I'm running on an API I'm developing and I'm using Guzzle to consume the API methods. I've got the tests wrapped in a try/catch block but it is still throwing unhandled exception errors. Adding an event listener as described in their docs doesn't seem to do anything. I need to be able to retrieve the responses that have HTTP codes of 500, 401, 400, in fact anything that isn't 200 as the system will set the most appropriate code based on the result of the call if it didn't work.

Current code example

foreach($tests as $test){

        $client = new Client($api_url);
        $client->getEventDispatcher()->addListener('request.error', function(Event $event) {        

            if ($event['response']->getStatusCode() == 401) {
                $newResponse = new Response($event['response']->getStatusCode());
                $event['response'] = $newResponse;
                $event->stopPropagation();
            }            
        });

        try {

            $client->setDefaultOption('query', $query_string);
            $request = $client->get($api_version . $test['method'], array(), isset($test['query'])?$test['query']:array());


          // Do something with Guzzle.
            $response = $request->send();   
            displayTest($request, $response);
        }
        catch (Guzzle\Http\Exception\ClientErrorResponseException $e) {

            $req = $e->getRequest();
            $resp =$e->getResponse();
            displayTest($req,$resp);
        }
        catch (Guzzle\Http\Exception\ServerErrorResponseException $e) {

            $req = $e->getRequest();
            $resp =$e->getResponse();
            displayTest($req,$resp);
        }
        catch (Guzzle\Http\Exception\BadResponseException $e) {

            $req = $e->getRequest();
            $resp =$e->getResponse();
            displayTest($req,$resp);
        }
        catch( Exception $e){
            echo "AGH!";
        }

        unset($client);
        $client=null;

    }

Even with the specific catch block for the thrown exception type I am still getting back

Fatal error: Uncaught exception 'Guzzle\Http\Exception\ClientErrorResponseException' with message 'Client error response [status code] 401 [reason phrase] Unauthorized [url]

and all execution on the page stops, as you'd expect. The addition of the BadResponseException catch allowed me to catch 404s correctly, but this doesn't seem to work for 500 or 401 responses. Can anyone suggest where I am going wrong please.

Was it helpful?

Solution 4

If the Exception is being thrown in that try block then at worst case scenario Exception should be catching anything uncaught.

Consider that the first part of the test is throwing the Exception and wrap that in the try block as well.

OTHER TIPS

Depending on your project, disabling exceptions for guzzle might be necessary. Sometimes coding rules disallow exceptions for flow control. You can disable exceptions for Guzzle 3 like this:

$client = new \Guzzle\Http\Client($httpBase, array(
  'request.options' => array(
     'exceptions' => false,
   )
));

This does not disable curl exceptions for something like timeouts, but now you can get every status code easily:

$request = $client->get($uri);
$response = $request->send();
$statuscode = $response->getStatusCode();

To check, if you got a valid code, you can use something like this:

if ($statuscode > 300) {
  // Do some error handling
}

... or better handle all expected codes:

if (200 === $statuscode) {
  // Do something
}
elseif (304 === $statuscode) {
  // Nothing to do
}
elseif (404 === $statuscode) {
  // Clean up DB or something like this
}
else {
  throw new MyException("Invalid response from api...");
}

For Guzzle 5.3

$client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['defaults' => [ 'exceptions' => false ]] );

Thanks to @mika

For Guzzle 6

$client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['http_errors' => false]);

To catch Guzzle errors you can do something like this:

try {
    $response = $client->get('/not_found.xml')->send();
} catch (Guzzle\Http\Exception\BadResponseException $e) {
    echo 'Uh oh! ' . $e->getMessage();
}

... but, to be able to "log" or "resend" your request try something like this:

// Add custom error handling to any request created by this client
$client->getEventDispatcher()->addListener(
    'request.error', 
    function(Event $event) {

        //write log here ...

        if ($event['response']->getStatusCode() == 401) {

            // create new token and resend your request...
            $newRequest = $event['request']->clone();
            $newRequest->setHeader('X-Auth-Header', MyApplication::getNewAuthToken());
            $newResponse = $newRequest->send();

            // Set the response object of the request without firing more events
            $event['response'] = $newResponse;

            // You can also change the response and fire the normal chain of
            // events by calling $event['request']->setResponse($newResponse);

            // Stop other events from firing when you override 401 responses
            $event->stopPropagation();
        }

});

... or if you want to "stop event propagation" you can overridde event listener (with a higher priority than -255) and simply stop event propagation.

$client->getEventDispatcher()->addListener('request.error', function(Event $event) {
if ($event['response']->getStatusCode() != 200) {
        // Stop other events from firing when you get stytus-code != 200
        $event->stopPropagation();
    }
});

thats a good idea to prevent guzzle errors like:

request.CRITICAL: Uncaught PHP Exception Guzzle\Http\Exception\ClientErrorResponseException: "Client error response

in your application.

In my case I was throwing Exception on a namespaced file, so php tried to catch My\Namespace\Exception therefore not catching any exceptions at all.

Worth checking if catch (Exception $e) is finding the right Exception class.

Just try catch (\Exception $e) (with that \ there) and see if it works.

You need to add a extra parameter with http_errors => false

$request = $client->get($url, ['http_errors' => false]);

I want to update the answer for exception handling in Psr-7 Guzzle, Guzzle7 and HTTPClient(expressive, minimal API around the Guzzle HTTP client provided by laravel).

Guzzle7 (same works for Guzzle 6 as well)

Using RequestException, RequestException catches any exception that can be thrown while transferring requests.

try{
  $client = new \GuzzleHttp\Client(['headers' => ['Authorization' => 'Bearer ' . $token]]);
  
  $guzzleResponse = $client->get('/foobar');
  // or can use
  // $guzzleResponse = $client->request('GET', '/foobar')
    if ($guzzleResponse->getStatusCode() == 200) {
         $response = json_decode($guzzleResponse->getBody(),true);
         //perform your action with $response 
    } 
}
catch(\GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException $e){
   // you can catch here 400 response errors and 500 response errors
   // You can either use logs here use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Log;
   $error['error'] = $e->getMessage();
   $error['request'] = $e->getRequest();
   if($e->hasResponse()){
       if ($e->getResponse()->getStatusCode() == '400'){
           $error['response'] = $e->getResponse(); 
       }
   }
   Log::error('Error occurred in get request.', ['error' => $error]);
}catch(Exception $e){
   //other errors 
}

Psr7 Guzzle

use GuzzleHttp\Psr7;
use GuzzleHttp\Exception\RequestException;

try {
    $client->request('GET', '/foo');
} catch (RequestException $e) {
    $error['error'] = $e->getMessage();
    $error['request'] = Psr7\Message::toString($e->getRequest());
    if ($e->hasResponse()) {
        $error['response'] = Psr7\Message::toString($e->getResponse());
    }
    Log::error('Error occurred in get request.', ['error' => $error]);
}

For HTTPClient

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Http;
try{
    $response = Http::get('http://api.foo.com');
    if($response->successful()){
        $reply = $response->json();
    }
    if($response->failed()){
        if($response->clientError()){
            //catch all 400 exceptions
            Log::debug('client Error occurred in get request.');
            $response->throw();
        }
        if($response->serverError()){
            //catch all 500 exceptions
            Log::debug('server Error occurred in get request.');
            $response->throw();
        }
        
    }
 }catch(Exception $e){
     //catch the exception here
 }

Old question, but Guzzle adds the response within the exception object. So a simple try-catch on GuzzleHttp\Exception\ClientException and then using getResponse on that exception to see what 400-level error and continuing from there.

I was catching GuzzleHttp\Exception\BadResponseException as @dado is suggesting. But one day I got GuzzleHttp\Exception\ConnectException when DNS for domain wasn't available. So my suggestion is - catch GuzzleHttp\Exception\ConnectException to be safe about DNS errors as well.

If you are using the latest version say 6^ and you have a JSON parameter, you can add 'http_errors' => false to the array together with the JSON as seen below enter image description here

I was looking out for away to do this i.e with my JSON in there but couldn't find a straight answer.

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