Skip to content

Small lib for recovering stack trace in exceptions thrown in Kotlin coroutines

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

p4654545/stacktrace-decoroutinator-jacoco

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

76 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Maven Central

Stacktrace-decoroutinator

Library for recovering stack trace in exceptions thrown in Kotlin coroutines.

Supports JVM 1.8 or higher and Android API 26 or higher.

Motivation

Coroutines is a significant Kotlin feature which allows you to write asynchronous code in synchronous style.

It's absolutely perfect until you need to investigate problems in your code.

One of the common problems is the shortened stack trace in exceptions thrown in coroutines. For example, this code prints out the stack trace below:

import kotlinx.coroutines.delay
import kotlinx.coroutines.runBlocking

suspend fun fun1() {
    delay(10)
    throw Exception("exception at ${System.currentTimeMillis()}")
}

suspend fun fun2() {
    fun1()
    delay(10)
}

suspend fun fun3() {
    fun2()
    delay(10)
}

fun main() {
    try {
        runBlocking {
            fun3()
        }
    } catch (e: Exception) {
        e.printStackTrace()
    }
}
java.lang.Exception: exception at 1641842199891
  at MainKt.fun1(main.kt:6)
  at MainKt$fun1$1.invokeSuspend(main.kt)
  at kotlin.coroutines.jvm.internal.BaseContinuationImpl.resumeWith(ContinuationImpl.kt:33)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.DispatchedTaskKt.resume(DispatchedTask.kt:234)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.DispatchedTaskKt.dispatch(DispatchedTask.kt:166)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.dispatchResume(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:397)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.resumeImpl(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:431)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.resumeImpl$default(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:420)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.resumeUndispatched(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:518)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.EventLoopImplBase$DelayedResumeTask.run(EventLoop.common.kt:494)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.EventLoopImplBase.processNextEvent(EventLoop.common.kt:279)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.BlockingCoroutine.joinBlocking(Builders.kt:85)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt__BuildersKt.runBlocking(Builders.kt:59)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt.runBlocking(Unknown Source)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt__BuildersKt.runBlocking$default(Builders.kt:38)
  at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt.runBlocking$default(Unknown Source)
  at MainKt.main(main.kt:21)
  at MainKt.main(main.kt)

The stack trace doesn't represent the true coroutine call stack: calls of functions fun3 and fun2 are absent.

In complex systems, even more calls may be missing. This can make debugging much more difficult.

Some examples of suffering from this problem:

The Kotlin team are known about the problem and has come up with a solution, but it solves just a part of the cases. For example, the exception from the example above still lacks some calls.

Solution

Stacktrace-decoroutinator replaces the coroutine awakening implementation.

It generates methods at runtime with names that match the entire coroutine call stack.

These methods don't do anything except call each other in the coroutine call stack order.

Thus, if the coroutine throws an exception, they mimic the real call stack of the coroutine during the creation of the exception stacktrace.

JVM

There are three ways to enable Stacktrace-decoroutinator for JVM.

  1. (recommended) Add dependency dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator:stacktrace-decoroutinator-jvm:2.3.4 and call method DecoroutinatorRuntime.load().
  2. Add -javaagent:stacktrace-decoroutinator-jvm-agent-2.3.4.jar to your JVM start arguments. Corresponding dependency is dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator:stacktrace-decoroutinator-jvm-agent:2.3.4.
  3. (less recommended) Add dependency dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator:stacktrace-decoroutinator-jvm-legacy:2.3.4 and call method DecoroutinatorRuntime.load(). This way doesn't use Java instrumentation API unlike the way number 1.

Usage example:

import dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator.runtime.DecoroutinatorRuntime
import kotlinx.coroutines.delay
import kotlinx.coroutines.runBlocking

suspend fun rec(depth: Int) {
    if (depth == 0) {
        delay(100)
        throw Exception("exception at ${System.currentTimeMillis()}")
    }
    rec(depth - 1)
}

fun main() {
    DecoroutinatorRuntime.load() // enable stacktrace-decoroutinator runtime
    try {
        runBlocking {
            rec(10)
        }
    } catch (e: Exception) {
        e.printStackTrace() // prints out full stack trace with 10 recursive calls
    }
}

prints out:

java.lang.Exception: exception at 1653565535416
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:8)
	at ExampleKt$rec$1.invokeSuspend(example.kt)
	at kotlin.coroutines.jvm.internal.BaseContinuationImpl$resumeWith$1.invoke(continuation-stdlib.kt:20)
	at kotlin.coroutines.jvm.internal.BaseContinuationImpl$resumeWith$1.invoke(continuation-stdlib.kt:18)
	at dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator.stdlib.StdlibKt.decoroutinatorResumeWith$lambda-1(stdlib.kt:34)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt.rec(example.kt:10)
	at ExampleKt$main$1.invokeSuspend(example.kt:17)
	at dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator.stdlib.StdlibKt.decoroutinatorResumeWith(stdlib.kt:110)
	at kotlin.coroutines.jvm.internal.BaseContinuationImpl.resumeWith(continuation-stdlib.kt:18)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.DispatchedTaskKt.resume(DispatchedTask.kt:234)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.DispatchedTaskKt.dispatch(DispatchedTask.kt:166)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.dispatchResume(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:397)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.resumeImpl(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:431)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.resumeImpl$default(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:420)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.CancellableContinuationImpl.resumeUndispatched(CancellableContinuationImpl.kt:518)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.EventLoopImplBase$DelayedResumeTask.run(EventLoop.common.kt:489)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.EventLoopImplBase.processNextEvent(EventLoop.common.kt:274)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.BlockingCoroutine.joinBlocking(Builders.kt:85)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt__BuildersKt.runBlocking(Builders.kt:59)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt.runBlocking(Unknown Source)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt__BuildersKt.runBlocking$default(Builders.kt:38)
	at kotlinx.coroutines.BuildersKt.runBlocking$default(Unknown Source)
	at ExampleKt.main(example.kt:16)
	at ExampleKt.main(example.kt)

Android

To enable Stacktrace-decoroutinator for Android you should add dependency dev.reformator.stacktracedecoroutinator:stacktrace-decoroutinator-android:2.3.4 in your Android application and call method DecoroutinatorRuntime.load() before creating any coroutines.

It's recomended to add DecoroutinatorRuntime.load() call in your Application.onCreate() method. Example:

class MyApp: Application() {
    override fun onCreate() {
        DecoroutinatorRuntime.load()
        super.onCreate()
    }
}

Communication

Feel free to ask any question at Discussions.

About

Small lib for recovering stack trace in exceptions thrown in Kotlin coroutines

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Kotlin 94.8%
  • Java 5.2%