On 28 February 2018 at 08:49, Jeff King <peff@xxxxxxxx> wrote: > On Wed, Feb 28, 2018 at 07:42:51AM +0000, Eric Wong wrote: > >> > > > a) We could override the meaning of die() in Git.pm. This feels >> > > > ugly but if it works, it would be a very small patch. >> > > >> > > Unlikely to work since I think we use eval {} to trap exceptions >> > > from die. >> > > >> > > > b) We could forbid use of die() and use some git_die() instead (but >> > > > with a better name) for our own error handling. >> > > >> > > Call sites may be dual-use: "die" can either be caught by an >> > > eval or used to show an error message to the user. >> >> <snip> >> >> > > > d) We could wrap each command in an eval {...} block to convert the >> > > > result from die() to exit 128. >> > > >> > > I prefer option d) >> > >> > FWIW, I agree with all of that. You can do (d) without an enclosing eval >> > block by just hooking the __DIE__ handler, like: >> > >> > $SIG{__DIE__} = sub { >> > print STDERR "fatal: @_\n"; >> > exit 128; >> > }; >> >> Looks like it has the same problems I pointed out with a) and b). > > You're right. I cut down my example too much and dropped the necessary > eval magic. Try this: > > -- >8 -- > SIG{__DIE__} = sub { > CORE::die @_ if $^S || !defined($^S); > print STDERR "fatal: @_"; > exit 128; > }; FWIW, this doesn't need to use CORE::die like that unless you have code that overrides die() or CORE::GLOBAL::die, which would be pretty unusual. die() within $SIG{__DIE__} is special cased not to trigger $SIG{__DIE__} again. Of course it doesn't hurt, but it might make a perl hacker do a double take why you are doing it. Maybe add a comment like # using CORE::die to armor against overridden die() cheers, Yves