Note: This section is under development.
Error handling in Yii is different than handling errors in plain PHP. First of all, Yii will convert all non-fatal errors to exceptions:
use yii\base\ErrorException;
use Yii;
try {
10/0;
} catch (ErrorException $e) {
Yii::warning("Tried dividing by zero.");
}
// execution may continue
As demonstrated above you may handle errors using try
-catch
.
Second, even fatal errors in Yii are rendered in a nice way. This means that in debugging mode, you can trace the causes of fatal errors in order to more quickly identify the cause of the problem.
The default Yii error page is great when developing a site, and is acceptable for production sites if YII_DEBUG
is turned off in your bootstrap index.php
file. But you may want to customize the default error page to make it
more suitable for your project.
The easiest way to create a custom error page it is to use a dedicated controller action for error rendering. First,
you'll need to configure the errorHandler
component in the application's configuration:
// ...
'components' => [
// ...
'errorHandler' => [
'errorAction' => 'site/error',
],
]
With that configuration in place, whenever an error occurs, Yii will execute the error
-action of the site
-controller.
That action should look for an exception and, if present, render the proper view file, passing along the exception:
public function actionError()
{
$exception = \Yii::$app->errorHandler->exception;
if ($exception !== null) {
return $this->render('error', ['exception' => $exception]);
}
}
Next, you would create the views/site/error.php
file, which would make use of the exception. The exception object has
the following properties:
statusCode
: the HTTP status code (e.g. 403, 500). Available for [[yii\web\HttpException|HTTP exceptions]] only.code
: the code of the exception.message
: the error message.file
: the name of the PHP script file where the error occurs.line
: the line number of the code where the error occurs.trace
: the call stack of the error.
Instead of creating a dedicated action within the Site controller, you could just indicate to Yii what class should be used to handle errors:
public function actions()
{
return [
'error' => [
'class' => 'yii\web\ErrorAction',
],
];
}
After associating the class with the error as in the above, define the views/site/error.php
file, which will
automatically be used. The view will be passed three variables:
$name
: the error name$message
: the error message$exception
: the exception being handled
The $exception
object will have the same properties as outlined above.