Does ruby allow you to treat warnings as errors?
One reason I'd like to do this is to ensure that if heckle removing a line of code means that a warning occurs, I have the option of ensuring that the mutant get killed.
Does ruby allow you to treat warnings as errors?
One reason I'd like to do this is to ensure that if heckle removing a line of code means that a warning occurs, I have the option of ensuring that the mutant get killed.
You could also potentially use DTrace, and intercept the calls to
rb_warn
andrb_warning
, though that's not going to produce exceptions you can rescue from somewhere. Rather, it'll just put them somewhere you can easily log them.There is unfortunately no real way of doing this, at least not on most versions of Ruby out there (variations may exist), short of monitoring the program output and aborting it when a warning appears on standard error. Here's why:
Kernel.warn
, which you can redefine to do whatever you wish (including exiting), and which you'd expect (hope) to be used consistently by Ruby to report warnings (including internal e.g. parsing warning), butrb_warn
fromsource/server.c
, completely bypassing your redefinition ofKernel.warn
(e.g. the "string literal in condition
" warning, for example, issued when doing something like:do_something if 'string'
, is printed via the nativerb_warn
fromsource/parse.c
)rb_warning
native method, which can be used by Ruby to log warnings if-w
or-v
is specified.So, if you need to take action solely on warnings generated by your application code's calling
Kernel.warn
then simply redefineKernel.warn
. Otherwise, you have exactly two options:source/error.c
to exit inrb_warn
andrb_warning
(andrb_warn_m
?), and rebuild Ruby: warning:
', and abort it on match