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(Possible) Implementation(s) of Catchable Errors for builtins.tryEval

Terminology

Talking about “catchable errors” in Nix in general is a bit precarious since there is no properly established terminology. Also, the existing terms are less than apt. The reason for this lies in the fact that catchable errors (or whatever you want to call them) don't properly exist in the language: While Nix's builtins.tryEval is (originally) based on the C++ exception system, it specifically lacks the ability of such systems to have an exception value whilst handling it. Consequently, these errors don't have an obvious name as they never appear in the Nix language. They just have to be named in the respective Nix implementation:

  • In C++ Nix the only term for such errors is AssertionError which is the name of the (C++) exception used in the implementation internally. This term isn't great, though, as AssertionErrors can not only be generated using assert, but also using throw and failed NIX_PATH resolutions. Were this terminology to be used in documentation addressing Nix language users, it would probably only serve confusion.

  • Tvix currently (as of r/7573) uses the term catchable errors. This term relates to nothing in the language as such: Errors are not caught, we rather try to evaluate an expression. Catching also sort of implies that a value representation of the error is attainable (like in an exception system) which is untrue.

In light of this I (sterni) would like to suggest “tryable errors” as an alternative term going forward which isn't inaccurate and relates to terms already established by language internal naming.

However, this document will continue using the term catchable error until the naming is adjusted in Tvix itself.

Implementation

Below we discuss different implementation approaches in Tvix in order to arrive at a proposal for the new one. The historical discussion is intended as a basis for discussing the proposal: Are we committing to an old or current mistake? Are we solving all problems that cropped up or were solved at any given point in time?

Original

The original implementation of tryEval in cl/6924 was quite straightforward: It would simply interrupt the propagation of a potential catchable error to the top level (which usually happened using the ? operator) in the builtin and construct the appropriate representation of an unsuccessful evaluation if the error was deemed catchable. It had, however, multiple problems:

  • The VM was originally written without tryEval in mind, i.e. it largely assumed that an error would always cause execution to be terminated. This problem was later solved (cl/6940).
  • Thunks could not be tryEval-ed multiple times (b/281). This was another consequence of VM architecture at the time: Thunks would be blackholed before evaluation was started and the error could occur. Due to the interaction of the generator-based VM code and Value::force the part of the code altering the thunk state would never be informed about the evaluation result in case of a failure, so the thunk would remain blackholed leading to a crash if the same thunk was tryEval-ed or forced again. To solve this issue, amjoseph completely overhauled the implementation.

One key point about this implementation is that it is based on the assumption that catchable errors can only be generated in thunks, i.e. expressions causing them are never evaluated strictly. This can be illustrated using C++ Nix:

> nix-instantiate --eval -E '[ (assert false; true) (builtins.throw "") <nixpkgs> ]'
[ <CODE> <CODE> <CODE> ]

If this wasn't the case, the VM could encounter the error in a situation where the error would not have needed to pass through the tryEval builtin, causing evaluation to abort.

Present

The current system (mostly implemented in cl/9289) uses a very different approach: Instead of relying on the thunk boundary, catchable errors are no longer errors, but special values. They are created at the relevant points (e.g. builtins.throw) and propagated whenever they are encountered by VM ops or builtins. Finally, they either encounter builtins.tryEval (and are converted to an ordinary value again) or the top level where they become a normal error again.

The problems with this mostly stem from the confusion between values and errors that it necessitates:

  • In most circumstances, catchable errors end up being errors again, as tryEval is not used a lot. So throws usually end up causing evaluation to abort. Consequently, not only Value::Catchable is necessary, but also a corresponding error variant that is only created if a catchable value remains at the end of evaluation. A requirement that was missed until cl/10991 (!) which illustrate how strange that architecture is. A consequence of this is that catchable errors have no location information at all.
  • Value::Catchable is similar to other internal values in Tvix, but is much more problematic. Aside from thunks, internal values only exist for a brief amount of time on the stack and it is very clear what parts of the VM or builtins need to handle them. This means that the rest of the implementation need to consider them, keeping the complexity caused by the internal value low. Value::Catchable, on the other hand, may exist anywhere and be passed to any VM op or builtin, so it needs to be correctly propagated everywhere. This causes a lot of noise in the code as well as a big potential for bugs. Essentially, catchable errors require as much attention by the Tvix developer as laziness. This doesn't really correlate to the importance of the two features to the Nix language.

Future?

The core assumption of the original solution does offer a path forward: After cl/9289 we should be in a better position to introspect an error occurring from within the VM code, but we need a better way of storing such an error to prevent another b/281. If catchable errors can only be generated in thunks, we can just use the thunk representation for this. This would mean that Thunk::force_ would need to check if evaluation was successful and (in case of failure) change the thunk representation

  • either to the original ThunkRepr::Suspended which would be simple, but of course mean duplicated evaluation work in some expressions. In fact, this would probably leave a lot of easy performance on the table for use cases we would like to support, e.g. tree walkers for nixpkgs.
  • or to a new ThunkRepr variant that stores the kind of the error and all necessary location info so stack traces can work properly. This of course reintroduces some of the difficulty of having two kinds of errors, but it is hopefully less problematic, as the thunk boundary (i.e. Thunk::force) is where errors would usually occur.

Besides the question whether this proposal can actually be implemented, another consideration is whether the underlying assumption will hold in the future, i.e. can we implement optimizations for thunk elimination in a way that thunks that generate catchable errors are never eliminated?