The main role of an Enterprise Service Bus (ESB) is to act as the backbone of an organization’s service-oriented architecture. It is the spine through which all the systems and applications within the enterprise (and external applications that integrate with the enterprise) communicate with each other. As such, an ESB often has to deal with many wire level protocols, messaging standards, and remote APIs. But applications and networks can be full of errors. Applications crash. Network routers and links get into states where they cannot pass messages through with the expected efficiency. These error conditions are very likely to cause a fault or trigger a runtime exception in the ESB.
WSO2 ESB provides fault sequence for dealing with such errors. A fault sequence is a collection of mediators just like any other sequence, and it can be associated with another sequence or a proxy service. When the sequence or the proxy service encounters an error during mediation or while forwarding a message, the message that triggered the error is delegated to the specified fault sequence. Using the available mediators it is possible to log the erroneous message, forward it to a special error-tracking service, and send a SOAP fault back to the client indicating the error or even send an email to the system admin.
It is not mandatory to associate each sequence and proxy service with a fault sequence. In situations where a fault sequence is not specified explicitly, a default fault sequence will be used to handle errors. Sample 4: Introduction to Error Handling shows how to specify a fault sequence with a regular mediation sequence.
Whenever an error occurs in WSO2 ESB, the mediation engine attempts to provide as much information as possible on the error to the user by initializing the following properties on the erroneous message:
- ERROR_CODE
- ERROR_MESSAGE
- ERROR_DETAIL
- ERROR_EXCEPTION
Within the fault sequence, you can access these property values using the get-property
XPath function. Sample 4 uses the log mediator as follows to log the actual error message:
<log level="custom">
<property name="text" value="An unexpected error occured"/>
<property name="message" expression="get-property('ERROR_MESSAGE')"/>
</log>
Note how the ERROR_MESSAGE property is being used to get the error message text.
Transport Error Codes
Error Code | Detail |
101000 | Receiver input/output error sending |
101001 | Receiver input/output error receiving |
101500 | Sender input/output error sending |
101501 | Sender input/output error receiving |
101503 | Connection failed |
101504 | Connection timed out |
101505 | Connection closed |
101506 | NHTTP protocol violation |
101507 | Connection canceled |
101508 | Connection timed out |
101509 | Send abort |
101510 | Response processing failed |
Endpoint Failures
This section describes the error codes for endpoint failures. For more information on handling endpoint errors, see Endpoint Error Handling.
General ErrorsError Code | Detail |
303000 | Load Balance endpoint is not ready to connect |
303000 | Recipient List Endpoint is not ready |
303000 | Failover endpoint is not ready to connect |
303001 | Address Endpoint is not Ready to connect |
303002 | WSDL Address is not ready to connect |
Failure on Endpoint in the Session
Error Code | Detail |
309001 | Session aware load balance endpoint, No ready child endpoints |
309002 | Session aware load balance endpoint, Invalid reference |
309003 | Session aware load balance endpoint, Failed session |
Non-Fatal Warnings
Error Code | Detail |
303100 | A failover occurred in a Load balance endpoint |
304100 | A failover occurred in a Failover endpoint |
Referring Real Endpoint is Null
Error Code | Detail |
305100 | Indirect endpoint not ready |
Callout Operation Failed
Error Code | Detail |
401000 | Callout operation failed (from the callout mediator) |