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@bennostein
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Would have saved me some headache earlier... without this, errors during service initialization are silently dropped and the process exits 0 without ever spinning up servers.

@skiplabsdaniel
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skiplabsdaniel commented May 1, 2025

I don't understand why you say that the exception is silented, if the init fails, the server doesn't start and the message is displayed, the only reason I can see for the message to be ignored is that there is no await on the runService.
And if the message doesn't appear in a certain environment, it's better to use try catch on runService to handle all cases.

@bennostein
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bennostein commented May 1, 2025

In the example I'm working with (running the hackernews example containers under kubernetes) all of the runService calls are awaited, but no message is printed without this patch. I'll see if I can catch on runService instead of making this change, but I don't understand why that's "better" -- it seems to me that printing no matter what is better than requiring user code to catch/print explicitly.

EDIT:
Indeed the message can be printed with

await runService(...).catch(console.error);

I suppose the silent failure is due to the handling of stderr/stdout in the WASM environment.

@bennostein
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So I suppose I'd propose either (A) making this change or (B) going through all of our examples and docs and adding .catch(console.error) on each runService call, so that people who copy/paste that get error messages. Either way's fine by me.

@skiplabsdaniel
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Indeed, it's a matter of taste, it can be done like that.

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2 participants