Whenever an error occurs in a procedure, tRPC responds to the client with an object that includes an "error" property. This property contains all the information that you need to handle the error in the client.
Here's an example error response caused by a bad request input:
json
{
"id": null,
"error": {
`"message": "\"password\" must be at least 4 characters",`
`"code": -32600,`
`"data": {`
`"code": "BAD_REQUEST",`
`"httpStatus": 400,`
`"stack": "...",`
`"path": "user.changepassword"`
`}`
}
}
Note: the returned stack trace is only available in the development environment.
Error codes
tRPC defines a list of error codes that each represent a different type of error and response with a different HTTP code.
Code
Description
HTTP code
BAD_REQUEST
The server cannot or will not process the request due to something that is perceived to be a client error.
400
UNAUTHORIZED
The client request has not been completed because it lacks valid authentication credentials for the requested resource.
401
FORBIDDEN
The server was unauthorized to access a required data source, such as a REST API.
403
NOT_FOUND
The server cannot find the requested resource.
404
TIMEOUT
The server would like to shut down this unused connection.
408
CONFLICT
The server request resource conflict with the current state of the target resource.
409
PRECONDITION_FAILED
Access to the target resource has been denied.
412
PAYLOAD_TOO_LARGE
Request entity is larger than limits defined by server.
413
METHOD_NOT_SUPPORTED
The server knows the request method, but the target resource doesn't support this method.
405
UNPROCESSABLE_CONTENT
The server understands the request method, and the request entity is correct, but the server was unable to process it.
422
TOO_MANY_REQUESTS
The rate limit has been exceeded or too many requests are being sent to the server.
429
CLIENT_CLOSED_REQUEST
Access to the resource has been denied.
499
INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR
An unspecified error occurred.
500
tRPC exposes a helper function, getHTTPStatusCodeFromError, to help you extract the HTTP code from the error:
ts
import { getHTTPStatusCodeFromError } from '@trpc/server/http';
// Example error you might get if your input validation fails
const error: TRPCError = {
name: 'TRPCError',
code: 'BAD_REQUEST',
message: '"password" must be at least 4 characters',
};
if (error instanceof TRPCError) {
const httpCode = getHTTPStatusCodeFromError(error);
console.log(httpCode); // 400
}
Throwing errors
tRPC provides an error subclass, TRPCError, which you can use to represent an error that occurred inside a procedure.
For example, throwing this error:
server.ts
ts
import { initTRPC, TRPCError } from '@trpc/server';
const t = initTRPC.create();
const appRouter = t.router({
hello: t.procedure.query(() => {
`throw new TRPCError({`
`code: 'INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR',`
`message: 'An unexpected error occurred, please try again later.',`
`// optional: pass the original error to retain stack trace`
`cause: theError,`
`});`
}),
});
// [...]
Results to the following response:
json
{
"id": null,
"error": {
`"message": "An unexpected error occurred, please try again later.",`
`"code": -32603,`
`"data": {`
`"code": "INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR",`
`"httpStatus": 500,`
`"stack": "...",`
`"path": "hello"`
`}`
}
}
Handling errors
All errors that occur in a procedure go through the onError method before being sent to the client. Here you can handle or change errors.
pages/api/trpc/[trpc].ts
ts
export default trpcNext.createNextApiHandler({
// ...
onError(opts) {
`const { error, type, path, input, ctx, req } = opts;`
`console.error('Error:', error);`
`if (error.code === 'INTERNAL_SERVER_ERROR') {`
`// send to bug reporting`
`}`
},
});
The onError parameter is an object that contains all information about the error and the context it occurs in:
ts
{
error: TRPCError; // the original error
type: 'query' | 'mutation' | 'subscription' | 'unknown';
path: string | undefined; // path of the procedure that was triggered
input: unknown;
ctx: Context | undefined;
req: BaseRequest; // request object
}