I'm not sure if this answers the question...

These errors are coming from the Web server response-outputing code
failing when the other side closed the connection early. The exception
would not be returned to your code, because your code is a function
from "request -> response" rather than a "request -> void" function
that ends with a call to "output this response". So, the exception is
thrown on the Web server's side and will just get caught be the
connection thread's handler, which just prints it out and cleans up
for the connection. The only way you could grab this would be to make
a different dispatcher that called your servlet and then ran its own
"output this response" code from a context you controlled.

In any case, what would you expect to do with such an exception? The
connection is gone and you can't do anything about it?

Jay


On Tue, Oct 6, 2015 at 9:25 AM, Tony Garnock-Jones <to...@ccs.neu.edu> wrote:
> On 10/06/2015 12:43 AM, George Neuner wrote:
>> I don't know where to put an error handler to deal with reset conditions
>> at the end of a request.  Maybe Jay has an idea?
>
> It feels like exceptions are something that response/full,
> response/xexpr and similar procedures could deal with, since they have a
> "fire and forget" flavour to them.
>
> Raw response objects wouldn't trap the exceptions, and so neither would
> response/output.
>
> The rule of thumb I have in mind is: if you're dealing with the response
> port at all, catching network exceptions is your responsibility. If the
> port is entirely hidden away from you, exception handlers would Do The
> Right Thing For You.
>
> Perhaps something like that might help the situation?
>
> Tony
>
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-- 
Jay McCarthy
http://jeapostrophe.github.io

           "Wherefore, be not weary in well-doing,
      for ye are laying the foundation of a great work.
And out of small things proceedeth that which is great."
                          - D&C 64:33

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