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go-error-handling

Use when writing Go code that returns, wraps, or handles errors — choosing between sentinel errors, custom types, and fmt.Errorf (%w vs %v), structuring error flow, or deciding whether to log or return. Also use when propagating errors across package boundaries or using errors.Is/As, even if the user doesn't ask about error strategy. Does not cover panic/recover patterns (see go-defensive).

How do I install this agent skill?

npx skills add https://github.com/cxuu/golang-skills --skill go-error-handling
view source ↗

Is this agent skill safe to install?

  • Gen Agent Trust Hubpass

    This skill provides comprehensive guidelines and a local utility script for Go error handling best practices. It includes a Bash script for static analysis of Go source files to detect anti-patterns. No security vulnerabilities or malicious behaviors were found.

  • Socketpass

    No alerts

  • Snykpass

    Risk: LOW · No issues

  • Runlayerpass

    1/5 files flagged

  • ZeroLeakspass

    Score: 93/100 · 2 sections analyzed

What does this agent skill do?

Go Error Handling

Compatibility: errors.Is, errors.As, and %w wrapping require Go 1.13+; structured logging examples may use log/slog from Go 1.21+.

Resource Routing

  • scripts/check-errors.sh - Run when checking string-based error matching, bare error propagation, and log-and-return patterns.
  • scripts/check-errors-ast.go - Implementation helper invoked by check-errors.sh; patch this when changing error-flow analysis behavior.
  • references/ERROR-FLOW.md - Read when deciding where to handle, wrap, log, or return errors.
  • references/ERROR-TYPES.md - Read when choosing sentinel errors, typed errors, or opaque errors.
  • references/WRAPPING.md - Read when choosing %w versus %v or crossing package boundaries.

In Go, errors are values — they are created by code and consumed by code.

Choosing an Error Strategy

  1. System boundary (RPC, IPC, storage)? → Wrap with %v to avoid leaking internals
  2. Caller needs to match specific conditions? → Sentinel or typed error, wrap with %w
  3. Caller just needs debugging context? → fmt.Errorf("...: %w", err)
  4. Leaf function, no wrapping needed? → Return the error directly

Default: wrap with %w and place it at the end of the format string.


Core Rules

Never Return Concrete Error Types

Never return concrete error types from exported functions — a concrete nil pointer can become a non-nil interface:

// Bad: Concrete type can cause subtle bugs
func Bad() *os.PathError { /*...*/ }

// Good: Always return the error interface
func Good() error { /*...*/ }

Error Strings

Error strings should not be capitalized and should not end with punctuation. Exception: exported names, proper nouns, or acronyms.

// Bad
err := fmt.Errorf("Something bad happened.")

// Good
err := fmt.Errorf("something bad happened")

For displayed messages (logs, test failures, API responses), capitalization is appropriate.

Return Values on Error

When a function returns an error, callers must treat all non-error return values as unspecified unless explicitly documented.

Tip: Functions taking a context.Context should usually return an error so callers can determine if the context was cancelled.


Handling Errors

When encountering an error, make a deliberate choice — do not discard with _:

  1. Handle immediately — address the error and continue
  2. Return to caller — optionally wrapped with context
  3. In exceptional caseslog.Fatal or panic

To intentionally ignore: add a comment explaining why.

n, _ := b.Write(p) // never returns a non-nil error

For related concurrent operations, use errgroup:

g, ctx := errgroup.WithContext(ctx)
g.Go(func() error { return task1(ctx) })
g.Go(func() error { return task2(ctx) })
if err := g.Wait(); err != nil { return err }

Avoid In-Band Errors

Don't return -1, nil, or empty string to signal errors. Use multiple returns:

// Bad: In-band error value
func Lookup(key string) int  // returns -1 for missing

// Good: Explicit error or ok value
func Lookup(key string) (string, bool)

This prevents callers from writing Parse(Lookup(key)) — it causes a compile-time error since Lookup(key) has 2 outputs.


Error Flow

Handle errors before normal code. Early returns keep the happy path unindented:

// Good: Error first, normal code unindented
if err != nil {
    return err
}
// normal code

Handle errors once — either log or return, never both:

Error encountered?
├─ Caller can act on it? → Return (with context via %w)
├─ Top of call chain? → Log and handle
└─ Neither? → Log at appropriate level, continue

Error Types

Advisory: Recommended best practice.

Caller needs to match?Message typeUse
Nostaticerrors.New("message")
Nodynamicfmt.Errorf("msg: %v", val)
Yesstaticvar ErrFoo = errors.New("...")
Yesdynamiccustom error type

Default: Wrap with fmt.Errorf("...: %w", err). Escalate to sentinels for errors.Is(), to custom types for errors.As().


Error Wrapping

Advisory: Recommended best practice.

  • Use %v: At system boundaries, for logging, to hide internal details
  • Use %w: To preserve error chain for errors.Is/errors.As

Key rules: Place %w at the end. Add context callers don't have. If annotation adds nothing, return err directly.

Validation: After implementing error handling, run bash scripts/check-errors.sh to detect common anti-patterns. Then run go vet ./... to catch additional issues.


Related Skills

  • Error naming: See go-naming when naming sentinel errors (ErrFoo) or custom error types
  • Testing errors: See go-testing when testing error semantics with errors.Is/errors.As or writing error-checking helpers
  • Panic handling: See go-defensive when deciding between panic and error returns, or writing recover guards
  • Guard clauses: See go-control-flow when structuring early-return error flow or reducing nesting
  • Logging decisions: See go-logging when choosing log levels, configuring structured logging, or deciding what context to include in log messages

Add the canonical catalog link to the repository README so users can inspect current installs and available audits. The publishing guide covers the complete discovery path.

<a href="https://skillzs.dev/skills/cxuu/golang-skills/go-error-handling">View go-error-handling on skillZs</a>