#!/usr/bin/env python # pylint: disable=unused-argument, wrong-import-position # This program is dedicated to the public domain under the CC0 license. """This is a very simple example on how one could implement a custom error handler.""" import html import json import logging import traceback from telegram import __version__ as TG_VER try: from telegram import __version_info__ except ImportError: __version_info__ = (0, 0, 0, 0, 0) # type: ignore[assignment] if __version_info__ < (20, 0, 0, "alpha", 1): raise RuntimeError( f"This example is not compatible with your current PTB version {TG_VER}. To view the " f"{TG_VER} version of this example, " f"visit https://docs.python-telegram-bot.org/en/v{TG_VER}/examples.html" ) from telegram import Update from telegram.constants import ParseMode from telegram.ext import Application, CommandHandler, ContextTypes # Enable logging logging.basicConfig( format="%(asctime)s - %(name)s - %(levelname)s - %(message)s", level=logging.INFO ) # set higher logging level for httpx to avoid all GET and POST requests being logged logging.getLogger("httpx").setLevel(logging.WARNING) logger = logging.getLogger(__name__) # This can be your own ID, or one for a developer group/channel. # You can use the /start command of this bot to see your chat id. DEVELOPER_CHAT_ID = 123456789 async def error_handler(update: object, context: ContextTypes.DEFAULT_TYPE) -> None: """Log the error and send a telegram message to notify the developer.""" # Log the error before we do anything else, so we can see it even if something breaks. logger.error("Exception while handling an update:", exc_info=context.error) # traceback.format_exception returns the usual python message about an exception, but as a # list of strings rather than a single string, so we have to join them together. tb_list = traceback.format_exception(None, context.error, context.error.__traceback__) tb_string = "".join(tb_list) # Build the message with some markup and additional information about what happened. # You might need to add some logic to deal with messages longer than the 4096 character limit. update_str = update.to_dict() if isinstance(update, Update) else str(update) message = ( f"An exception was raised while handling an update\n" f"
update = {html.escape(json.dumps(update_str, indent=2, ensure_ascii=False))}"
        "
\n\n" f"
context.chat_data = {html.escape(str(context.chat_data))}
\n\n" f"
context.user_data = {html.escape(str(context.user_data))}
\n\n" f"
{html.escape(tb_string)}
" ) # Finally, send the message await context.bot.send_message( chat_id=DEVELOPER_CHAT_ID, text=message, parse_mode=ParseMode.HTML ) async def bad_command(update: Update, context: ContextTypes.DEFAULT_TYPE) -> None: """Raise an error to trigger the error handler.""" await context.bot.wrong_method_name() # type: ignore[attr-defined] async def start(update: Update, context: ContextTypes.DEFAULT_TYPE) -> None: """Displays info on how to trigger an error.""" await update.effective_message.reply_html( "Use /bad_command to cause an error.\n" f"Your chat id is {update.effective_chat.id}." ) def main() -> None: """Run the bot.""" # Create the Application and pass it your bot's token. application = Application.builder().token("TOKEN").build() # Register the commands... application.add_handler(CommandHandler("start", start)) application.add_handler(CommandHandler("bad_command", bad_command)) # ...and the error handler application.add_error_handler(error_handler) # Run the bot until the user presses Ctrl-C application.run_polling(allowed_updates=Update.ALL_TYPES) if __name__ == "__main__": main()