<try>
  <!-- COMPONENTS TO TRY TO USE -->
  <error-handler>
    <on-error-continue>
      <!-- COMPONENTS TO USE IN CASE OF ERROR -->
    </on-error-continue>
    <on-error-propagate>
      <!-- COMPONENTS TO USE IN CASE OF ERROR -->
    </on-error-propagate>
  </error-handler>
</try>
Try Scope XML Reference
A Try scope follows the structure described below.
- 
A single root element
<try> - 
Components that are executed under the error-handling rules defined by the Try scope are defined as child elements of the
tryelement. You can place one or many here. - 
A single
<error-handler>element holds all error handling strategies for the scope. - 
In the error handler, one or several
on-error-continueandon-error-propagatedefine the various strategies. At least one of these must be present. - 
Components that are executed when a matching error occurs are defined as child elements of the
on-errorelement. You can place one or many here. 
Each error handling strategy in a Try scope (on-error-*) follows a condition. This condition is typically an error type (or a list of several) which must match the current error. You can also define this condition as a freely written expression, such as error.cause.message.contains("fatal").
| Note that conditions are evaluated in order and only the first strategy to match is executed. | 
Below is an example that includes two error handling strategies, each executing a logger component:
<try>
  <http:request config-ref="HTTP-config" method="GET" path="/" />
  <error-handler>
    <on-error-continue enableNotifications="true" logException="true" type="CONNECTIVITY">
      <logger level="INFO" doc:name="Logger" message="Connectivity Error"/>
    </on-error-continue>
    <on-error-propagate enableNotifications="true" logException="true" doc:name="On Error Propagate" type="EXPRESSION">
      <logger level="INFO" doc:name="Logger" message="Expression error" />
    </on-error-propagate>
  </error-handler>
</try>
Properties of Try
| Property | Default | Description | 
|---|---|---|
  | 
INDIFFERENT  | 
Defines if what’s in the scope is treated as a transaction. Possible values: 
  | 
  | 
LOCAL  | 
Defines the type of transaction to use. Possible values: 
  | 



