I won't maintain this fork any longer. Have a look at the new redmine_airbrake plugin instead, which is a complete rewrite and also supports Airbrake's newer JSON based API.
This is a simple Redmine plugin that makes Redmine act like an Airbrake (http://airbrake.io/) (formerly known as Hoptoad) server. All exceptions caught and sent by HoptoadNotifier or Airbrake client libraries will create or update an issue in Redmine.
Just install the Plugin following the general Redmine plugin installation instructions at http://www.redmine.org/wiki/redmine/Plugins.
Then, go to Administration -> Settings -> Incoming emails in your Redmine and generate an API key.
Now, install Airbrake following the excellent instructions at http://github.com/airbrake/airbrake.
The Redmine Hoptoad Server supports the older Hoptoad API (v1) as well as Hoptoad v2 / Airbrake.
When it comes to creating your config/initializers/airbrake.rb file, deviate from the standard and put in something like this:
Airbrake.configure do |config|
config.api_key = {:project => 'my_redmine_project_identifier', # the identifier you specified for your project in Redmine
:tracker => 'Bug', # the name of your Tracker of choice in Redmine
:api_key => 'my_redmine_api_key', # the key you generated before in Redmine (NOT YOUR HOPTOAD API KEY!)
:category => 'Development', # the name of a ticket category (optional.)
:assigned_to => 'admin', # the login of a user the ticket should get assigned to by default (optional.)
:priority => 5, # the default priority (use a number, not a name. optional.)
:environment => 'staging', # application environment, gets prepended to the issue's subject and is stored as a custom issue field. useful to distinguish errors on a test system from those on the production system (optional).
:repository_root => '/some/path' # this optional argument overrides the project wide repository root setting (see below).
}.to_yaml
config.host = 'my_redmine_host.com' # the hostname your Redmine runs at
config.port = 443 # the port your Redmine runs at
config.secure = true # sends data to your server via SSL (optional.)
end
You're done. You can start receiving your Exceptions in Redmine!
After you received your first exception in Redmine, you will notice two new custom fields in the project(s) you've received the exceptions for. Those are Backtrace filter and Repository root.
If you'd like to (and we really recommend you do!) filter the backtraces that
Notifier reports, you can add comma separated strings to that field. Every line
in a backtrace will be scanned against those strings and matching lines will
be removed. I usually set my filter to [GEM_ROOT]
, but if you're using
plugins which tend to clutter up your backtraces, you might want to include
those as well. Like this for example: [GEM_ROOT],[RAILS_ROOT]/vendor/plugins/newrelic_rpm
.
All Issues created will have a source link in their description which -- provided that you have your source repository linked to your Redmine project -- leads you directly to the file and line in your code that has caused the exception. Your repository structure most likely won't match the structure of your deployed code, so you can add an additional repository root. Just use "trunk" for a general SVN setup for instance.
You may use the :repository_root
option in your application's airbrake.rb to
override this setting with a custom value. This is helful in case you have
multiple applications in the same repository reporting errors to the same
Redmine project.
Safe YAML. For parsing Airbrake v2 requests the plugin also depends on Nokogiri.
Add to your Redmine's Gemfile.local:
gem 'safe_yaml'
gem 'nokogiri'
GPL
Jan Schulz-Hofen, Planio GmbH (http://plan.io) Jens Kraemer (jk@jkraemer.net)