Gobrake is the official notifier library for Airbrake for the Go programming language. Gobrake provides a minimalist API that enables the ability to send any Go error or panic to the Airbrake dashboard. The library is extremely lightweight, with minimal overhead.
- Simple, consistent and easy-to-use library API
- Asynchronous exception reporting
- Flexible configuration options
- Support for environments
- Add extra context to errors before reporting them
- Filters support (filter out sensitive or unwanted data that shouldn't be sent)
- Ignore errors based on class, message, status, file, or any other filter
- SSL support (all communication with Airbrake is encrypted by default)
- Notify Airbrake on panics
- Set error severity to control notification thresholds
- Support for code hunks (lines of code surrounding each backtrace frame)
- Automatic deploy tracking
- Performance monitoring features such as HTTP route statistics, SQL queries, and Job execution statistics
- Integrations with Beego and Gin
- Last but not least, we follow semantic versioning 2.0.0
Gobrake can be installed like any other Go package that supports Go modules.
Just go get
the library:
go get github.com/airbrake/gobrake/v4
Create a new directory, initialize a new module and go get
the library:
mkdir airbrake_example && cd airbrake_example
go mod init airbrake_example
go get github.com/airbrake/gobrake/v4
This is the minimal example that you can use to test Gobrake with your project.
package main
import (
"errors"
"github.com/airbrake/gobrake/v4"
)
var airbrake = gobrake.NewNotifierWithOptions(&gobrake.NotifierOptions{
ProjectId: <YOUR PROJECT ID>,
ProjectKey: "<YOUR API KEY>",
Environment: "production",
})
func main() {
defer airbrake.Close()
airbrake.Notify(errors.New("operation failed"), nil)
}
To find <YOUR PROJECT ID>
and <YOUR API KEY>
navigate to your project's
Settings and copy the values from the right sidebar.
There are two ways to configure Gobrake: quick and dirty & full.
To configure a notifier quickly, you can call gobrake.NewNotifier
, which
accepts only two arguments: ProjectId
(int64
) and ProjectKey
(string
).
All of the other options will be set to default values.
airbrake := gobrake.NewNotifier(<YOUR PROJECT ID>, "<YOUR API KEY>")
Full configuration is done through gobrake.NotifierOptions
struct, which you
are supposed to pass to gobrake.NewNotifierWithOptions
. This way is much more
flexible as it allows configuring all aspects of the notifier. It's the
recommended way to configure your notifier.
airbrake := gobrake.NewNotifierWithOptions(&gobrake.NotifierOptions{
ProjectId: <YOUR PROJECT ID>,
ProjectKey: "<YOUR API KEY>",
Environment: "production",
})
You must set both ProjectId
& ProjectKey
.
To find your ProjectId
(int64
) and ProjectKey
(string
) navigate to your
project's Settings and copy the values from the right sidebar:
Configures the environment the application is running in. It helps Airbrake
dashboard to distinguish between exceptions occurring in different
environments. By default, it's not set. Expects string
type.
opts := gobrake.NotifierOptions{
Environment: "production",
}
Specifies current version control revision. If your app runs on Heroku, its
value will be defaulted to SOURCE_VERSION
environment variable. For non-Heroku
apps this option is not set. Expects string
type.
opts := gobrake.NotifierOptions{
Revision: "d34db33f",
}
Specifies which keys in the payload (parameters, session data, environment data,
etc) should be filtered. Before sending an error, filtered keys will be
substituted with the [Filtered]
label.
By default, password
and secret
are filtered out. string
and
*regexp.Regexp
types are permitted.
// String keys.
secrets := []string{"mySecretKey"}
// OR regexp keys
// secrets := []*regexp.Regexp{regexp.MustCompile("mySecretKey")}
blocklist := make([]interface{}, len(secrets))
for i, v := range secrets {
blocklist[i] = v
}
opts := gobrake.NotifierOptions{
KeysBlocklist: blocklist,
}
Controls code hunk collection. Code hunks are lines of code surrounding each
backtrace frame. By default, it's set to false
. Expects bool
type.
opts := gobrake.NotifierOptions{
DisableCodeHunks: true,
}
By default, it is set to https://api.airbrake.io
. A host
(string
) is a web
address containing a scheme ("http" or "https"), a host and a port. You can omit
the port (80 will be assumed) and the scheme ("https" will be assumed).
opts := gobrake.NotifierOptions{
Host: "http://localhost:8080/api/",
}
HTTP client that is used to send data to Airbrake API. Expects *http.Client
type. Normally, you shouldn't configure it.
opts := gobrake.NotifierOptions{
HTTPClient: &http.Client{
Timeout: 10 * time.Second,
},
}
For complete API description please follow documentation on pkg.go.dev documentation.
AddFilter
accepts a callback function which will be executed every time a
gobrake.Notice
is sent. You can use that for two purposes: filtering of
unwanted or sensitive params or ignoring the whole notice completely.
// Filter out sensitive information such as credit cards.
airbrake.AddFilter(func(n *gobrake.Notice) *gobrake.Notice {
if _, ok := n.Context["creditCard"] {
n.Context["creditCard"] = "Filtered"
}
return n
})
// Ignore all notices in development.
airbrake.AddFilter(func(n *gobrake.Notice) *gobrake.Notice {
if n.Context["environment"] == "development" {
return nil
}
return n
})
Severity allows
categorizing how severe an error is. By default, it's set to error
. To
redefine severity, simply overwrite context/severity
of a notice object. For
example:
notice := airbrake.NewNotice("operation failed", nil, 0)
notice.Context["severity"] = "critical"
airbrake.Notify(notice, nil)
You can read more about our Performance Monitoring offering in our docs.
In order to collect routes stats you can instrument your application
using notifier.Routes.Notify
API.
Below is an example using the net/http middleware. We also have HTTP middleware examples for Gin, Beego and Negroni.
package main
import (
"fmt"
"net/http"
"github.com/airbrake/gobrake"
)
// Airbrake is used to report errors and track performance
var Airbrake = gobrake.NewNotifierWithOptions(&gobrake.NotifierOptions{
ProjectId: <YOUR PROJECT ID>, // <-- Fill in this value
ProjectKey: "<YOUR API KEY>", // <-- Fill in this value
Environment: "production",
})
func indexHandler(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "Hello, There!")
}
func main() {
fmt.Println("Server listening at http://localhost:5555/")
// Wrap the indexHandler with Airbrake Performance Monitoring middleware:
http.HandleFunc(airbrakePerformance("/", indexHandler))
http.ListenAndServe(":5555", nil)
}
func airbrakePerformance(route string, h http.HandlerFunc) (string, http.HandlerFunc) {
handler := http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
ctx := req.Context()
ctx, routeMetric := gobrake.NewRouteMetric(ctx, req.Method, route) // Starts the timing
arw := newAirbrakeResponseWriter(w)
h.ServeHTTP(arw, req)
routeMetric.StatusCode = arw.statusCode
Airbrake.Routes.Notify(ctx, routeMetric) // Stops the timing and reports
fmt.Printf("code: %v, method: %v, route: %v\n", arw.statusCode, req.Method, route)
})
return route, handler
}
type airbrakeResponseWriter struct {
http.ResponseWriter
statusCode int
}
func newAirbrakeResponseWriter(w http.ResponseWriter) *airbrakeResponseWriter {
// Returns 200 OK if WriteHeader isn't called
return &airbrakeResponseWriter{w, http.StatusOK}
}
func (arw *airbrakeResponseWriter) WriteHeader(code int) {
arw.statusCode = code
arw.ResponseWriter.WriteHeader(code)
}
To get more detailed timing you can wrap important blocks of code into
spans. For example, you can create 2 spans sql
and http
to measure timing of
specific operations:
metric := &gobrake.RouteMetric{
Method: "GET",
Route: "/",
}
ctx, span := metric.Start(ctx, "sql")
users, err := fetchUser(ctx, userID)
span.Finish()
ctx, span = metric.Start(ctx, "http")
resp, err := http.Get("http://example.com/")
span.Finish()
metric.StatusCode = http.StatusOK
notifier.Routes.Notify(ctx, metric)
You can also collect stats about individual SQL queries performance using following API:
notifier.Queries.Notify(
context.TODO(),
&gobrake.QueryInfo{
Query: "SELECT * FROM users WHERE id = ?", // query must be normalized
Func: "fetchUser", // optional
File: "models/user.go", // optional
Line: 123, // optional
StartTime: startTime,
EndTime: time.Now(),
},
)
metric := &gobrake.QueueMetric{
Queue: "my-queue-name",
Errored: true,
}
ctx, span := metric.Start(ctx, "sql")
users, err := fetchUser(ctx, userID)
span.Finish()
ctx, span = metric.Start(ctx, "http")
resp, err := http.Get("http://example.com/")
span.Finish()
notifier.Queues.Notify(ctx, metric)
The maximum size of an exception is 64KB. Exceptions that exceed this limit will be truncated to fit the size.
There's a glog fork, which integrates with Gobrake. It provides all of original glog's functionality and adds the ability to send errors/logs to Airbrake.io.
The library supports Go v1.11+. The CI file would be the best source of truth because it contains all Go versions that we test against.
In case you have a problem, question or a bug report, feel free to:
- file an issue
- send us an email
- tweet at us
- chat with us (visit airbrake.io and click on the round orange button in the bottom right corner)
The project uses the MIT License. See LICENSE.md for details.