The Exception Notifier plugin provides a mailer object and a default set of templates for sending email notifications when errors occur in a Rails application. The plugin is configurable, allowing programmers to specify:
- the sender address of the email
- the recipient addresses
- the text used to prefix the subject line
The email includes information about the current request, session, and environment, and also gives a backtrace of the exception.
There's a great Railscast about Exception Notifications you can see that may help you getting started.
You can use the latest ExceptionNotification gem with Rails 3, by adding the following line in your Gemfile
gem 'exception_notification'
As of Rails 3 ExceptionNotification is used as a rack middleware, so you can configure its options on your config.ru file, or in the environment you want it to run. In most cases you would want ExceptionNotification to run on production. You can make it work by
Whatever::Application.config.middleware.use ExceptionNotifier,
:email_prefix => "[Whatever] ",
:sender_address => %{"notifier" <notifier@example.com>},
:exception_recipients => %w{exceptions@example.com}
By default, the notification email includes four parts: request, session, environment, and backtrace (in that order). You can customize how each of those sections are rendered by placing a partial named for that part in your app/views/exception_notifier directory (e.g., _session.rhtml). Each partial has access to the following variables:
@controller # the controller that caused the error
@request # the current request object
@exception # the exception that was raised
@backtrace # a sanitized version of the exception's backtrace
@data # a hash of optional data values that were passed to the notifier
@sections # the array of sections to include in the email
Background views will not have access to @controller and @request.
You can reorder the sections, or exclude sections completely, by altering the ExceptionNotifier.sections variable. You can even add new sections that describe application-specific data--just add the section's name to the list (wherever you'd like), and define the corresponding partial.
#Example with two new added sections
Whatever::Application.config.middleware.use ExceptionNotifier,
:email_prefix => "[Whatever] ",
:sender_address => %{"notifier" <notifier@example.com>},
:exception_recipients => %w{exceptions@example.com},
:sections => %w{my_section1 my_section2} + ExceptionNotifier::Notifier.default_sections
If your new section requires information that isn't available by default, make sure it is made available to the email using the exception_data macro:
class ApplicationController < ActionController::Base
before_filter :log_additional_data
...
protected
def log_additional_data
request.env["exception_notifier.exception_data"] = {
:document => @document,
:person => @person
}
end
...
end
In the above case, @document and @person would be made available to the email renderer, allowing your new section(s) to access and display them. See the existing sections defined by the plugin for examples of how to write your own.
You may want to include different sections for background notifications:
#Example with two new added sections
Whatever::Application.config.middleware.use ExceptionNotifier,
:email_prefix => "[Whatever] ",
:sender_address => %{"notifier" <notifier@example.com>},
:exception_recipients => %w{exceptions@example.com},
:background_sections => %w{my_section1 my_section2} + ExceptionNotifier::Notifier.default_background_sections
By default, the backtrace and data sections are included in background notifications.
You can choose to ignore certain exceptions, which will make ExceptionNotifier avoid sending notifications for those specified. There are three ways of specifying which exceptions to ignore:
-
:ignore_exceptions - By exception class (i.e. ignore RecordNotFound ones)
-
:ignore_crawlers - From crwaler (i.e. ignore ones originated by Googlebot)
-
:ignore_if - Custom (i.e. ignore exceptions that satisfy some condition)
- :ignore_exceptions
Ignore specified exception types. To achieve that, you should use the :ignore_exceptions option, like this:
Whatever::Application.config.middleware.use ExceptionNotifier,
:email_prefix => "[Whatever] ",
:sender_address => %{"notifier" <notifier@example.com>},
:exception_recipients => %w{exceptions@example.com},
:ignore_exceptions => %w{::ActionView::TemplateError} + ExceptionNotifier.default_ignore_exceptions
The above will make ExceptionNotifier ignore a TemplateError exception, plus the ones ignored by default. By default, ExceptionNotifier ignores ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound, AbstractController::ActionNotFound and ActionController::RountingError.
- :ignore_crawlers
In some cases you may want to avoid getting notifications from exceptions made by crawlers. Using :ignore_crawlers option like this,
Whatever::Application.config.middleware.use ExceptionNotifier,
:email_prefix => "[Whatever] ",
:sender_address => %{"notifier" <notifier@example.com>},
:exception_recipients => %w{exceptions@example.com},
:ignore_crawlers => %w{Googlebot bingbot}
will prevent sending those unwanted notifications.
- :ignore_if
Last but not least, you can ignore exceptions based on a condition, by
Whatever::Application.config.middleware.use ExceptionNotifier,
:email_prefix => "[Whatever] ",
:sender_address => %{"notifier" <notifier@example.com>},
:exception_recipients => %w{exceptions@example.com},
:ignore_if => lambda { |e| e.message =~ /^Couldn't find Page with ID=/ }
You can also choose to exclude the exception message from the subject, which is included by default. Use :verbose_subject => false to exclude it.
You can also choose to remove numbers from subject so they thread as a single one. This is disabled by default. Use :normalize_subject => true to enable it.
If you want to send notifications from a background process like DelayedJob, you should use the background_exception_notification method like this:
begin
some code...
rescue => e
ExceptionNotifier::Notifier.background_exception_notification(e)
end
You can include information about the background process that created the error by including a data parameter:
begin
some code...
rescue => exception
ExceptionNotifier::Notifier.background_exception_notification(exception,
:data => {:worker => worker.to_s, :queue => queue, :payload => payload})
end
If your controller action manually handles an error, the notifier will never be run. To manually notify of an error you can do something like the following:
rescue_from Exception, :with => :server_error
def server_error(exception)
# Whatever code that handles the exception
ExceptionNotifier::Notifier.exception_notification(request.env, exception,
:data => {:message => "was doing something wrong"}).deliver
end
After an exception notification has been delivered the rack environment variable 'exception_notifier.delivered' will be set to +true+.
NOTE: Master branch is currently set for v2.6.0
For v2.5.2, see this tag:
http://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/tree/v2.5.2
For v2.5.0, see tag:
http://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/tree/v2.5.0
For v2.4.1, see tag:
http://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/tree/v2.4.1
For v2.4.0, see tag:
http://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/tree/v2.4.0
If you are running Rails 2.3 then see the branch for that:
http://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/tree/2-3-stable
If you are running pre-rack Rails then see this tag:
http://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/tree/pre-2-3
https://github.com/smartinez87/exception_notification/issues
Copyright (c) 2005 Jamis Buck, released under the MIT license: http://www.opensource.org/licenses/MIT