/sentry-elixir

The official Elixir SDK for Sentry (sentry.io)

Primary LanguageElixirMIT LicenseMIT

sentry

Build Status hex.pm version

The Official Sentry Client for Elixir which provides a simple API to capture exceptions, automatically handle Plug Exceptions and provides a backend for the Elixir Logger.

Documentation

Installation

To use Sentry with your projects, edit your mix.exs file to add it as a dependency and add the :sentry package to your applications:

defp application do
  [applications: [:sentry, :logger]]
end

defp deps do
  [{:sentry, "~> 2.0.2"}]
end

Capture Exceptions

Sometimes you want to capture specific exceptions, to do so use the Sentry.capture_exception/3.

try do
  ThisWillError.reall()
rescue
  my_exception ->
    Sentry.capture_exception(my_exception, [stacktrace: System.stacktrace(), extra: %{extra: information}])
end

For optional settings check the docs.

Setup with Plug or Phoenix

In your router add the following lines:

use Plug.ErrorHandler
use Sentry.Plug

Capture all Exceptions

This library comes with an extension to capture all Error messages that the Plug handler might not. Simply set use_error_logger to true.

This is based on the Erlang error_logger.

config :sentry,
  use_error_logger: true

Configuration

Key Required Default Notes
dsn True n/a
environment_name False :dev
included_environments False ~w(prod test dev)a If you need non-standard mix env names you need to include it here
tags False %{}
release False None
server_name False None
use_error_logger False False
hackney_opts False []

An example production config might look like this:

config :sentry,
  dsn: "https://public:secret@app.getsentry.com/1",
  environment_name: :prod,
  included_environments: [:prod],
  tags: %{
    env: "production"
  },
  hackney_opts: [pool: :my_pool]

The environment_name and included_environments work together to determine if and when Sentry should record exceptions. The environment_name is the name of the current environment. In the example above, we have explicitly set the environment to :prod which works well if you are inside an environment specific configuration like config/prod.exs.

Alternatively, you could use Mix.env in your general configuration file:

config :sentry, dsn: "https://public:secret@app.getsentry.com/1"
  included_environments: [:prod],
  environment_name: Mix.env

You can even rely on more custom determinations of the environment name. It's not uncommmon for most applications to have a "staging" environment. In order to handle this without adding an additional Mix environment, you can set an environment variable that determines the release level.

config :sentry, dsn: "https://public:secret@app.getsentry.com/1"
  included_environments: ~w(production staging),
  environment_name: System.get_env("RELEASE_LEVEL") || "development"

In this example, we are getting the environment name from the RELEASE_LEVEL environment variable. If that variable does not exist, we default to "development". Now, on our servers, we can set the environment variable appropriately. On our local development machines, exceptions will never be sent, because the default value is not in the list of included_environments.

Sentry uses the hackney HTTP client for HTTP requests. If you need to set hackney configurations for things like a proxy or different pool, the hackney_opts configuration is passed directly to hackney.

Testing Your Configuration

To ensure you've set up your configuration correctly we recommend running the included mix task. It can be tested on different Mix environments and will tell you if it is not currently configured to send events in that environment:

$ MIX_ENV=dev mix sentry.send_test_event
Client configuration:
server: https://sentry.io/
public_key: public
secret_key: secret
included_environments: [:prod]
current environment_name: :dev

:dev is not in [:prod] so no test event will be sent

$ MIX_ENV=prod mix sentry.send_test_event
Client configuration:
server: https://sentry.io/
public_key: public
secret_key: secret
included_environments: [:prod]
current environment_name: :prod

Sending test event!

Docs

To build the docs locally, you'll need the Sphinx:

$ pip install sphinx

Once Sphinx is available building the docs is simply:

$ make docs

You can then view the docs in your browser:

$ open docs/_build/html/index.html

License

This project is Licensed under the MIT License.