raven

0.6.0 released

raven.cr Build Status

A client and integration layer for the Sentry error reporting API.

Based on fine raven-ruby gem from folks at @getsentry.

Status

Stability

LGTM (aside of few FIXME flags here and there…) yet there are no tests written, so use it at your own risk! - or kindly send a PR :)

Feature support

  • [x] Processors (data scrubbers)
  • [x] Interfaces (Message, Exception, Stacktrace, User, HTTP, ...)
  • [x] Contexts (tags, extra, os, runtime)
  • [x] Breadcrumbs
  • [x] Integrations (Kemal, Sidekiq.cr)
  • [x] Async support
  • [x] User Feedback (Raven.send_feedback + Kemal handler)

TODO

  • [ ] Tests
  • [ ] Exponential backoff in case of connection error
  • [ ] Caching unsent events for later send
  • [ ] Catching app crashes, kind of a bin wrapper perhaps?

Installation

Add this to your application's shard.yml:

dependencies:
  raven:
    github: sija/raven.cr

Usage

require "raven"

Raven only runs when SENTRY_DSN is set

Raven will capture and send exceptions to the Sentry server whenever its DSN is set. This makes environment-based configuration easy - if you don't want to send errors in a certain environment, just don't set the DSN in that environment!

# Set your SENTRY_DSN environment variable.
export SENTRY_DSN=http://public:secret@example.com/project-id
# Or you can configure the client in the code (not recommended - keep your DSN secret!)
Raven.configure do |config|
  config.dsn = "http://public:secret@example.com/project-id"
end

Raven doesn't report some kinds of data by default.

Raven ignores some exceptions by default - most of these are related to 404s or controller actions not being found. For a complete list, see the IGNORE_DEFAULT constant.

Raven doesn't report POST data or cookies by default. In addition, it will attempt to remove any obviously sensitive data, such as credit card or Social Security numbers. For more information about how Sentry processes your data, check out the documentation on the processors config setting.

Call

Raven supports two methods of capturing exceptions:

Raven.capture do
  # capture any exceptions which happen during execution of this block
  1 / 0
end

begin
  1 / 0
rescue exception : DivisionByZero
  Raven.capture(exception)
end

More configuration

You're all set - but there's a few more settings you may want to know about too!

DSN

While we advise that you set your Sentry DSN through the SENTRY_DSN environment variable, there are two other configuration settings for controlling Raven:

# DSN can be configured as a config setting instead.
# Place in config/initializers or similar.
Raven.configure do |config|
  config.dsn = "your_dsn"
end

And, while not necessary if using SENTRY_DSN, you can also provide an environments setting. Raven will only capture events when KEMAL_ENV matches an environment in the list.

Raven.configure do |config|
  config.environments = %w(staging production)
end

async

When an error or message occurs, the notification is immediately sent to Sentry. Raven can be configured to send asynchronously:

# define your own handler
config.async = ->(event : Raven::Event) {
  spawn { Raven.send_event(event) }
}
# or use default implementation based on fibers (i.e. the one above)
config.async = true

If the async callback raises an exception, Raven will attempt to send synchronously.

We recommend creating a background job, using your background job processor, that will send Sentry notifications in the background. Rather than enqueuing an entire Raven::Event object, we recommend providing the Hash representation of an event as a job argument. Here’s an example for Sidekiq.cr:

config.async = ->(event : Raven::Event) {
  # enqueue the job with a hash...
  SentryJob.async.perform(event.to_hash)
  # or with JSON string
  # SentryJob.async.perform(event.to_json)
}

class SentryJob
  include Sidekiq::Worker
  sidekiq_options do |job|
    job.queue = "sentry"
    job.retry = true
  end

  def perform(event : Raven::Event::HashType)
    Raven.send_event(event)
  end
end

transport_failure_callback

If Raven fails to send an event to Sentry for any reason (either the Sentry server has returned a 4XX or 5XX response), this Proc will be called.

config.transport_failure_callback = ->(event : Raven::Event::HashType) {
  AdminMailer.async.perform("Oh god, it's on fire!", event)
}

Context

Much of the usefulness of Sentry comes from additional context data with the events. Raven makes this very convenient by providing methods to set thread local context data that is then submitted automatically with all events.

There are three primary methods for providing request context:

# bind the logged in user
Raven.user_context email: "foo@example.com"

# tag the request with something interesting
Raven.tags_context interesting: "yes"

# provide a bit of additional context
Raven.extra_context happiness: "very"

For more information, see Context.

More Information

Development

crystal spec

Contributing

  1. Fork it
  2. Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
  3. Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
  4. Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
  5. Create a new Pull Request

Contributors

  • sija Sijawusz Pur Rahnama - creator, maintainer
raven:
  github: sija/raven.cr
  version: ~> 0.6.0
License MIT
Crystal 0.21.1

Authors

Dependencies 1

  • any_hash master
    {'branch' => 'master', 'github' => 'sija/any_hash.cr'}

Development Dependencies 0

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