Python notifier for reporting exceptions, errors, and log messages to Rollbar.
Install using pip:
pip install rollbar
import rollbar
rollbar.init('POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN', 'production') # access_token, environment
try:
main_app_loop()
except IOError:
rollbar.report_message('Got an IOError in the main loop', 'warning')
except:
# catch-all
rollbar.report_exc_info()
# equivalent to rollbar.report_exc_info(sys.exc_info())
- Python 2.7, 3.3, 3.4, or 3.5
- requests 0.12+
- A Rollbar account
In your settings.py
, add 'rollbar.contrib.django.middleware.RollbarNotifierMiddleware'
as the last item in
-
MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES
in Django 1.9 and earlier:MIDDLEWARE_CLASSES = [ # ... other middleware classes ... 'rollbar.contrib.django.middleware.RollbarNotifierMiddleware', ]
-
MIDDLEWARE
in Django 1.10 and up:MIDDLEWARE = [ # ... other middleware classes ... 'rollbar.contrib.django.middleware.RollbarNotifierMiddleware', ]
Add these configuration variables in settings.py
:
ROLLBAR = {
'access_token': 'POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
'environment': 'development' if DEBUG else 'production',
'branch': 'master',
'root': '/absolute/path/to/code/root',
}
Be sure to replace POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN
with your project's post_server_item
access token, which you can find in the Rollbar.com interface.
Check out the Django example.
If you'd like to be able to use a Django LOGGING
handler that could catch errors that happen outside of the middleware and ship them to Rollbar, such as in celery job queue tasks that run in the background separate from web requests, do the following:
Add this to the handlers
key:
'rollbar': {
'filters': ['require_debug_false'],
'access_token': 'POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
'environment': 'production',
'class': 'rollbar.logger.RollbarHandler'
},
Then add the handler to the loggers
key values where you want it to fire off.
'myappwithtasks': {
'handlers': ['console', 'logfile', 'rollbar'],
'level': 'DEBUG',
'propagate': True,
},
To use pyrollbar with Celery in a Django app, please see this blog post written by Matt Layman which explains how to configure everything in detail.
In your ini
file (e.g. production.ini
), add rollbar.contrib.pyramid
to the end of your pyramid.includes
:
[app:main]
pyramid.includes =
pyramid_debugtoolbar
rollbar.contrib.pyramid
And add these rollbar configuration variables:
[app:main]
rollbar.access_token = POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN
rollbar.environment = production
rollbar.branch = master
rollbar.root = %(here)s
Be sure to replace POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN
with your project's post_server_item
access token, which you can find in the Rollbar.com interface.
The above will configure Rollbar to catch and report all exceptions that occur inside your Pyramid app. However, in order to catch exceptions in middlewares or in Pyramid itself, you will also need to wrap your app inside a pipeline
with Rollbar as a filter
.
To do this, first change your ini
file to use a pipeline
. Change this:
[app:main]
#...
To:
[pipeline:main]
pipeline =
rollbar
YOUR_APP_NAME
[app:YOUR_APP_NAME]
pyramid.includes =
pyramid_debugtoolbar
rollbar.contrib.pyramid
rollbar.access_token = POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN
rollbar.environment = production
rollbar.branch = master
rollbar.root = %(here)s
[filter:rollbar]
use = egg:rollbar#pyramid
access_token = POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN
environment = production
branch = master
root = %(here)s
Note that the access_token, environment, and other Rollbar config params do need to be present in both the app
section and the filter
section.
Additionally, note that because Pyramid uses INI files for configuration, any changes to nested settings, like the locals
dictionary, will need to be handled in code.
Check out rollbar-flask-example.
Be sure to add the required blinker
dependency! See requirements.txt
in the example repo for how.
Import the plugin and install! Can be installed globally or on a per route basis.
import bottle
from rollbar.contrib.bottle import RollbarBottleReporter
rbr = RollbarBottleReporter(access_token='POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN', environment='production') #setup rollbar
bottle.install(rbr) #install globally
@bottle.get('/')
def raise_error():
'''
When navigating to /, we'll get a regular 500 page from bottle,
as well as have the error below listed on Rollbar.
'''
raise Exception('Hello, Rollbar!')
if __name__ == '__main__':
bottle.run(host='localhost', port=8080)
Be sure to replace POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN
with your project's post_server_item
access token, which you can find in the Rollbar.com interface.
Check out the Twisted example.
The biggest issue with the Lambda execution environment is that as soon as you return from your handler function, any work executing in other threads will stop executing as the process is frozen. This is true also of any child processes that one may spawn. Furthermore, the Lambda environment implements multithreading via a hypervisor on a single CPU core. Therefore, using separate threads to do additional work will not necessarily lead to better performance.
In order to ensure that the Rollbar library works correctly, meaning that items
are transmitted to the Rollbar API, one must not return from the main handler
function before all of this work completes. In order to ensure this, one can
either use the blocking
handler by specifying this value in the configuration,
rollbar.init(token, environment='production', handler='blocking')
or use the Rollbar function wait to delay the return from your function until all Rollbar threads have finished. Note that we use threads for the handler if otherwise unspecified, therefore you must use wait if you do not set the handler.
wait
is a function which takes an optional function as an argument. It waits for
all currently running Rollbar created threads to stop processing, meaning it waits
for any items to be sent over the network, then it returns the result of calling
the function passed as an argument or None
if function was given. Hence, one can
use it via
def lambda_handler(event, context):
try:
result = ...
return rollbar.wait(lambda: result)
except:
rollbar.report_exc_info()
rollbar.wait()
raise
We provide a decorator for your handler functions which takes care of calling
wait properly as well as catching any exceptions, namely
rollbar.lambda_function
:
import os
import rollbar
token = os.getenv('ROLLBAR_KEY', 'missing_api_key')
rollbar.init(token, 'production')
@rollbar.lambda_function
def lambda_handler(event, context):
return some_other_function('Hello from Lambda')
For generic Python or a non-Django/non-Pyramid framework just initialize the Rollbar library with your access token and environment.
rollbar.init('POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN', environment='production', **other_config_params)
Other options can be passed as keyword arguments. See the reference below for all options.
pyrollbar comes with a command-line tool that can be used with other UNIX utilities to create an ad-hoc monitoring solution.
e.g. Report all 5xx haproxy requests as warning
tail -f /var/log/haproxy.log | awk '{print $11,$0}' | grep '^5' | awk '{$1="";print "warning",$0}' | rollbar -t POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN -e production -v
e.g. Test an access token
rollbar -t POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN -e test debug testing access token
$ rollbar --help
Usage: rollbar [options]
Options:
--version show program's version number and exit
-h, --help show this help message and exit
-t ACCESS_TOKEN, --access_token=ACCESS_TOKEN
You project's access token from rollbar.com.
-e ENVIRONMENT, --environment=ENVIRONMENT
The environment to report errors and messages to.
-u ENDPOINT_URL, --url=ENDPOINT_URL
The Rollbar API endpoint url to send data to.
-m HANDLER, --handler=HANDLER
The method in which to report errors.
-v, --verbose Print verbose output.
The Django, Pyramid, Flask, and Bottle integrations will automatically report uncaught exceptions to Rollbar.
To report a caught exception to Rollbar, use rollbar.report_exc_info()
:
try:
do_something()
except:
rollbar.report_exc_info(sys.exc_info())
# or if you have a webob-like request object, pass that as well:
# rollbar.report_exc_info(sys.exc_info(), request)
You can also send any other log messages you want, using rollbar.report_message()
:
try:
do_something()
except IOError:
rollbar.report_message('Got an IOError while trying to do_something()', 'warning')
# report_message() also accepts a request object:
#rollbar.report_message('message here', 'warning', request)
Here's a full example, integrating into a simple Gevent app.
"""
Sample Gevent application with Rollbar integration.
"""
import sys
import logging
from gevent.pywsgi import WSGIServer
import rollbar
import webob
# configure logging so that rollbar's log messages will appear
logging.basicConfig()
def application(environ, start_response):
request = webob.Request(environ)
status = '200 OK'
headers = [('Content-Type', 'text/html')]
start_response(status, headers)
yield '<p>Hello world</p>'
# extra fields we'd like to send along to rollbar (optional)
extra_data = {'datacenter': 'us1', 'app' : {'version': '1.1'}}
try:
# will raise a NameError about 'bar' not being defined
foo = bar
except:
# report full exception info
rollbar.report_exc_info(sys.exc_info(), request, extra_data=extra_data)
# and/or, just send a string message with a level
rollbar.report_message("Here's a message", 'info', request, extra_data=extra_data)
yield '<p>Caught an exception</p>'
# initialize rollbar with an access token and environment name
rollbar.init('POST_SERVER_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN', 'development')
# now start the wsgi server
WSGIServer(('', 8000), application).serve_forever()
- access_token
- Access token from your Rollbar project
- agent.log_file
- If `handler` is `agent`, the path to the log file. Filename must end in `.rollbar`
- branch
- Name of the checked-out branch.
Default:
master
- code_version
- A string describing the current code revision/version (i.e. a git sha). Max 40 characters.
Default:
None
- enabled
- Controls whether or not Rollbar will report any data
Default:
True
- endpoint
- URL items are posted to.
Default:
https://api.rollbar.com/api/1/item/
- environment
- Environment name. Any string up to 255 chars is OK. For best results, use "production" for your production environment.
- exception_level_filters
- List of tuples in the form `(class, level)` where `class` is an Exception class you
want to always filter to the respective `level`. Any subclasses of the given `class`
will also be matched.
Valid levels:
'critical'
,'error'
,'warning'
,'info'
,'debug'
and'ignored'
.Use
'ignored'
if you want an Exception (sub)class to never be reported to Rollbar.Any exceptions not found in this configuration setting will default to
'error'
.Django
settings.py
example (and Django default):from django.http import Http404 ROLLBAR = { ... 'exception_level_filters': [ (Http404, 'warning') ] }
In a Pyramid
ini
file, define each tuple as an individual whitespace delimited line, for example:rollbar.exception_level_filters = pyramid.exceptions.ConfigurationError critical #...
- handler
- The method for reporting rollbar items to api.rollbar.com
One of:
- blocking -- runs in main thread
- thread -- spawns a new thread
- agent -- writes messages to a log file for consumption by rollbar-agent
- tornado -- uses the Tornado async library to send the payload
- gae -- uses the Google AppEngineFetch library to send the payload
- twisted -- uses the Twisted event-driven networking library to send the payload
Default:
thread
- locals
- Configuration for collecting local variables. A dictionary:
- enabled
- If `True`, variable values will be collected for stack traces. Default `True`.
- safe_repr
- If `True`, non-built-in objects will be serialized into just their class name. If `False` `repr(obj)` will be used for serialization. Default `True`.
- sizes
- Dictionary of configuration describing the max size to repr() for each type.
- maxdict
- Default 10
- maxarray
- Default 10
- maxlist
- Default 10
- maxtuple
- Default 10
- maxset
- Default 10
- maxfrozenset
- Default 10
- maxdeque
- Default 10
- maxstring
- Default 100
- maxlong
- Default 40
- maxother
- Default 100
- whitelisted_types
- A list of `type` objects, (e.g. `type(my_class_instance)` or `MyClass`) that will be serialized using `repr()`. Default `[]`
- scrub_varargs
- If `True`, variable argument values will be scrubbed. Default `True`.
- root
- Absolute path to the root of your application, not including the final ```/```.
- scrub_fields
- List of sensitive field names to scrub out of request params and locals. Values will be replaced with asterisks. If overriding, make sure to list all fields you want to scrub, not just fields you want to add to the default. Param names are converted to lowercase before comparing against the scrub list.
Default:
['pw', 'passwd', 'password', 'secret', 'confirm_password', 'confirmPassword', 'password_confirmation', 'passwordConfirmation', 'access_token', 'accessToken', 'auth', 'authentication']
- timeout
- Timeout for any HTTP requests made to the Rollbar API (in seconds).
Default:
3
- allow_logging_basic_config
- When True, `logging.basicConfig()` will be called to set up the logging system. Set to False to skip this call. If using Flask, you'll want to set to `False`. If using Pyramid or Django, `True` should be fine.
Default:
True
- url_fields
- List of fields treated as URLs and scrubbed. Default `['url', 'link', 'href']`
- verify_https
- If `True`, network requests will fail unless encountering a valid certificate. Default `True`.
- shortener_keys
- A list of key prefixes (as tuple) to apply our shortener transform to. Added to built-in list:
[ ('body', 'request', 'POST'), ('body', 'request', 'json') ]
If
locals.enabled
isTrue
, extra keys are also automatically added:[ ('body', 'trace', 'frames', '*', 'code'), ('body', 'trace', 'frames', '*', 'args', '*'), ('body', 'trace', 'frames', '*', 'kwargs', '*'), ('body', 'trace', 'frames', '*', 'locals', '*') ]
Default:
[]
- suppress_reinit_warning
- If `True`, suppresses the warning normally shown when `rollbar.init()` is called multiple times. Default `False`.
If you run into any issues, please email us at [email protected]
You can also find us in IRC: #rollbar on chat.freenode.net
For bug reports, please open an issue on GitHub.
- Fork it
- Create your feature branch (
git checkout -b my-new-feature
). - Commit your changes (
git commit -am 'Added some feature'
) - Push to the branch (
git push origin my-new-feature
) - Create new Pull Request
Tests are in rollbar/test
. To run the tests: python setup.py test