A webpack (v1 or 2) plugin to upload source maps to Sentry.
Using npm:
$ npm install webpack-sentry-plugin --save-dev
Using yarn:
$ yarn add webpack-sentry-plugin --dev
-
Require
webpack-sentry-plugin
:var SentryPlugin = require('webpack-sentry-plugin');
-
Configure webpack to output source maps. Recommended reading: webpack docs, Sentry docs
-
Add to webpack config:
var config = { plugins: [ new SentryPlugin({ // Sentry options are required organisation: 'your-organisation-name', project: 'your-project-name', apiKey: process.env.SENTRY_API_KEY, // Release version name/hash is required release: function() { return process.env.GIT_SHA } }) ] }
-
organisation
: Required, Sentry organisation to upload files to -
project
: Required, Sentry project to upload files to -
apiKey
: Required, Sentry api key (Generate one here, ensure thatproject:write
,project:read
andproject:releases
are selected ,under scopes) -
release
: Required, string or function that returns the release name. See What is a release? below for details -
exclude
: RegExp to match for excluded filesvar config = { plugins: [ new SentryPlugin({ // Exclude uploading of html exclude: /\.html$/, ... }) ] }
-
include
: RegExp to match for included filesvar config = { plugins: [ new SentryPlugin({ // Only upload foo.js & foo.js.map include: /foo.js/, ... }) ] }
-
filenameTransform
: Function to transform filename before uploading to Sentry. Defaults to prefixing filename with~/
, which is used by Sentry as a host wildcardvar config = { plugins: [ new SentryPlugin({ filenameTransform: function(filename) { return 'a-filename-prefix-' + filename } }) ] }
-
suppressErrors
: Display warnings instead of failing webpack build - useful in case webpack compilation is done during deploy on multiple instances -
baseSentryURL
: URL of Sentry instance. Shouldn't need to set if using sentry.io, but useful if self hosting -
deleteAfterCompile
: Boolean determining whether source maps should be deleted after the webpack compile finishes. Defaults tofalse
A release is a concept that Sentry uses to attach source maps to a known version of your code. The plugin creates one for you, but you need to provide a "name" for a particular version of your code, which is just a string. Sentry can then use the release to say that a it found an error in this known version of your code.
Passing the string to the plugin really depends on your setup. There are three main approaches:
A git commit hash is very useful for releases - it is a string that defines a particular version of your code. For example, deploying to Heroku with a git hook, you can access a SOURCE_VERSION
environment variable that is the latest commit's hash. CircleCI provides the git hash in a CIRCLE_SHA1
environment variable. Travis provides TRAVIS_COMMIT
. To supply it to the plugin you can configure the release
option to be a function that returns the hash:
new SentryPlugin({
// ...
release: function() {
// Note: this is just an example, it depends on your deployment pipeline
return process.env.SOURCE_VERSION;
}
});
Alternatively you can use the webpack build hash. This is generated by webpack and is based on the contents of the build - so if you change the code, the hash also changes. This also is useful for Sentry releases as it identifies a particular version of your code. The plugin provides the webpack hash to you as the first argument to the release function:
new SentryPlugin({
// ...
release: function(hash) {
return hash; // webpack build hash
}
});
The final option is to manually provide a string to the release
option:
new Sentry Plugin({
// ...
release: 'foo-release'
});
Keep in mind that this string will need to change when you update your code. The other options above are recommended.
After you deploy you need to tell the Sentry client (Raven) which release is the current release. There is an option called release
that you pass when configuring it:
Raven.config({
release: 'YOUR-RELEASE-STRING-HERE'
});
- Thanks to @MikaAK for creating s3-webpack-plugin, which inspired much of this project
- Thanks to @danharper for creating the original build script implementation
Contributions are welcome 😄. To run the tests, please ensure you have the relevant environment variables set up. You can cp .env.example .env
and fill it in with test account credentials. An API key can be created here, assuming you are signed in.
Warning
npm start
: List available commands (in green at bottom)npm test
: Runs the test suitenpm start lint
: Runs lintingnpm start format
: Formats code with prettier-eslint