Filtering
When you add Sentry to your app, you get a lot of valuable information about errors and performance. And lots of information is good -- as long as it's the right information, at a reasonable volume.
The Sentry SDKs have several configuration options to help you filter out events.
We also offer Inbound Filters to filter events in sentry.io. We recommend filtering at the client level though, because it removes the overhead of sending events you don't actually want. Learn more about the fields available in an event.
Configure your SDK to filter error events by using the BeforeSend
callback method and configuring, enabling, or disabling integrations.
All Sentry SDKs support the BeforeSend
callback method. Because it's called immediately before the event is sent to the server, this is your last chance to decide not to send data or to edit it. BeforeSend
receives the event object as a parameter, which you can use to either modify the event’s data or drop it completely by returning null
, based on custom logic and the data available on the event.
A Func<SentryEvent, Hint, SentryEvent?>
can be used to mutate, discard (return null), or return a completely new event.
using Sentry;
// Add this to the SDK initialization callback
options.SetBeforeSend((sentryEvent, hint) =>
{
if (sentryEvent.Exception != null
&& sentryEvent.Exception.Message.Contains("Noisy Exception"))
{
return null; // Don't send this event to Sentry
}
sentryEvent.ServerName = null; // Never send Server Name to Sentry
return sentryEvent;
});
Note also that breadcrumbs can be filtered, as discussed in our Breadcrumbs documentation.
To prevent certain transactions from being reported to Sentry, use the TracesSampler
or BeforeSendTransaction
configuration option, which allows you to provide a function to evaluate the current transaction and drop it if it's not one you want.
Note: The TracesSampler
and TracesSampleRate
config options are mutually exclusive. If you define a TracesSampler
to filter out certain transactions, you must also handle the case of non-filtered transactions by returning the rate at which you'd like them sampled.
In its simplest form, used just for filtering the transaction, it looks like this:
// Add this to the SDK initialization callback
options.TracesSampler = samplingContext =>
{
if (/* make a decision based on `samplingContext` */) {
// Drop this transaction, by setting its sample rate to 0%
return 0;
} else if (/* ... */) {
// Override sample rate for other cases (replaces `options.TracesSampleRate`)
return 0.1;
}
// Can return `null` to fallback to the rate configured by `options.TracesSampleRate`
return null;
};
It also allows you to sample different transactions at different rates.
If the transaction currently being processed has a parent transaction (from an upstream service calling this service), the parent (upstream) sampling decision will always be included in the sampling context data, so that your TracesSampler
can choose whether and when to inherit that decision. In most cases, inheritance is the right choice, to avoid breaking distributed traces. A broken trace will not include all your services. See Inheriting the parent sampling decision to learn more.
Learn more about configuring the sample rate.
A Func<SentryTransaction, Hint, SentryTransaction?>
can be used to update the transaction or drop it by returning null
before it gets sent to Sentry. For example:
using Sentry;
// Add this to the SDK initialization callback
options.SetBeforeSendTransaction((sentryTransaction, hint) =>
{
// Modify the transaction
if (sentryTransaction.Operation.Equals("http.server"))
{
return null; // Drop the transaction by returning null
}
return sentryTransaction;
});
Our documentation is open source and available on GitHub. Your contributions are welcome, whether fixing a typo (drat!) or suggesting an update ("yeah, this would be better").
- Package:
- nuget:Sentry.AspNetCore
- Version:
- 4.3.0
- Repository:
- https://github.com/getsentry/sentry-dotnet