Falcon
Learn about using Sentry with Falcon.
The Falcon integration adds support for the Falcon Web Framework. The integration has been confirmed to work with Falcon 1.4 and 2.0.
Install sentry-sdk
from PyPI with the falcon
extra:
pip install --upgrade 'sentry-sdk[falcon]'
If you have the falcon
package in your dependencies, the Falcon integration will be enabled automatically when you initialize the Sentry SDK.
import falcon
import sentry_sdk
sentry_sdk.init(
dsn="https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0",
enable_tracing=True,
)
api = falcon.API()
import falcon
sentry_sdk.init(...) # same as above
class HelloWorldResource:
def on_get(self, req, resp):
message = {
'hello': "world",
}
1 / 0 # raises an error
resp.media = message
app = falcon.App()
app.add_route('/', HelloWorldResource())
When you point your browser to http://localhost:8000/ a transaction will be created in the Performance section of sentry.io. Additionally, an error event will be sent to sentry.io and will be connected to the transaction.
It takes a couple of moments for the data to appear in sentry.io.
uWSGI and Sentry SDK
If you're using uWSGI, note that it doesn't support threads by default. This might lead to unexpected behavior when using the Sentry SDK, from features not working properly to uWSGI workers crashing.
To enable threading support in uWSGI, make sure you have both --enable-threads
and --py-call-uwsgi-fork-hooks
on.
The Sentry Python SDK will install the Falcon integration for all of your apps. The integration hooks into the base
falcon.API
class via monkey patching.All exceptions leading to an Internal Server Error are reported.
Request data is attached to all events: HTTP method, URL, headers, form data, JSON payloads. Sentry excludes raw bodies and multipart file uploads. Sentry also excludes personally identifiable information (such as user ids, usernames, cookies, authorization headers, IP addresses) unless you set
send_default_pii
toTrue
.Each request has a separate scope. Changes to the scope within a view, for example setting a tag, will only apply to events sent as part of the request being handled.
By adding FalconIntegration
to your sentry_sdk.init()
call explicitly, you can set options for FalconIntegration
to change its behavior:
import sentry_sdk
from sentry_sdk.integrations.falcon import FalconIntegration
sentry_sdk.init(
dsn="https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0",
enable_tracing=True,
integrations = [
FalconIntegration(
transaction_style="path",
),
],
)
You can pass the following keyword arguments to FalconIntegration()
:
transaction_style
:Copiedclass MessageResource: def on_get(self, req, resp, message_id): msg = database.get_message(message_id) resp.media = msg.as_json() app = falcon.API() app.add_route("/message/{message_id}", MessageResource())
In the above code, you would set the transaction to:
/myurl/b48a7686-ad8c-4c94-8c3b-412ec7f25db2123
if you settransaction_style="path"
./myurl/{message_id}
if you settransaction_style="uri_template"
The default is
"uri_template"
.
- Falcon: 1.4+
- Python: 3.6+
The versions above apply for Sentry Python SDK version 2.0+
, which drops support for some legacy Python and framework versions. If you're looking to use Sentry with older Python or framework versions, consider using an SDK version from the 1.x
major line of releases.
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").