Environment
This guide steps you through configuring a local development environment for the Sentry server on macOS and Linux.
If you're using another operating system (Plan 9, BeOS, Windows, …) the instructions are still roughly the same, but we don't maintain any official documentation for anything else for now.
Begin by installing the devenv
tool following these instructions.
After installation you should be able to run devenv bootstrap
which will guide you through the rest.
When you're done with setup, you'll want to also review the development workflow.
Simply run devenv sync
inside of your sentry or getsentry repo.
The devservices
ensure that you have all the services required for local development running. See the devservices docs for more information on managing services. When setting up sentry
, execute the following command in the sentry
folder:
sentry devservices up
After that, you can start the development server inside the sentry
folder:
sentry devserver --workers
If you are developing for aesthetics only and do not rely on the async workers, you can omit the --workers
flag in order to use fewer system resources.
Access it at http://dev.getsentry.net:8000 (you'll have to wait a bit for webpack to finish). A superuser account should have been created for you during bootstrap - admin@sentry.io
with password admin
. You can create other users with sentry createuser
.
Note
When asked for the root address of the server, make sure that you use http://dev.getsentry.net:8000, as both protocol and port are required in order for DNS and some pages' URLs to be displayed correctly.
Please refer to Frontend Development Server and Backend Development Server for alternative ways to bring up the Sentry UI.
You may wish to run the development server in HTTPS mode. This can be done by generating and installing local certificates.
We will be using mkcert to create and install a locally-trusted, development certificate. The following will install mkcert
and then create and install the local certificates.
brew install mkcert
brew install nss # if you use Firefox
yarn mkcert-localhost
Running sentry devserver
will automatically use HTTPS when the certificates have been installed.
Relay and the ingest workers are not started by default. Follow the instructions below to start them so you can send events to your dev environment Sentry instance:
- Set
SENTRY_USE_RELAY = True
in~/.sentry/sentry.conf.py
. This will tellsentry devservices up
to also start services that Relay needs. - Run
sentry devservices up
to start the services Relay needs. (like for example Kafka) - (Re-)Start your devserver with the
--ingest
flag (e.g.sentry devserver --workers --ingest
). This will start the Relay container and all related services alongside your devserver.
Note: To update Relay, manually run sentry devservices up --skip-only-if relay
.
If you want to enable the entire metrics ingestion pipeline: You need to add the following to your config at ~/.sentry/sentry.conf.py
:
SENTRY_USE_RELAY = True
SENTRY_USE_METRICS_DEV = True
SENTRY_EVENTSTREAM = "sentry.eventstream.kafka.KafkaEventStream"
SENTRY_FEATURES['organizations:metrics-extraction'] = True # Enables session metrics
SENTRY_FEATURES['organizations:transaction-metrics-extraction'] = True # Enables transaction metrics
After enabling KafkaEventStream
the snuba
service has to be reset to pick up the new configuration:
sentry devservices rm snuba
sentry devservices up snuba
Employees Only
Only Sentry employees have access to getsentry.
See also: Sentry vs Getsentry
Just like running sentry
(see above), you can start the devservices
using the following command in the getsentry
folder:
sentry devservices up
After that, you can start the development server inside the getsentry
folder:
getsentry devserver --workers
Note: You cannot have both sentry and getsentry devserver running at the same time.
After the server warms up for a little while, you must access it at http://dev.getsentry.net:8000. Using localhost doesn't work.
If you need to overwrite configuration options for your local environment, you can create getsentry/conf/settings/devlocal.py
and put the configuration option overrides there. This module will be automatically imported by dev.py
if it exists.
To enable the ingest workers, follow the steps described here and run
getsentry devserver --workers --ingest
By default sentry devserver
will run a monolith mode application server. You can also run devserver
with siloed application instances. Before you do, you need to create split silo databases.
The devserver command supports --silo
option that lets you create siloed instances. Any workers, consumers, or celery-beat processes will be started with the same silo mode.
# Start control silo servers
sentry devserver --silo=control --celery-beat --workers
# Start region silo servers
sentry devserver --silo=region --celery-beat --workers --ingest
Siloed servers have the following port assignments:
- 8000 - Webpack
- 8010 - Region silo webserver
- 8001 - Control silo webserver
In the above setup your local environment will use org slug domains, and send requests to us.dev.getsentry.net
(region silo) and dev.getsentry.net
(control silo). All requests will be proxied by webpack and forwarded to the appropriate server based on hostname.
To combine ngrok and local development servers you’ll need to reserve multiple domains in ngrok, and create a configuration file for ngrok:
version: "2"
authtoken: <YOUR-NGROK-AUTHTOKEN>
tunnels:
acme-org:
proto: http
hostname: acme.<yourname>.ngrok.dev
addr: 8000
control-silo:
proto: http
hostname: <yourname>.ngrok.dev
host_header: "rewrite"
addr: 8000
region-silo:
proto: http
hostname: us.<yourname>.ngrok.dev
addr: 8010
host_header: "rewrite"
Then run all the required servers
# Run a control silo with ngrok
sentry devserver --silo=control --ngrok <yourname>.ngrok.dev
# Run a region silo without ngrok
sentry devserver --silo=region --ngrok <yourname>.ngrok.dev
# Run ngrok
ngrok start --all --config regions.yml
This setup will result in both the region and control servers responding to different domains. The multi-region setup with ngrok also enables customer-domains and you'll need ngrok domains for each organization you plan on using. In this configuration, CORS will work similar to production. For ngrok setup with non-siloed development server see developement server.
If you want to use a repl with silo modes active:
# Start a control silo shell
SENTRY_SILO_DEVSERVER=1 SENTRY_SILO_MODE=CONTROL getsentry django shell
# Start a region silo shell
SENTRY_SILO_DEVSERVER=1 SENTRY_SILO_MODE=REGION SENTRY_REGION=us getsentry django shell
You might also be interested in troubleshooting CI.
Problem: DoesNotExist: Subscription matching query does not exist
during getsentry devserver
Solution:
./bin/mock-subscription
You can also set your local instance's org to use a business plan by running the following in getsentry:
./bin/mock-subscription <org_slug> --plan mm2_a_500k
Problem: You see an error that mentions something like pkg_resources.DistributionNotFound: The 'some_dependency<0.6.0,>=0.5.5' distribution was not found and is required by sentry
Solution: Your virtualenv needs to be updated. Run make install-py-dev
.
Problem: You see Error occured while trying to proxy to: dev.getsentry.net:8000/
Solution: You likely need to upgrade your Python dependencies. Go to the git root directory and run make install-py-dev
.
Problem: Module not found: Error: Can't resolve 'integration-docs-platforms'
Solution:
make build-platform-assets
Problem: You see SessionNotCreatedException: Message: session not created: This version of ChromeDriver only supports Chrome version 76
Or:
Traceback (most recent call last):
File "/Users/joshua.li/dev/sentry/sentry/src/sentry/utils/pytest/selenium.py", line 344, in browser
driver = start_chrome(**chrome_args)
File "/Users/joshua.li/dev/sentry/sentry/src/sentry/utils/retries.py", line 41, in execute_with_retry
return retrier(functools.partial(fn, *args, **kwargs))
File "/Users/joshua.li/dev/sentry/sentry/src/sentry/utils/retries.py", line 85, in __call__
error,
RetryException: Could not successfully execute <functools.partial object at 0x10f31e7e0> within 15.830 seconds (12 attempts.)
Solution:
ChromeDriver needs to be updated.
brew upgrade --cask chromedriver
Problem: You see DoesNotExist: Subscription matching query does not exist
Solution: In getsentry, run the following to mock a subscription:
./bin/mock-subscription <org_slug>
Problem: You see something like Error: No such container: sentry_postgres
, or you don't see sentry_snuba
, sentry_postgres
, sentry_clickhouse
, and sentry_redis
listed under COMMAND NAMES
.
Solution:
sentry devservices up
Problem: You see something like Error 61 connecting to 127.0.0.1:6379. Connection refused.
when running your dev server.
Solution: Make sure your Docker services are running:
docker ps
Problem: You use an Android emulator with a DSN pointing to localhost, and the events don't show up in your local Sentry instance.
Solution: Change localhost
to 10.0.2.2
. So, for example, change http://d895df97e1cb4a33b4dff8af3e78da09@localhost:8000/2 to http://d895df97e1cb4a33b4dff8af3e78da09@10.0.2.2:8000/2. This is because localhost or 127.0.0.1
refers to the emulator's own loopback interface, not the loopback interface of the host machine. For more information see https://developer.android.com/studio/run/emulator-networking.
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").