README.md
Errbit
The open source, self-hosted error catcher
Errbit is a tool for collecting and managing errors from other applications.
It is Airbrake API compliant, so if you are already using
Airbrake, you can just point the airbrake
gem to your Errbit server.
Apps Errors Error Summary Error Backtraces
Mailing List
Join the Google Group at https://groups.google.com/group/errbit to receive updates and notifications.
Requirements
The list of requirements to install Errbit are:
- Ruby 2.1.0 or higher
- MongoDB 2.6.0 or higher
Installation
Note: This app is intended for people with experience deploying and maintaining Rails applications. If you're uncomfortable with any steps below then Errbit is not for you.
- Install MongoDB
- git clone https://github.com/errbit/errbit.git
- bundle install
- bundle exec rake errbit:bootstrap
- bundle exec rails server
Configuration
Errbit configuration is done entirely through environment variables. See configuration
Deployment
Notice Grouping
The way Errbit arranges notices into error groups is configurable. By default, Errbit uses the notice's error class, error message, complete backtrace, component (or controller), action and environment name to generate a unique fingerprint for every notice. Notices with identical fingerprints appear in the UI as different occurences of the same error and notices with differing fingerprints are displayed as separate errors.
Changing the fingerprinter (under the 'config' menu) applies to all apps and
the change affects only notices that arrive after the change. If you want to
refingerprint old notices, you can run rake errbit:notice_refingerprint
.
Managing apps
An Errbit app is a place to collect error notifications from your external application deployments.
See apps
Authentication
Configuring GitHub authentication:
- Set GITHUB_AUTHENTICATION=true
- Register your instance of Errbit at https://github.com/settings/applications
If you host Errbit at errbit.example.com, you would fill in:
URL http://errbit.example.com Callback URL http://errbit.example.com/users/auth/github/callback
- After you have registered your app, set GITHUB_CLIENT_ID and GITHUB_SECRET with your app's Client ID and Secret key.
When you start your application, you should see the option to Sign in with GitHub on the Login page. You will also be able to link your GitHub profile to your user account on your Edit profile page.
If you have signed in with GitHub, or linked your GitHub profile, and you're working with an App that has a GitHub repo configured, then you will be able to create issues on GitHub. If you use another issue tracker, see Issue Trackers.
You can change the OAuth scope Errbit requests from GitHub by setting
GITHUB_ACCESS_SCOPE
. The default ['repo'] is very permissive, but there are a
few others that could make sense for your needs:
GITHUB_ACCESS_SCOPE="['repo']" Allow creating issues for public and private repos GITHUB_ACCESS_SCOPE="['public_repo']" Allow creating issues for public repos only GITHUB_ACCESS_SCOPE="[]" No permissions at all, but allows errbit login through github
- GITHUB_ORG_ID is an optional environment variable you can set to your own github organization id. If set, only users of the specified GitHub organization can log in to Errbit through GitHub. Errbit will provision accounts for new users.
Configuring Google authentication:
- Set GOOGLE_AUTHENTICATION=true
- Register your instance of Errbit at https://console.developers.google.com/apis/api/plus/overview
If you host Errbit at errbit.example.com, you would fill in:
URL http://errbit.example.com Callback URL http://errbit.example.com/users/auth/google_oauth2/callback
- After you have registered your app, set GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID and GOOGLE_SECRET with your app's Client ID and Secret key.
When you start your application, you should see the option to Sign in with Google on the Login page. You will also be able to link your Google profile to your user account on your Edit profile page.
Configuring LDAP authentication:
- Set ERRBIT_USER_HAS_USERNAME=true
- Follow the instructions at https://github.com/cschiewek/devise_ldap_authenticatable to set up the devise_ldap_authenticatable gem.
- Set
config.ldap_create_user = true
inconfig/initializers/devise.rb
, this enables creating the users from LDAP, otherwhise login will not work. - Create a new initializer (e.g.
config/initializers/devise_ldap.rb
) and add the following code to enable ldap authentication in the User-model:
Errbit::Config.devise_modules << :ldap_authenticatable
- If you are authenticating by
username
, you will need to set the user's email manually before authentication. You must add the following lines toapp/models/user.rb
:
def ldap_before_save
name = Devise::LDAP::Adapter.get_ldap_param(self.username, "givenName")
surname = Devise::LDAP::Adapter.get_ldap_param(self.username, "sn")
mail = Devise::LDAP::Adapter.get_ldap_param(self.username, "mail")
self.name = (name + surname).join ' '
self.email = mail.first
end
- Now login with your user from LDAP, this will create a user in the database
- Open a rails console and set the admin flag for your user:
user = User.first
user.admin = true
user.save!
Upgrading
When upgrading Errbit, please run:
git pull origin master # assuming origin is the github.com/errbit/errbit repo
bundle install
rake db:migrate
rake db:mongoid:remove_undefined_indexes
rake db:mongoid:create_indexes
rake assets:precompile
This will ensure that your application stays up to date with any schema changes.
Upgrading errbit beyond v0.4.0
- You must have already run migrations at least up to v0.3.0. Check to make sure you're schema version is at least 20131011155638 by running rake db:version before you upgrade beyond v0.4.0
- Notice fingerprinting has changed and is now easy to configure. But this
means you'll have to regenerate fingerprints on old notices in order to for
them to be properly grouped with new notices. To do this run:
rake errbit:notice_refingerprint
. If you were using a custom fingerprinter class in a previous version, be aware that it will no longer have any effect. Fingerprinting is now configurable within the Errbit UI. - Prior to v0.4.0, users were only able to see apps they were watching. All users can now see all apps and they can watch or unwatch any app. If you were using the watch feature to hide secret apps, you should not upgrade beyond v0.4.0.
Upgrading errbit from v0.3.0 to v0.4.0
- All configuration is now done through the environment. See configuration
- Ruby 1.9 and 2.0 are no longer offically supported. Please upgrade to Ruby 2.1+
- Errbit now maintains an issue tracker only for github. If you're using another issue tracker integration, you may need to maintain it yourself. See Issue Trackers
User information in error reports
Errbit can now display information about the user who experienced an error. This gives you the ability to ask the user for more information, and let them know when you've fixed the bug.
The Airbrake gem will look for current_user
or current_member
. By defailt it will only send the id
of the user, to specify other attributes you can set config.user_attributes
. See the Airbrake wiki for more information.
If user information is received with an error report, it will be displayed under the User Details tab:
This tab will be hidden if no user information is available.
Javascript error notifications
You can log javascript errors that occur in your application by including the airbrake-js javascript library.
Install airbrake-js according to the docs at and set your project and host as soon as you want to start reporting errors. Then follow along with the documentation at https://github.com/airbrake/airbrake-js/blob/master/README.md
var airbrake = new airbrakeJs.Client({
projectId: 'ERRBIT API KEY',
projectKey: 'ERRBIT API KEY (again)',
reporter: 'xhr',
host: 'https://myerrbit.com'
});
Plugins and Integrations
You can extend Errbit by adding Ruby gems and plugins which are typically gems.
It's nice to keep track of which gems are core Errbit dependencies and which
gems are your own dependencies. If you want to add gems to your own Errbit,
place them in a new file called UserGemfile
and Errbit will treat that file
as an additional Gemfile. If you want to use a file with a different name, you
can pass the name of that file in an environment variable named USER_GEMFILE
.
If you want to use errbit_jira_plugin, just add it to UserGemfile:
echo "gem 'errbit_jira_plugin'" > UserGemfile
bundle install
Issue Trackers
Each issue tracker integration is implemented as a gem that depends on errbit_plugin. The only officially supported issue tracker plugin is errbit_github_plugin.
If you want to implement your own issue tracker plugin, read the README.md file at errbit_plugin.
What if Errbit has an error?
Errbit will log it's own errors to an internal app named Self.Errbit. The Self.Errbit app is automatically created when the first error happens.
If your Errbit instance has logged an error, we would appreciate a bug report on GitHub Issues. You can post this manually at https://github.com/errbit/errbit/issues, or you can set up the GitHub Issues tracker for your Self.Errbit app:
- Go to the Self.Errbit app's edit page. If that app does not exist yet,
go to the apps page and click Add a new App to create it. (You can also
create it by running
rake airbrake:test
.) - In the Issue Tracker section, click GitHub Issues.
- Fill in the Account/Repository field with errbit/errbit.
- Fill in the Username field with your github username.
- If you are logged in on GitHub, you can find your API Token on this page: https://github.com/account/admin.
- Save the settings by clicking Update App (or Add App)
- You can now easily post bug reports to GitHub Issues by clicking the Create Issue button on a Self.Errbit error.
Use Errbit with applications written in other languages
In theory, any Airbrake-compatible error catcher for other languages should work with Errbit. Solutions known to work are listed below:
PHP (>= 5.3) flippa/errbit-php OOP PHP (>= 5.3) emgiezet/errbitPHP Python mkorenkov/errbit.py , pulseenergy/airbrakepy
People using Errbit
See our wiki page for a list of people and companies around the world who use Errbit. You may edit this page, and add your name and country to the list if you are using Errbit.
Special Thanks
- Michael Parenteau - For rocking the Errbit design and providing a great user experience.
- Nick Recobra (@oruen) - Nick is Errbit's first core contributor. He's been working hard at making Errbit more awesome.
- Nathan Broadbent (@ndbroadbent) - Maintaining Errbit and contributing many features
- Vasiliy Ermolovich (@nashby) - Contributing and helping to resolve issues and pull requests
- Marcin Ciunelis (@martinciu) - Helping to improve Errbit's architecture
- Cyril Mougel (@shingara) - Maintaining Errbit and contributing many features
- Relevance - For giving me Open-source Fridays to work on Errbit and all my awesome co-workers for giving feedback and inspiration.
- Thoughtbot - For being great open-source advocates and setting the bar with Airbrake.
See the contributors graph for more details.
Contributing to Errbit
See the contribution guidelines
Running tests
Check the .travis.yml file to see how tests are run
Copyright
Copyright (c) 2010-2015 Errbit Team