Contexts Interface
The Contexts Interface provides additional context data. Typically, this is data related to the current user and the environment. For example, the device or application version. Its canonical name is contexts
.
The contexts
type can be used to define arbitrary contextual data on the event. It accepts an object of key/value pairs. The key is the “alias” of the context and can be freely chosen. However, as per policy, it should match the type of the context unless there are two values for a type. You can omit type
if the key name is the type.
When adding additional data to the event data model contexts are a good fit when you have all the data available at a single point in time. Contexts are not well suited to data that is collected over time as the SDK interfaces for contexts don't afford merging of data.
Unknown data for the contexts is rendered as a key/value list.
In the Sentry Product, certain contexts are rendered in a special way to make it more readable. More details about this can be found in the contexts code on the Sentry UI.
For more details about sending additional data with your event, see the full documentation on Additional Data.
Device context describes the device that caused the event. This is most appropriate for mobile applications.
The type
and default key is "device"
.
name
- Required. The name of the device. This is typically a hostname.
family
- Optional. The family of the device. This is usually the common part of model names across generations. For instance,
iPhone
would be a reasonable family, so would beSamsung Galaxy
. model
- Optional. The model name. This, for example, can be
Samsung Galaxy S3
. model_id
- Optional. An internal hardware revision to identify the device exactly.
arch
- Optional. The CPU architecture.
battery_level
- Optional. If the device has a battery, this can be a floating point value defining the battery level (in the range 0-100).
battery_temperature
- Optional. If the device has a battery, this can be a floating point value defining the battery temperature in Celsius.
orientation
- Optional. This can be a string
portrait
orlandscape
to define the orientation of a device. manufacturer
- Optional. The manufacturer of the device.
brand
- Optional. The brand of the device.
screen_resolution
- Optional. The screen resolution. (e.g.: 800x600, 3040x1444).
screen_height_pixels
- Optional. The height of the screen.
screen_width_pixels
- Optional. The width of the screen.
screen_density
- Optional. A floating point denoting the screen density.
screen_dpi
- Optional. A decimal value reflecting the DPI (dots-per-inch) density.
online
- Optional. Whether the device was online or not.
charging
- Optional. Whether the device was charging or not.
low_memory
- Optional. Whether the device was low on memory.
simulator
- Optional. A flag indicating whether this device is a simulator or an actualdevice.
memory_size
- Optional. Total system memory available in bytes.
free_memory
- Optional. Free system memory in bytes.
usable_memory
- Optional. Memory usable for the app in bytes.
storage_size
- Optional. Total device storage in bytes.
free_storage
- Optional. Free device storage in bytes.
external_storage_size
- Optional. Total size of an attached external storage in bytes (for example, android SDK card).
external_free_storage
- Optional. Free size of an attached external storage in bytes (for example, android SDK card).
boot_time
- Optional. A formatted UTC timestamp when the system was booted. For example,
"2018-02-08T12:52:12Z"
. timezone
- Optional. The timezone of the device. For example,
Europe/Vienna
. This field is deprecated, please usetimezone
of culture context instead. language
- Optional. The language of the device. For example,
en
. This field is deprecated, please uselocale
of culture context instead. processor_count
- Optional. Number of "logical processors". For example,
8
. cpu_description
- Optional. CPU description. For example,
Intel(R) Core(TM)2 Quad CPU Q6600 @ 2.40GHz
. processor_frequency
- Optional. Processor frequency in MHz. Note that the actual CPU frequency might vary depending on current load and power conditions, especially on low-powered devices like phones and laptops.
device_type
- Optional. Kind of device the application is running on. For example,
Unknown, Handheld, Console, Desktop
. battery_status
- Optional. Status of the device's battery. For example,
Unknown, Charging, Discharging, NotCharging, Full
. device_unique_identifier
- Optional. Unique device identifier. This value might only be used if
sendDefaultPii
is enabled. supports_vibration
- Optional. Is vibration available on the device?
supports_accelerometer
- Optional. Is accelerometer available on the device?
supports_gyroscope
- Optional. Is gyroscope available on the device?
supports_audio
- Optional. Is audio available on the device?
supports_location_service
- Optional. Is the device capable of reporting its location?
OS context under the default key "os"
describes the operating system on which the crash happened/the event was created.
The type
and default key is "os"
. However, since contexts can be set multiple times under different keys, there has historically been a lot of confusion about which OS context represents what. So here's some examples:
In events reported from a Python/ASP.NET/Rails web backend, the OS context under the default key
"os"
is the server's operating system, and is set by the SDK (if at all).Additionally, the Sentry server will attempt to parse the
User-Agent
header from the event's Request Interface and create a secondary OS context under the non-default key"client_os"
.In events reported from a JS web frontend, the SDK typically reports no OS context.
The server however knows by looking at the platform (
"javascript"
) that the incoming User-Agent can only come from the crashing device, and creates the User-Agent based OS context under the default key"os"
.
To summarize:
"os"
key for the device generating the event."client_os"
key for an adjacent client device's OS (that is not the device creating the event) if it's important. The Sentry server sets this as part of User-Agent parsing, but SDKs can set this directly too.If in doubt, just send
"os"
. Any other keys are not searchable in the product and will not be visually pronounced using icons, so using something like"server_os"
to clarify what you meant is probably going to backfire with regards to the overall product experience.Under the existing mental model, a hypothetical
"server_os"
key would actually mean you're reporting the operating system of an adjacent "upstream" device that the crashing device is talking to.As Kurt Tucholsky said: "The opposite of good is not evil, but good intentions"
name
- Recommended. The name of the operating system. It might be derived from
raw_description
. It is required ifraw_description
is not provided. version
- Optional. The version of the operating system.
build
- Optional. The internal build revision of the operating system.
kernel_version
- Optional. An independent kernel version string. This is typically the entire output of the
uname
syscall. rooted
- Optional. A flag indicating whether the OS has been jailbroken or rooted.
theme
- Optional. Either
light
ordark
. Describes whether the OS runs in dark mode or not. raw_description
- Optional. An unprocessed description string obtained by the operating system. For some well-known runtimes, Sentry will attempt to parse
name
andversion
from this string, if they are not explicitly given. distribution_name
- Optional. A stable name for each distribution. This maps to
ID
in/etc/os-release
(examples:ubuntu
,rhel
,alpine
; a full list of tested identifiers is available in the Native SDK repository) distribution_version
- Optional. Typically identifies at least the major release version number. This maps to
VERSION_ID
in/etc/os-release
. Distributions with rolling releases only, will not provide a version. distribution_pretty_name
- Optional. Typically provides the full name, full version, and release alias. This maps to
PRETTY_NAME
in/etc/os-release
(examples:Ubuntu 22.04.4 LTS
,Raspian GNU/Linux 10 (buster)
).
The OS Context for the 3 major OSs should look like this:
{
"windows": {
"type": "os",
"name": "Windows",
"version": "10.0.19041",
"build": "662"
},
"mac": {
"type": "os",
"name": "macOS",
"version": "11.1.0",
"build": "20C69",
"kernel_version": "20.2.0"
},
"linux": {
"type": "os",
"name": "Linux",
"version": "6.1.82(99.168.amzn2023.x86_64)",
"distribution_name": "amzn",
"distribution_version": "2023",
"distribution_pretty_name": "Amazon Linux 2023.4.20240401"
}
}
}
Runtime context describes a runtime in more detail. Typically, this context is used multiple times if multiple runtimes are involved (for instance, if you have a JavaScript application running on top of JVM).
The type
and default key is "runtime"
.
name
- Recommended. The name of the runtime. It might be derived from
raw_description
. It is required ifraw_description
is not provided. version
- Optional. The version identifier of the runtime.
raw_description
- Optional. An unprocessed description string obtained by the runtime. For some well-known runtimes, Sentry will attempt to parse
name
andversion
from this string, if they are not explicitly given.
App context describes the application. As opposed to the runtime, this is the actual application that was running and carries metadata about the current session.
The type
and default key is "app"
.
app_start_time
- Optional. Formatted UTC timestamp when the user started the application.
device_app_hash
- Optional. Application-specific device identifier.
build_type
- Optional. String identifying the kind of build. For example,
testflight
. app_identifier
- Optional. Version-independent application identifier, often a dotted bundleID.
app_name
- Optional. Human readable application name, as it appears on the platform.
app_version
- Optional. Human readable application version, as it appears on the platform.
app_build
- Optional. Internal build identifier, as it appears on the platform.
app_memory
- Optional. Amount of memory used by the application in bytes.
app_arch
- Optional. The CPU architecture of the application. This may differ from the device CPU architecture.
in_foreground
- Optional. A flag indicating whether the app is in foreground or not. An app is in foreground when it's visible to the user.
permissions
- Optional. A dictionary of permissions that the application uses. Each entry in the dictionary conforms to the following structure:
<permission_name>: 'granted|denied|not_granted'
.If a platform doesn't provide capabilities to identify whether a permission has beendenied
, thennot_granted
can be used. view_names
- Optional. A list of visible UI screens at the current point in time.
start_type
- Optional. The way the OS started the app. For example,
cold
,warm
,cold.prewarmed
, orwarm.prewarmed
.
Browser context carries information about the browser or user agent for web-related errors. This can either be the browser this event occurred in or the user agent of a web request that triggered the event.
The type
and default key is "browser"
.
name
- Required. Display name of the browser application.
version
- Optional. Version string of the browser.
GPU context describes the GPU of the device.
name
- Required. The name of the graphics device.
version
- Optional. The Version of the graphics device.
id
- Optional. The PCI identifier of the graphics device.
vendor_id
- Optional. The PCI vendor identifier of the graphics device.
vendor_name
- Optional. The vendor name as reported by the graphics device.
memory_size
- Optional. The total GPU memory available in Megabytes.
api_type
- Optional. The device low-level API type.
Examples: "Apple Metal"
or "Direct3D11"
multi_threaded_rendering
- Optional. Whether the GPU has multi-threaded rendering or not.
npot_support
- Optional. The Non-Power-Of-Two-Support support.
max_texture_size
- Optional. Largest size of a texture that is supported by the graphics hardware. For example,
16384
. graphics_shader_level
- Optional. Approximate "shader capability" level of the graphics device. For example,
Shader Model 2.0, OpenGL ES 3.0, Metal / OpenGL ES 3.1, 27 (unknown)
. supports_draw_call_instancing
- Optional. Is GPU draw call instancing supported?
supports_ray_tracing
- Optional. Is ray tracing available on the device?
supports_compute_shaders
- Optional. Are compute shaders available on the device?
supports_geometry_shaders
- Optional. Are geometry shaders available on the device?
{
"contexts": {
"gpu": {
"name": "AMD Radeon Pro 560",
"vendor_name": "Apple",
"memory_size": 4096,
"api_type": "Metal",
"multi_threaded_rendering": true,
"version": "Metal",
"npot_support": "Full"
}
}
}
State context describes the state of the application (e.g.: Redux store object).
The type
and default key is "state"
.
state
- Required. Object with two keys: Optional
type
for naming the state library (e.g.: Redux, MobX, Vuex) and Requiredvalue
that holds the state object.
{
"contexts": {
"state": {
"state": {
"type": "MobX",
"value": {
"flights": [],
"airports": [],
"showModal": false
}
}
}
}
}
Culture Context describes certain properties of the culture in which the software is used.
The type
and default key is "culture"
.
calendar
- Optional. For example
GregorianCalendar
. Free form string. display_name
- Optional. Human readable name of the culture. For example
English (United States)
locale
- Optional. The name identifier, usually following the RFC 4646. For example
en-US
orpt-BR
. is_24_hour_format
- Optional. boolean, either
true
orfalse
. timezone
- Optional. The timezone of the locale. For example,
Europe/Vienna
.
Cloud Resource Context describes certain properties of cloud provider the software is running. The data in the context abides to the Cloud and Host semantic conventions of OpenTelemenetry.
The type
and default key is "cloud_resource"
.
cloud.provider
- Optional. Name of the cloud provider.
- List of well-known values. If one of them applies, then the respective value MUST be used, otherwise a custom value MAY be used:
alibaba_cloud
- Alibaba Cloudaws
- Amazon Web Servicesazure
- Microsoft Azuregcp
- Google Cloud Platformibm_cloud
- IBM Cloudtencent_cloud
- Tencent Cloud
- Example:
aws
cloud.account.id
- Optional. The cloud account ID the resource is assigned to.
- Example:
111111111111
cloud.region
- Optional. The geographical region the resource is running.
- Example:
us-central1
orus-east-1
cloud.availability_zone
- Optional. Cloud regions often have multiple, isolated locations known as zones to increase availability. Availability zone represents the zone where the resource is running.
- Example:
us-east-1c
cloud.platform
- Optional. The cloud platform in use. The prefix of the service SHOULD match the one specified in
cloud.provider
.
- Example:
aws_ecs
host.id
- Optional. Unique host ID.
- Example:
3635354529892309001
host.type
- Optional. Machine type of host.
- Example:
t4g.medium
The following example illustrates the contexts part of the event payload and omits other attributes for simplicity.
{
"contexts": {
"cloud_resource": {
"cloud.provider": "aws",
"cloud.platform": "aws_ec2",
"cloud.account.id": "499517922981",
"cloud.region": "us-east-1",
"cloud.availability_zone": "us-east-1e",
"host.id": "i-07d3301208fe0a55a",
"host.type": "t2.large"
}
}
}
Additional information that allows Sentry to connect multiple transactions, spans, and/or errors into one trace. Important: If the trace context is missing, relay will drop the transaction.
trace_id
- Required. The trace ID. Determines which
trace
the Span/Transaction belongs to. The value should be 16 random bytes encoded as a hex string (32 characters long).
- Example:
"8f431b7aa08441bbbd5a0100fd91f9fe"
span_id
- Required. The ID of the span or transaction. For non-transaction events, and if performance monitoring is disabled, it may still be desired to attach events to a trace via a trace ID. In these cases, you still need to provide a span ID. This span ID can effectively be entirely random and doesn't need to relate to an actual span, however, it is recommended to consider using the same span ID for multiple events within the same unit-of-execution (e.g. a request). See the TwP docs for more details.
- Example:
"bb8f278130535c3c"
parent_span_id
- Optional. The ID of the span enclosing this span.
- Example:
null
or"a8972eefa820e2ff"
op
- Optional. Short code identifying the type of operation the span is measuring. For more details, see Sentry's conventions around span operations.
- Example:
"http.server"
status
- Optional. Whether the trace failed or succeeded. Currently only used to indicate status of individual transactions.
Example:
"ok"
List of available status plus description:
State Description HTTP status code equivalent ok
Not an error, returned on success 200 and 2XX HTTP statuses cancelled
The operation was cancelled, typically by the caller 499 unknown
orunknown_error
An unknown error raised by APIs that don't return enough error information 500 invalid_argument
The client specified an invalid argument 400 deadline_exceeded
The deadline expired before the operation could succeed 504 not_found
Content was not found or request was denied for an entire class of users 404 already_exists
The entity attempted to be created already exists 409 permission_denied
The caller doesn't have permission to execute the specified operation 403 resource_exhausted
The resource has been exhausted e.g. per-user quota exhausted, file system out of space 429 failed_precondition
The client shouldn't retry until the system state has been explicitly handled 400 aborted
The operation was aborted 409 out_of_range
The operation was attempted past the valid range e.g. seeking past the end of a file 400 unimplemented
The operation is not implemented or is not supported/enabled for this operation 501 internal_error
Some invariants expected by the underlying system have been broken. This code is reserved for serious errors 500 unavailable
The service is currently available e.g. as a transient condition 503 data_loss
Unrecoverable data loss or corruption 500 unauthenticated
The requester doesn't have valid authentication credentials for the operation 401
exclusive_time
- Optional. The amount of time in milliseconds spent in this transaction span, excluding its immediate child spans.
- Example:
1.035
client_sample_rate
- Optional. The client-side sample rate.
- Example:
0.1
tags
- Optional. A map or list of tags for this event. Each tag must be less than 200 characters.
- Example:
{ "deviceMemory": "8 GB", "effectiveConnectionType": "4g", "routing.instrumentation": "react-router-v3" }
dynamic_sampling_context
- Optional. The Dynamic Sampling Context.
- Example:
{ "trace_id": "12312012123120121231201212312012", "sample_rate": "1.0", "public_key": "93D0D1125146288EAEE2A9B3AF4F96CCBE3CB316" },
origin
- Optional. The origin of the trace indicates what created the trace. For more details, see trace origin.
data
- Optional. The map of custom provided data. Currently Sentry SDKs can set following fields:
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
route | string or map | The current route in the application. |
previous_route | string or map | The previous route in the application the user was visiting. |
The route
currently supports the following predefined fields if it's a map:
Field | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
name | string | The name of the route in the user application. |
params | map | Params assigned to this route. |
If the route is set to a string (e.g. "route": "foo"
), it will be normalized into a map (e.g. "route": {"name": "foo"}
) server-side.
{
"contexts": {
"trace": {
"trace_id": "12312012123120121231201212312012",
"span_id": "0415201309082013",
"parent_span_id": null,
"description": "<OrganizationContext>",
"op": "http.server",
"tags": {
"deviceMemory": "8 GB",
"effectiveConnectionType": "4g",
"routing.instrumentation": "react-router-v3"
},
"dynamic_sampling_context": {
"trace_id": "12312012123120121231201212312012",
"sample_rate": "1.0",
"public_key": "93D0D1125146288EAEE2A9B3AF4F96CCBE3CB316"
},
"origin": "auto.http.http_client_5",
"data": {
"route": {
"name": "HomeRoute"
}
}
}
}
}
Replay context contains the replay_id of the associated replay with the event.
The only and required field is replay_id
.
This should not be sent by SDKs in most cases, as the Dynamic Sampling Context will be plucked in relay, but for current versions of python and PHP these SDKs will send this context as they do not currently support the envelope endpoint.
replay_id
- Required. The replay_id associated with the event.
{
"contexts": {
"replay": {
"replay_id": "12312012123120121231201212312012"
}
}
}
Response context contains information about the HTTP response associated with the event.
The only and required field is status_code
.
This is mostly set on transactions in a web server environment where one transaction represents a HTTP request/response cycle.
status_code
- Required. The integer status code from the HTTP response associated with the event.
- Example:
200
{
"contexts": {
"response": {
"status_code": 404
}
}
}
Context contains information about missing or failed OTEL instrumentation.
The required field is package
which should contain the package or framework where a missing instrumentation was detected.
package
- Required. The package or framework where a missing instrumentation was detected.
- Example:
express
javascript.is_cjs
- Optional. Boolean that indicates if the context was added from a commonjs module.
- Example:
true
{
"contexts": {
"missing_instrumentation": {
"package": "express",
"javascript.is_cjs": true
}
}
}
The feature flag context contains information about the flags evaluated prior to an error occurring. Flag evaluation results are placed into the values
key which is an array of 0 or more flag evaluation result objects.
flag
- Required. The name of the flag which was evaluated.
- Example:
"feature-is-enabled"
result
- Required. The boolean result of flag evaluation.
- Example:
false
{
"contexts": {
"flags": {
"values": [
{
"flag": "my_flag_name",
"result": true
}
]
}
}
}
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").