Thin library that provides symbolicated crash reports for Kotlin code on iOS. Currently implemented for Crashlytics and Bugsnag.
Kotlin's design has obviously been influenced by Java. In Java, exceptions are a normal thing, and further in Kotlin, checked exceptions aren't a thing. Crash reporters (Crashlytics, Bugsnag, etc) can take the unhandled exceptions and provide the full stack trace.
On iOS, exceptions exist, but they're very much a special case. When a "crash" happens, the app stops, and crash reporting tools take the state of the application threads. When calling into Kotlin code, if a crash happens in the Kotlin code, the exception bubbles back up to the iOS/Kotlin interface, at which point, if not @Throws, the app is forcibly crashed. You can see the crash info from the local device and from the app store, assuming the user reported it, but crash reporting services like Crashlytics and Bugsnag only get the stack trace from the iOS/Kotlin interface. Not where the crash actually happened.
TL;DR, you'll see this:
You want to see this:
That's what this library is for.
With some stack trace visibility improvements included in Kotlin 1.3.60, we can report "handled errors" to Crashlytics and Bugsnag, and have them record symbolicated crash reports. These can be sent explicitly, but more likely, reported as part of the uncaught exception handler.
The crash library itself is minimal, but because of current transitive code rules and how interop works with Objc and Swift, we'll be copying some code manually.
kotlin {
sourceSets {
iosMain {
dependencies {
api "co.touchlab:crashkios:0.2.1"
}
}
}
}
In your app, you'll need to include some extra passthrough code. In your iOS Kotlin source, add the following function
import co.touchlab.crashkios.CrashHandler
import co.touchlab.crashkios.setupCrashHandler
fun crashInit(handler: CrashHandler){
setupCrashHandler(handler)
}
In our sample, we put this in a file called CrashIntegration.kt
. If it's in a different file, you'll
need to know that for the Swift config. See CrashIntegration.kt
This will be called from your iOS code to set the default crash handler. There are other options,
but this is generally what you want to do. The name crashInit
is unimportant, but creating this
method forces the Kotlin compiler to include the necessary crash handling code. In the future, with
proper transitive dependency settings, this may not be necessary.
In Swift, you need to add a CrashHandler
instance specific to the crash reporting service you'll
be using. We currently support Crashlytics and Bugsnag. Setup currently involves copy/pasting some
Swift/Objc code rather than using interop bindings in Kotlin. This is more manual, but simpler. We
may add interop code in the future.
Create the CrashHandler
class
class CrashlyticsCrashHandler: CrashkiosCrashHandler {
override func crashParts(
addresses: [KotlinLong],
exceptionType: String,
message: String) {
let clsStackTrace = addresses.map {
CLSStackFrame(address: UInt(truncating: $0))
}
Crashlytics.sharedInstance().recordCustomExceptionName(
exceptionType,
reason: message,
frameArray: clsStackTrace
)
}
}
Note, CrashkiosCrashHandler
and possibly KotlinLong
may have different generated names from
the Kotlin compiler output.
Inside AppDelegate.swift
, or wherever you do app setup, add the following:
CrashIntegrationKt.crashInit(handler: CrashlyticsCrashHandler())
To see all of this code in a sample app, see sample/iosAppCrashlytics
Bugsnag's setup is a little more complicated. We create an extension of NSException
which is provided
to the Bugsnag crash reporting library.
In Swift, add the following:
class CrashNSException: NSException {
init(callStack:[NSNumber], exceptionType: String, message: String) {
super.init(name: NSExceptionName(rawValue: exceptionType), reason: message, userInfo: nil)
self._callStackReturnAddresses = callStack
}
required init?(coder: NSCoder) {
fatalError("init(coder:) has not been implemented")
}
private lazy var _callStackReturnAddresses: [NSNumber] = []
override var callStackReturnAddresses: [NSNumber] {
get { return _callStackReturnAddresses }
set { _callStackReturnAddresses = newValue }
}
}
class BugsnagCrashHandler: CrashkiosCrashHandler {
override func crashParts(addresses: [KotlinLong], exceptionType: String, message: String) {
Bugsnag.notify(CrashNSException(callStack: addresses, exceptionType: exceptionType, message: message))
}
}
Note, CrashkiosCrashHandler
and possibly KotlinLong
may have different generated names from
the Kotlin compiler output.
Inside AppDelegate.swift
, or wherever you do app setup, add the following:
CrashIntegrationKt.crashInit(handler: BugsnagCrashHandler())
To see all of this code in a sample app, see sample/iosAppBugsnag
Release builds will show method names from the stack, but not line numbers. Debug builds include line numbers. There may be a setting to change that, but we haven't found it yet.
We currently add the following config to each build binary. We still need to experiment and may be able to remove some of the config.
freeCompilerArgs += "-Xg0"
if(it instanceof org.jetbrains.kotlin.gradle.plugin.mpp.Framework) {
isStatic = true
}
If you find that you're missing events, or you're getting a warning message in the Crashlytics dashboard about missing dSYMs, then following instructions can help you ensure that Crashlytics always has your most up-to-date dSYMs.
In Xcode, select the iosApp project on the lefthand side, then switch to the Build Phases tab. Beneath that, on the left, is a "+" button (circled in the image below). Select that, and then in the dropdown menu that appears, select "New run script phase". Name the new script something along the lines of "Upload Crashlytics dSYMs", or something similarly descriptive.
Paste in the following script:
Pods/Fabric/upload-symbols -gsp iosApp/GoogleService-Info.plist -p ios ../build/bin/ios/releaseFramework/sample.framework.dSYM/
Note a few things about this script:
- It will upload both your debug and release dSYMs every time you run your project in order to ensure that Firebase has any and all relevant dSYMs.
- Depending on the configuration of your project, the relative paths in the script may need to be different. Ensure that you're pointing to the following:
- GoogleService-Info.plist
- Debug [shared_library_name].framework.dSYM
- Release [shared_library_name].framework.dSYM
If the folder structure of your shared Kotlin library is different than what it is here, or you're having difficulty finding your dSYMs for any reason, you can use the following script to print a list of them:
find ../build -name "*.dSYM"
Note again that the ../build
relative path is configured to this repository's structure. Be sure that the script points to your Kotlin library's /build
folder, which may be somewhere else, based on the configuration of your project.
The primary resource for these tips was this page of Firebase's Crashlytics guide.