The Python sentry-sdk has a before_send hook that lets you scrub Sentry events before they're sent. Fillmore makes it easier to set up a before_send scrubber and test it.
Code: | https://github.com/willkg/fillmore |
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Issues: | https://github.com/willkg/fillmore/issues |
License: | MPL v2 |
Documentation: | https://fillmore.readthedocs.io/ |
Goals of Fillmore:
- make it easier to configure Sentry event scrubbing in a way that you can reason about
- make it easier to test your scrubbing code so you know it's working over time
- scrub in a resilient manner and default to emitting some signal when it kicks up errors so you know when your error handling code is kicking up errors
From that, Fillmore has the following features:
- lets you specify keys to scrub in a Sentry event
- resilient to errors--if it fails, it will emit a signal that you can see and alert on
- links to relevant Sentry documentation, projects, and other things
- testing infrastructure to use in your integration tests
Run:
$ pip install fillmore
Example:
# myapp/app.py import logging import logging.config from fillmore.libsentry import set_up_sentry from fillmore.scrubber import Scrubber, Rule, build_scrub_query_string # Set up logging to capture fillmore error messages logging.getLogger("fillmore").setLevel(logging.ERROR) # Create a scrubber scrubber = Scrubber( rules=[ Rule( path="request.headers", keys=["Auth-Token", "Cookie"], scrub="scrub", ), Rule( path="request", keys=["query_string"], scrub=build_scrub_query_string(params=["code", "state"]), ), Rule( path="exception.values.[].stacktrace.frames.[].vars", keys=["username", "password"], scrub="scrub", ), ] ) # Set up Sentry with the scrubber and the default integrations which # includes the LoggingIntegration which will capture messages with level # logging.ERROR. set_up_sentry( sentry_dsn="http://user@example.com/1", host_id="some host id", release="some release name", before_send=scrubber, ) def kick_up_exception(): username = "James" # noqa try: raise Exception("internal exception") except Exception: logging.getLogger(__name__).exception("kick_up_exception exception")
Now you have a scrubber and you've set up the Sentry client to use it. How do you know it's scrubbing the right stuff? How will you know if something changes and it's no longer scrubbing the right stuff?
You can test it like this:
# myapp/test_app.py import unittest from fillmore.test import SentryTestHelper from myapp.app import kick_up_exception class TestApp(unittest.TestCase): def test_scrubber(self): # Reuse the existing Sentry configuration and set up the helper # to capture Sentry events sentry_test_helper = SentryTestHelper() with sentry_test_helper.reuse() as sentry_client: kick_up_exception() (event,) = sentry_client.events error = event["exception"]["values"][0] self.assertEqual(error["type"], "Exception") self.assertEqual(error["value"], "internal exception") self.assertEqual( error["stacktrace"]["frames"][0]["vars"]["username"], "[Scrubbed]" )
This creates a Sentry client specific to this test and kicks up an exception in the test and captures it with Sentry.
Note that this is a contrived context using a Sentry client created for this test. You'll want to write tests that use the Sentry client configured for your application and handling events kicked up from different points in your application to make sure that Sentry events are getting scrubbed correctly.
See Fillmore documentation for explanation and examples.
Other libraries:
Have an awkward API that is hard to reason about.
I'm not scrubbing Sentry events for fun. I need to be able to write scrubbing configuration that is exceptionally clear about what it is and isn't doing.
Don't covers large portions of the Sentry event structure.
I need scrubbers that cover the entire event structure as well as some of the curious cases like the fact that cookie information shows up twice and can be encoded as a string.
Aren't resilient.
The scrubber is running in the context of Sentry reporting an error. If it also errors out, then you can end up in situations where you never see errors and have no signal that something is horribly wrong. We need scrubbing code to be extremely resilient and default to emitting a signal that it's broken.
Don't include testing infrastructure.
I'm not scrubbing Sentry events for fun. I need to know that the scrubbing code is working correctly and that it continues to work as we upgrade Python, sentry_sdk, and other things.
Having testing infrastructure for making this easier is really important.