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Upgrading from 6.x to 7.x

The v7 version of the JavaScript SDK requires a self-hosted version of Sentry 20.6.0 or higher.

The main goal of version 7 is to reduce bundle size. This version is breaking because we removed deprecated APIs, upgraded our build tooling, and restructured npm package contents. Below we will outline all the breaking changes you should consider when upgrading.

TL;DR If you only use basic features of Sentry, or you simply copy & pasted the setup examples from our docs, here's what changed for you:

  • If you installed additional Sentry packages, such as@sentry/tracing alongside your Sentry SDK (e.g. @sentry/react or @sentry/node), make sure to upgrade all of them to version 7.
  • Our CDN bundles are now ES6 - you will need to reconfigure your script tags if you want to keep supporting ES5 and IE11 on the new SDK version.
  • Distributed CommonJS files will be ES6. Use a transpiler if you need to support old node versions.
  • We bumped the TypeScript version we generate our types with to 3.8.3. Please check if your TypeScript projects using TypeScript version 3.7 or lower still compile. Otherwise, upgrade your TypeScript version.
  • whitelistUrls and blacklistUrls have been renamed to allowUrls and denyUrls in the Sentry.init() options.
  • The UserAgent integration is now called HttpContext.
  • If you are using Performance Monitoring and with tracing enabled, you might have to make adjustments to your server's CORS settings

Dropping Support for Node.js v6

Node.js version 6 has reached end of life in April 2019. For Sentry JavaScript SDK version 7, we will no longer be supporting version 6 of Node.js.

As far as SDK development goes, dropping support means no longer running integration tests for Node.js version 6, and also no longer handling edge cases specific to version 6. Running the new SDK version on Node.js v6 is therefore highly discouraged.

Removal of @sentry/minimal

The @sentry/minimal package was deleted and it's functionality was moved to @sentry/hub. All exports from @sentry/minimal should be available in @sentry/hub other than _callOnClient function which was removed.

// New in v7:
import { addBreadcrumb, captureException, configureScope, setTag } from '@sentry/hub';

// Before:
import { addBreadcrumb, captureException, configureScope, setTag } from '@sentry/minimal';

Explicit Client Options

In v7, we've updated the Client to have options separate from the options passed into Sentry.init. This means that constructing a client now requires 3 options: integrations, transport and stackParser. These can be customized as you see fit.

import { BrowserClient, defaultStackParser, defaultIntegrations, makeFetchTransport } from '@sentry/browser';

// New in v7:
const client = new BrowserClient({
  transport: makeFetchTransport,
  stackParser: defaultStackParser,
  integrations: defaultIntegrations,
});

// Before:
const client = new BrowserClient();

Since you now explicitly pass in the dependencies of the client, you can also tree-shake out dependencies that you do not use this way. For example, you can tree-shake out the SDK's default integrations and only use the ones that you want like so:

import {
  BrowserClient,
  Breadcrumbs,
  Dedupe,
  defaultStackParser,
  GlobalHandlers,
  Integrations,
  makeFetchTransport,
  LinkedErrors,
} from '@sentry/browser';

// New in v7:
const client = new BrowserClient({
  transport: makeFetchTransport,
  stackParser: defaultStackParser,
  integrations: [new Breadcrumbs(), new GlobalHandlers(), new LinkedErrors(), new Dedupe()],
});

Removal Of Old Platform Integrations From @sentry/integrations Package

The following classes will be removed from the @sentry/integrations package and can no longer be used:

  • Angular
  • Ember
  • Vue

These classes have been superseded and were moved into their own packages, @sentry/angular, @sentry/ember, and @sentry/vue in a previous version. Refer to those packages if you want to integrate Sentry into your Angular, Ember, or Vue application.

Moving To ES6 For CommonJS Files

From version 7 onwards, the CommonJS files in Sentry JavaScript SDK packages will use ES6.

If you need to support Internet Explorer 11 or old Node.js versions, we recommend using a preprocessing tool like Babel to convert Sentry packages to ES5.

Renaming Of CDN Bundles

CDN bundles will be ES6 by default. Files that followed the naming scheme bundle.es6.min.js were renamed to bundle.min.js and any bundles using ES5 (files without .es6) turned into bundle.es5.min.js.

See our docs on CDN bundles for more information.

Restructuring Of Package Content

Up until v6.x, we have published our packages on npm with the following structure:

  • build folder contained CDN bundles
  • dist folder contained CommonJS files and TypeScript declarations
  • esm folder contained ESM files and TypeScript declarations

Moving forward the JavaScript SDK packages will generally have the following structure:

  • cjs folder contains CommonJS files
  • esm folder contains ESM files
  • types folder contains TypeScript declarations

CDN bundles of version 7 or higher will no longer be distributed through our npm package. This means that most third-party CDNs like unpkg or jsDelivr will also not provide them.

If you depend on any specific files in a Sentry JavaScript npm package, you will most likely need to update their references. For example, imports on @sentry/browser/dist/client will become @sentry/browser/cjs/client. However, directly importing from specific files is discouraged.

Removing the API class from @sentry/core

The internal API class was removed in favor of using client options explicitly.

// New in v7:
import {
  initAPIDetails,
  getEnvelopeEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth,
  getStoreEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth,
} from '@sentry/core';

const client = getCurrentHub().getClient();
const dsn = client.getDsn();
const options = client.getOptions();
const envelopeEndpoint = getEnvelopeEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth(dsn, options.tunnel);

// Before:
import { API } from '@sentry/core';

const api = new API(dsn, metadata, tunnel);
const dsn = api.getDsn();
const storeEndpoint = api.getStoreEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth();
const envelopeEndpoint = api.getEnvelopeEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth();

Transport Changes

The Transport API was simplified and some functionality (e.g. APIDetails and client reports) was refactored and moved to the Client. To send data to Sentry, we switched from the previously used Store endpoint to the Envelopes endpoint.

This example shows the new v7 and the v6 Transport API:

// New in v7:
export interface Transport {
  /* Sends an envelope to the Envelope endpoint in Sentry */
  send(request: Envelope): PromiseLike<void>;
  /* Waits for all events to be sent or the timeout to expire, whichever comes first */
  flush(timeout?: number): PromiseLike<boolean>;
}

// Before:
export interface Transport {
  /* Sends the event to the Store endpoint in Sentry */
  sendEvent(event: Event): PromiseLike<Response>;
  /* Sends the session to the Envelope endpoint in Sentry */
  sendSession?(session: Session | SessionAggregates): PromiseLike<Response>;
  /* Waits for all events to be sent or the timeout to expire, whichever comes first */
  close(timeout?: number): PromiseLike<boolean>;
  /* Increment the counter for the specific client outcome */
  recordLostEvent?(type: Outcome, category: SentryRequestType): void;
}

Custom Transports

If you rely on a custom transport, you will need to make some adjustments to how it is created when migrating to v7. Note that we changed our transports from a class-based to a functional approach, meaning that the previously class-based transports are now created via functions. This also means that custom transports are now passed by specifying a factory function in the Sentry.init options object instead passing the custom transport's class.

The following example shows how to create a custom transport in v7 vs. how it was done in v6:

// New in v7:
import { BaseTransportOptions, Transport, TransportMakeRequestResponse, TransportRequest } from '@sentry/types';
import { createTransport } from '@sentry/core';

export function makeMyCustomTransport(options: BaseTransportOptions): Transport {
  function makeRequest(request: TransportRequest): PromiseLike<TransportMakeRequestResponse> {
    // this is where your sending logic goes
    const myCustomRequest = {
      body: request.body,
      url: options.url
    };
    // you define how `sendMyCustomRequest` works
    return sendMyCustomRequest(myCustomRequest).then(response => ({
      headers: {
        'x-sentry-rate-limits': response.headers.get('X-Sentry-Rate-Limits'),
        'retry-after': response.headers.get('Retry-After'),
      },
    }));
  }

  // `createTransport` takes care of rate limiting and flushing
  return createTransport(options, makeRequest);
}

Sentry.init({
  dsn: '...',
  transport: makeMyCustomTransport, // this function will be called when the client is initialized
  ...
})

// Before:
class MyCustomTransport extends BaseTransport {
  constructor(options: TransportOptions) {
    // initialize your transport here
    super(options);
  }

  public sendEvent(event: Event): PromiseLike<Response> {
    // this is where your sending logic goes
    // `url` is decoded from dsn in BaseTransport
    const myCustomRequest = createMyCustomRequestFromEvent(event, this.url);
    return sendMyCustomRequest(myCustomRequest).then(() => resolve({status: 'success'}));
  }

  public sendSession(session: Session): PromiseLike<Response> {...}
  // ...
}

Sentry.init({
  dsn: '...',
  transport: MyCustomTransport, // the constructor was called when the client was initialized
  ...
})

Overall, the new way of transport creation allows you to create your custom sending implementation without having to deal with the conversion of events or sessions to envelopes. We recommend calling using the createTransport function from @sentry/core as demonstrated in the example above which, besides creating the Transport object with your custom logic, will also take care of rate limiting and flushing.

For a complete v7 transport implementation, take a look at our browser fetch transport.

Node Transport Changes

To clean up the options interface, we now require users to pass down transport related options under the transportOptions key. The options that were changed were caCerts, httpProxy, and httpsProxy. In addition, httpProxy and httpsProxy were unified to a single option under the transportOptions key, proxy.

// New in v7:
Sentry.init({
  dsn: '...',
  transportOptions: {
    caCerts: getMyCaCert(),
    proxy: 'http://example.com',
  },
});

// Before:
Sentry.init({
  dsn: '...',
  caCerts: getMyCaCert(),
  httpsProxy: 'http://example.com',
});

Enum Changes

Given that enums have a high bundle-size impact, our long term goal is to eventually remove all enums from the SDK in favor of string literals.

Removed Enums

  • The previously deprecated enum Status was removed (see #4891).
  • The previously deprecated internal-only enum RequestSessionStatus was removed (see #4889) in favor of string literals.
  • The previously deprecated internal-only enum SessionStatus was removed (see #4890) in favor of string literals.

Deprecated Enums

The two enums SpanStatus, and Severity remain deprecated, as we decided to limit the number of high-impact breaking changes in v7. They will be removed in the next major release which is why we strongly recommend moving to the corresponding string literals. Here's how to adjust Severity and SpanStatus.

Session Changes

Note: These changes are not relevant for the majority of Sentry users but if you are building an SDK on top of the Javascript SDK, you might need to make some adaptions. The internal Session class was refactored and replaced with a more functional approach in #5054. Instead of the class, we now export a Session interface from @sentry/types and three utility functions to create and update a Session object from @sentry/hub. This short example shows what has changed and how to deal with the new functions:

// New in v7:
import { makeSession, updateSession, closeSession } from '@sentry/hub';

const session = makeSession({ release: 'v1.0' });
updateSession(session, { environment: 'prod' });
closeSession(session, 'ok');

// Before:
import { Session } from '@sentry/hub';

const session = new Session({ release: 'v1.0' });
session.update({ environment: 'prod' });
session.close('ok');

Propagation of Baggage Header

We introduced a new way of propagating tracing and transaction-related information between services. This change adds the baggage HTTP header to outgoing requests if the instrumentation of requests is enabled. Since this adds a header to your HTTP requests, you might need to adjust your Server's CORS settings to allow this additional header. Take a look at the Sentry docs for more in-depth instructions what to change.

General API Changes

For our efforts to reduce bundle size of the SDK we had to remove and refactor parts of the package which introduced a few changes to the API:

  • Remove support for deprecated @sentry/apm package. @sentry/tracing should be used instead.
  • Remove deprecated user field from DSN. publicKey should be used instead.
  • Remove deprecated whitelistUrls and blacklistUrls options from Sentry.init. They have been superseded by allowUrls and denyUrls specifically. See our docs page on inclusive language for more details.
  • Gatsby SDK: Remove Sentry from window object.
  • Remove deprecated Status, SessionStatus, and RequestSessionStatus enums. These were only part of an internal API. If you are using these enums, we encourage you to to look at b177690d, 5fc3147d, and f99bdd16 to to see the changes we've made to our code as result. We generally recommend using string literals instead of the removed enums.
  • Remove 'critical' severity.
  • Remove deprecated getActiveDomain method and DomainAsCarrier type from @sentry/hub.
  • Rename registerRequestInstrumentation to instrumentOutgoingRequests in @sentry/tracing.
  • Remove Backend and port its functionality into Client (see #4911 and #4919). Backend was an unnecessary abstraction which is not present in other Sentry SDKs. For the sake of reducing complexity, increasing consistency with other Sentry SDKs and decreasing bundle-size, Backend was removed.
  • Remove support for Opera browser pre v15.
  • Rename UserAgent integration to HttpContext. (see #5027)
  • Remove SDK_NAME export from @sentry/browser, @sentry/node, @sentry/tracing and @sentry/vue packages.
  • Removed eventStatusFromHttpCode to save on bundle size.
  • Replace BrowserTracing maxTransactionDuration option with finalTimeout option
  • Removed ignoreSentryErrors option from AWS lambda SDK. Errors originating from the SDK will now always be caught internally.
  • Removed Integrations.BrowserTracing export from @sentry/nextjs. Please import BrowserTracing from @sentry/nextjs directly.
  • Removed static id property from BrowserTracing integration.
  • Removed usage of deprecated event.stacktrace field

Sentry Angular SDK Changes

The Sentry Angular SDK (@sentry/angular) is now compiled with the Angular compiler (see #4641). This change was necessary to fix a long-lasting bug in the SDK (see #3282): TraceDirective and TraceModule can now be used again without risking an application compiler error or having to disable AOT compilation.

Angular Version Compatibility

As in v6, we continue to list Angular 10-13 in our peer dependencies, meaning that these are the Angular versions we officially support. If you are using v7 with Angular <10 in your project and you experience problems, we recommend staying on the latest 6.x version until you can upgrade your Angular version. As v7 of our SDK is compiled with the Angular 10 compiler and we upgraded our Typescript version, the SDK will work with Angular 10 and above. Tests have shown that Angular 9 seems to work as well (use at your own risk) but we recommend upgrading to a more recent Angular version.

Import Changes

Due to the compiler change, our NPM package structure changed as well as it now conforms to the Angular Package Format v10. In case you're importing from specific paths other than @sentry/angular you will have to adjust these paths. As an example, import ... from '@sentry/angular/esm/injex.js' should be changed to import ... from '@sentry/angular/esm2015/index.js'. Generally, we strongly recommend only importing from @sentry/angular.

Upgrading from 6.17.x to 6.18.0

Version 6.18.0 deprecates the frameContextLines top-level option for the Node SDK. This option will be removed in an upcoming major version. To migrate off of the top-level option, pass it instead to the new ContextLines integration.

// New in 6.18.0
init({
  dsn: '__DSN__',
  integrations: [new ContextLines({ frameContextLines: 10 })],
});

// Before:
init({
  dsn: '__DSN__',
  frameContextLines: 10,
});

Upgrading from 6.x to 6.17.x

You only need to make changes when migrating to 6.17.x if you are using our internal Dsn class. Our internal API class and typescript enums were deprecated, so we recommend you migrate them as well.

The internal Dsn class was removed in 6.17.0. For additional details, you can look at the PR where this change happened. To migrate, see the following example.

// New in 6.17.0:
import { dsnToString, makeDsn } from '@sentry/utils';

const dsn = makeDsn(process.env.SENTRY_DSN);
console.log(dsnToString(dsn));

// Before:
import { Dsn } from '@sentry/utils';

const dsn = new Dsn(process.env.SENTRY_DSN);
console.log(dsn.toString());

The internal API class was deprecated, and will be removed in the next major release. More details can be found in the PR that made this change. To migrate, see the following example.

// New in 6.17.0:
import {
  initAPIDetails,
  getEnvelopeEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth,
  getStoreEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth,
} from '@sentry/core';

const dsn = initAPIDetails(dsn, metadata, tunnel);
const dsn = api.dsn;
const storeEndpoint = getStoreEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth(api.dsn);
const envelopeEndpoint = getEnvelopeEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth(api.dsn, api.tunnel);

// Before:
import { API } from '@sentry/core';

const api = new API(dsn, metadata, tunnel);
const dsn = api.getDsn();
const storeEndpoint = api.getStoreEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth();
const envelopeEndpoint = api.getEnvelopeEndpointWithUrlEncodedAuth();

Enum changes

The enums Status, SpanStatus, and Severity were deprecated, and we've detailed how to migrate away from them below. We also deprecated the TransactionMethod, Outcome and RequestSessionStatus enums, but those are internal-only APIs. If you are using them, we encourage you to take a look at the corresponding PRs to see how we've changed our code as a result.

Status

We deprecated the Status enum in @sentry/types and it will be removed in the next major release. We recommend using string literals to save on bundle size. PR. We also removed the Status.fromHttpCode method. This was done to save on bundle size.

// New in 6.17.0:
import { eventStatusFromHttpCode } from '@sentry/utils';

const status = eventStatusFromHttpCode(500);

// Before:
import { Status } from '@sentry/types';

const status = Status.fromHttpCode(500);

SpanStatus

We deprecated the Status enum in @sentry/tracing and it will be removed in the next major release. We recommend using string literals to save on bundle size. PR. We also removed the SpanStatus.fromHttpCode method. This was done to save on bundle size.

// New in 6.17.0:
import { spanStatusfromHttpCode } from '@sentry/tracing';

const status = spanStatusfromHttpCode(403);

// Before:
import { SpanStatus } from '@sentry/tracing';

const status = SpanStatus.fromHttpCode(403);

Severity, SeverityLevel, and SeverityLevels

We deprecated the Severity enum in @sentry/types and it will be removed in the next major release. We recommend using string literals (typed as SeverityLevel) to save on bundle size.

// New in 6.17.5:
import { SeverityLevel } from '@sentry/types';

const levelA = "error" as SeverityLevel;

const levelB: SeverityLevel = "error"

// Before:
import { Severity, SeverityLevel } from '@sentry/types';

const levelA = Severity.error;

const levelB: SeverityLevel = "error"