Custom Instrumentation

The Sentry SDK for Python does a very good job of auto instrumenting your application. If you use one of the popular frameworks, we've got you covered because everything is instrumented out of the box. The Sentry SDK will check your installed Python packages and auto enable the matching SDK integrations.

Adding transactions will allow you to instrument and capture certain regions of your code.

The following example creates a transaction for an expensive operation (in this case, eat_pizza), and then sends the result to Sentry:

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import sentry_sdk

def eat_slice(slice):
    ...

def eat_pizza(pizza):
    with sentry_sdk.start_transaction(op="task", name="Eat Pizza"):
        while pizza.slices > 0:
            eat_slice(pizza.slices.pop())

If you want to have more fine-grained performance monitoring, you can add child spans to your transaction, which can be done by either:

  • Using a context manager or
  • Using a decorator, (this works on sync and async functions)

Calling a sentry_sdk.start_span() will find the current active transaction and attach the span to it.

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import sentry_sdk

def eat_slice(slice):
    ...

def eat_pizza(pizza):
    with sentry_sdk.start_transaction(op="task", name="Eat Pizza"):
        while pizza.slices > 0:
            with sentry_sdk.start_span(description="Eat Slice"):
                eat_slice(pizza.slices.pop())

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import sentry_sdk

@sentry_sdk.trace
def eat_slice(slice):
    ...

def eat_pizza(pizza):
    with sentry_sdk.start_transaction(op="task", name="Eat Pizza"):
        while pizza.slices > 0:
            eat_slice(pizza.slices.pop())

Spans can be nested to form a span tree. If you'd like to learn more, read our distributed tracing documentation.

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import sentry_sdk

def chew():
    ...

def swallow():
    ...

def eat_slice(slice):
    with sentry_sdk.start_span(description="Eat Slice"):
        with sentry_sdk.start_span(description="Chew"):
            chew()
        with sentry_sdk.start_span(description="Swallow"):
            swallow()

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import sentry_sdk

@sentry_sdk.trace
def chew():
    ...

@sentry_sdk.trace
def swallow():
    ...

@sentry_sdk.trace
def eat_slice(slice):
    chew()
    swallow()

To avoid having custom performance instrumentation code scattered all over your code base, pass a parameter functions_to_trace to your sentry_sdk.init() call.

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import sentry_sdk

functions_to_trace = [
    {"qualified_name": "myrootmodule.eat_slice"},
    {"qualified_name": "myrootmodule.swallow"},
    {"qualified_name": "myrootmodule.chew"},
    {"qualified_name": "myrootmodule.someothermodule.another.some_function"},
    {"qualified_name": "myrootmodule.SomePizzaClass.some_method"},
]

sentry_sdk.init(
    dsn="https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0",
    functions_to_trace=functions_to_trace,
)

Now, whenever a function specified in functions_to_trace will be executed, a span will be created and attached as a child to the currently running span.

To change data in an already ongoing transaction, use Hub.current.scope.transaction. This property will return a transaction if there's one running, otherwise it will return None.

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import sentry_sdk

def eat_pizza(pizza):
    transaction = sentry_sdk.Hub.current.scope.transaction

    if transaction is not None:
        transaction.set_tag("num_of_slices", len(pizza.slices))

    while pizza.slices > 0:
        eat_slice(pizza.slices.pop())

To change data in the current span, use sentry_sdk.Hub.current.scope.span. This property will return a span if there's one running, otherwise it will return None.

In this example, we'll set a tag in the span created by the @sentry_sdk.trace decorator.

Copied
import sentry_sdk

@sentry_sdk.trace
def eat_slice(slice):
    span = sentry_sdk.Hub.current.scope.span

    if span is not None:
        span.set_tag("slice_id", slice.id)

    ...
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