Set Up Metrics

Metrics allow you to send, view and query counters, gauges and measurements sent from your applications within Sentry.

Sentry metrics help you pinpoint and solve issues that impact user experience and app performance by measuring the data points that are important to you. You can track things like processing time, event size, user signups, and conversion rates, then correlate them back to tracing data in order to get deeper insights and solve issues faster.

Once in Sentry, these metrics can be viewed alongside relevant errors, and searched using their individual attributes.

Metrics for Python are supported in Sentry Python SDK version 2.44.0 and above.

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pip install "sentry-sdk" 

Metrics are enabled by default. Once you initialize the SDK, you can send metrics using the sentry_sdk.metrics APIs.

The metrics namespace exposes three methods that you can use to capture different types of metric information: count, gauge, and distribution.

Counters are one of the more basic types of metrics and can be used to count certain event occurrences.

To emit a counter, do the following:

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import sentry_sdk  # Record five total button clicks sentry_sdk.metrics.count( "button_click", 5, attributes={ "browser": "Firefox", "app_version": "1.0.0" }, ) 

Distributions help you get the most insights from your data by allowing you to obtain aggregations such as p90, min, max, and avg.

To emit a distribution, do the following:

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import sentry_sdk  # Add '15.0' to a distribution used for tracking the loading times per page. sentry_sdk.metrics.distribution( "page_load", 15.0, unit="millisecond", attributes={ "page": "/home" }, ) 

Gauges let you obtain aggregates like min, max, avg, sum, and count. They can be represented in a more space-efficient way than distributions, but they can't be used to get percentiles. If percentiles aren't important to you, we recommend using gauges.

To emit a gauge, do the following:

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import sentry_sdk  # Add '15.0' to a gauge used for tracking the loading times for a page. sentry_sdk.metrics.gauge( "page_load", 15.0, unit="millisecond", attributes={ "page": "/home" }, ) 

To filter metrics, or update them before they are sent to Sentry, you can use the before_send_metric option. If the callback returns None, the metric is not emitted. Attributes can also be updated in the callback function.

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import sentry_sdk from sentry_sdk.types import Metric, Hint from typing import Optional  def before_metric(metric: Metric, hint: Hint) -> Optional[Metric]:  if metric["name"] == "removed-metric":  return None   metric["attributes"]["extra"] = "foo"   if "browser" in metric["attributes"]:  del metric["attributes"]["browser"]   return metric  sentry_sdk.init(  dsn="___PUBLIC_DSN___",  before_send_metric=before_metric, ) 

The before_send_metric function receives a metric object, and should return the metric object if you want it to be sent to Sentry, or None if you want to discard it.

The metric dict has the following keys:

  • name: (str) The name of the metric.
  • type: (str - one of counter, gauge, distribution) The type of metric.
  • value: (float) The numeric value of the metric.
  • unit: (Optional[str]) The unit of measurement for the metric value.
  • attributes: (dict[str, str | bool | float | int]) Additional attributes to be sent with the metric.
  • timestamp: (float) Timestamp in seconds (epoch time) indicating when the metric was recorded.
  • trace_id: (Optional[str]) The trace ID of the trace this metric belongs to.
  • span_id: (Optional[str]) The span id of the span that was active when the metric was emitted.

The Python SDK automatically sets several default attributes on all metrics to provide context and improve debugging:

  • environment: The environment set in the SDK if defined. This is sent from the SDK as sentry.environment.
  • release: The release set in the SDK if defined. This is sent from the SDK as sentry.release.
  • trace.parent_span_id: The span ID of the span that was active when the metric was collected (only set if there was an active span). This is sent from the SDK as sentry.trace.parent_span_id.
  • sdk.name: The name of the SDK that sent the metric. This is sent from the SDK as sentry.sdk.name.
  • sdk.version: The version of the SDK that sent the metric. This is sent from the SDK as sentry.sdk.version.

  • server.address: The address of the server that sent the metric. Equivalent to server_name that gets attached to Sentry errors.

If user information is available in the current scope, the following attributes are added to the metric:

  • user.id: The user ID.
  • user.name: The username.
  • user.email: The email address.
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