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React features to enhance using Rollbar.js in React Applications.
This SDK provides a wrapper around the base Rollbar.js SDK in order to provide an SDK that matches the intention of how to build React Apps with a declarative API, features for the latest React API like hooks and ErrorBoundaries, as well as simplify using Rollbar within a React SPA.
- Telemetry: The telemetry timeline provides a list of “breadcrumbs” events that can help developers understand and fix problems in their client-side javascript. Learn more about telemetry.
- Automatic error grouping: Rollbar aggregates Occurrences caused by the same error into Items that represent application issues. Learn more about reducing log noise.
- Advanced search: Filter items by many different properties. Learn more about search.
- Customizable notifications: Rollbar supports several messaging and incident management tools where your team can get notified about errors and important events by real-time alerts. Learn more about Rollbar notifications.
It is currently in a public Beta release right now as we push towards a 1.0 release that will have all of the features we want to provide full capability for using React SDK in your production apps. We expect a 1.0 release to come in the next month.
- Key benefits of using Rollbar React are:
- Setup Instructions
- Usage and Reference
- Components
- Functions
- Hooks
These instructions provide an addendum to the Rollbar.js Setup Instructions.
After following those 2 steps, you will be ready.
To install with npm
:
npm install @rollbar/react rollbar
To install with yarn
:
yarn add @rollbar/react rollbar
To install by adding to package.json
, add the following to your project's
package.json
file:
…
"dependencies": {
"@rollbar/react": "^0.8.0",
"rollbar": "^2.24.0",
…
}
…
then run either using npm
or yarn
(or other package manager):
npm install
# OR
yarn install
The React SDK is very new and has not been given the full documentation treatment we expect to get from Rollbar Docs, but that will be coming shortly and a direct link will be put here for your reference.
In the meantime, the basic usage reference is available below.
To get you started quickly, here is an example that will get you started right away by providing the easiest and simplest usage possible:
import React from 'react';
import { Provider, ErrorBoundary } from '@rollbar/react'; // <-- Provider imports 'rollbar' for us
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
export default function App() {
return (
{/* Provider instantiates Rollbar client instance handling any uncaught errors or unhandled promises in the browser */}
<Provider config={rollbarConfig}>
{/* ErrorBoundary catches all React errors in the tree below and logs them to Rollbar */}
<ErrorBoundary>
// all other app providers and components - Rollbar will just work
…
</ErrorBoundary>
</Provider>
);
};
The first step to using Rollbar with the Next.js App Router is to configure your Rollbar instance.
import Rollbar from 'rollbar';
const baseConfig = {
captureUncaught: true,
captureUnhandledRejections: true,
environment: process.env.NODE_ENV,
};
export const clientConfig = {
accessToken: process.env.NEXT_PUBLIC_POST_CLIENT_ITEM_TOKEN,
...baseConfig,
};
export const serverInstance = new Rollbar({
accessToken: process.env.POST_SERVER_ITEM_TOKEN,
...baseConfig,
});
We suggest you create a single instance for use server side, to be certain there are not more than one, and a config to use in your client side components. React Server Components limit you to passing simple objects as props from Server Components to Client Components. The config object can be used by the Rollbar Provider to construct your Rollbar instance.
There's a fully functional example that showcases the many ways in which you can integrate Rollbar into your modern web-app leveraging React Server Components and the Next.js App Router.
The following components are available as named imports from @rollbar/react
.
The Provider
component is used to wrap your React App so an instance of Rollbar will be made available within your React tree.
This is a common pattern in React using a custom React Context that is available to the
Components
and hooks
from this SDK library.
The simplest way to use the Provider
is to provide a configuration as the config
prop which will instantiate an
instance of Rollbar for you and provide that to its child tree:
import React from 'react';
import { Provider } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
export function App(props) {
return <Provider config={rollbarConfig}>…</Provider>;
}
Sometimes you may need to instantiate an instance of Rollbar before adding it to your App tree. In that case use the
instance
prop to pass it to the Provider
like this:
import React from 'react';
import Rollbar from 'rollbar';
import { Provider } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
const rollbar = new Rollbar(rollbarConfig);
export function App(props) {
return <Provider instance={rollbar}>…</Provider>;
}
This method will also work with the global Rollbar instance when using the Rollbar.init(…)
method.
Rollbar provides a React Native SDK which also wraps the Rollbar.js to provide React Native capabilities based on that specific environment.
To use the Rollbar React SDK with the React Native SDK, pass the instance that it generates to the Provider
's
instance
prop, like this:
import React from 'react';
import { Client } from 'rollbar-react-native';
import { Provider } from '@rollbar/react';
const rollbarClient = new Client('POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN');
export function App(props) {
return <Provider instance={rollbarClient.rollbar}>…</Provider>;
}
Rollbar's React SDK provides a new ErrorBoundary
component which implements the interface for React's Error Boundaries
introduced in React 16.
The ErrorBoundary
is used to wrap any tree or subtree in your React App to catch React Errors and log them to Rollbar
automatically.
The ErrorBoundary
relies on the Provider
above for the instance of Rollbar, so it will utilize
whatever configuration has been provided.
You can add an ErrorBoundary
component to the top of your tree right after the Provider
with no additional props
and it will just work:
import React from 'react';
import { Provider, ErrorBoundary } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
export function App(props) {
return (
<Provider config={rollbarConfig}>
<ErrorBoundary>…</ErrorBoundary>
</Provider>
);
}
The ErrorBoundary
provides several prop
s that allow customizing the behavior of how it will report errors to
Rollbar.
These prop
s take either a value or a function that will be invoked with the error
and info
from the Error Boundaries
API's componentDidCatch
method (i.e. signature is (error, info)
).
import React from 'react';
import { Provider, ErrorBoundary, LEVEL_WARN } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
export function App(props) {
return (
<Provider config={rollbarConfig}>
<ErrorBoundary
level={LEVEL_WARN}
errorMessage="Error in React render"
extra={(error, info) =>
info.componentStack.includes('Experimental')
? { experiment: true }
: {}
}
>
…
</ErrorBoundary>
</Provider>
);
}
You may also include a Fallback UI to render when the error occurs so that the User does not experience a broken/blank UI caused during the render cycle of React.
It can accept a value that is a React Component
import React from 'react';
import { Provider, ErrorBoundary, LEVEL_WARN } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
const ErrorDisplay = (
{ error, resetError }, // <-- props passed to fallbackUI component
) => (
<div>
<h1>A following error has occured:</h1>
<p>{error.toString()}</p>
</div>
);
export function App(props) {
return (
<Provider config={rollbarConfig}>
<ErrorBoundary level={LEVEL_WARN} fallbackUI={ErrorDisplay}>
…
</ErrorBoundary>
</Provider>
);
}
Use the RollbarContext
component to declaratively set the context
value used by Rollbar.js when it's sending any
messages to Rollbar.
This works for your ErrorBoundary
from above or any other log or message sent to Rollbar while the RollbarContext
is mounted on the tree.
Like ErrorBoundary
above, RollbarContext
relies on a Provider
for an instance of a Rollbar.js client.
To use the RollbarContext
you must provide the context
prop, a String
that is used to set the context used by
Rollbar.js to the value while mounted.
import React from 'react';
import { RollbarContext } from '@rollbar/react';
function HomePage() {
return <RollbarContext context="home">…</RollbarContext>;
}
It's useful to set the context
in Rollbar associated with areas of your application. On the server it's usually
set when a specific page is requested. For SPAs like React Apps, using RollbarContext
with your Router is one way
to achieve the same result.
Here is an example of using RollbarContext
with [React Router] if you have a top level set of routes:
import React from 'react';
import { Router, Switch, Route } from 'react-router-dom';
import { RollbarContext } from '@rollbar/react';
import { About, ContactDetails, ContactsList } from './pages';
const Routes = () => (
<Router>
<Switch>
<Route path="/about">
<RollbarContext context="/about">
<About />
</RollbarContext>
</Route>
<Route path="/contacts/:id">
<RollbarContext context="contacts/details">
<ContactDetails />
</RollbarContext>
</Route>
<Route path="/contacts">
<RollbarContext context="contacts">
<ContactsList />
</RollbarContext>
</Route>
</Switch>
</Router>
);
export default Routes;
Here's another example of using RollbarContext
within a component that manages its own route:
import React from 'react';
import { Route } from 'react-router-dom';
import { RollbarContext } from '@rollbar/react';
export default function About(props) {
return (
<Route path="/about">
<RollbarContext context="/about">…</RollbarContext>
</Route>
);
}
The following functions are available as named imports from @rollbar/react
.
A lot of SPAs and React Apps will use the history package to handle browser history. The
historyContext
function is a helper that creates a valid listener function to receive
history changes and use those to change the Rollbar.js context.
historyContext
is a factory function used to create a proper history.listen
callback
that will work for v4 and v5 of the history package.
The historyContext
factory function requires an instance of Rollbar.js to wrap in order
to create the listener callback function.
By default, if no options (see below) are provided, all history updates will update the context
for Rollbar using the
location.pathname
as the value.
import Rollbar from 'rollbar';
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history';
import { Provider } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
const rollbar = new Rollbar(rollbarConfig);
const history = createBrowserHistory();
history.listen(historyContext(rollbar));
The historyContext
factory function accepts options
as a 2nd argument that allow you to control the behavior
of how and when the context
will be set for the Rollbar.js client.
Use the formatter
option to provide a function that will receive the history
change event and return a String
that you would like to be set as the context
for Rollbar.
The signature is formatter(location, action): String
where location
is history.location and action
is history.action.
The other option is filter
which you can provide to tell the historyContext
listener you create to control
which history updates will change the context
for Rollbar. All truthy values will tell the listener to make
the change. Any falsy values will skip the update.
The signature is filter(location, action): Boolean
where location
is history.location and action
is history.action.
Here's an example of using both:
import Rollbar from 'rollbar';
import { createBrowserHistory } from 'history';
import { Provider } from '@rollbar/react';
// same configuration you would create for the Rollbar.js SDK
const rollbarConfig = {
accessToken: 'POST_CLIENT_ITEM_ACCESS_TOKEN',
environment: 'production',
};
const rollbar = new Rollbar(rollbarConfig);
const ROUTE_PARAMS_RE = /\/\d+/g;
const historyListener = historyContext(rollbar, {
// optional: default uses location.pathname
formatter: (location, action) =>
location.pathname.replace(ROUTE_PARAMS_RE, ''),
// optional: true return sets Rollbar context
filter: (location, action) => !location.pathname.includes('admin'),
});
const unlisten = history.listen(historyListener);
The following hooks are available as named imports from @rollbar/react
for use in Functional Components making use of the
React Hooks API introduced in React 16.8.
All of these hooks below require there to be a Provider
in the React Tree as an ancestor to the component using the hook.
To consume the Rollbar.js instance directly from the Provider
in your React Tree and make use of the client API within
your [Functional Component], use the useRollbar
hook which will return the instance from the currently scoped React Context.
Here is a basic example:
import { useRollbar } from '@rollbar/react';
function ContactDetails({ contactId }) {
const rollbar = useRollbar(); // <-- must have parent Provider
const [contact, setContact] = useState();
useEffect(async () => {
try {
const { data } = await getContactFromApi(contactId);
setContact(data.contact);
} catch (error) {
rollbar.error('Error fetching contact', error, { contactId });
}
}, [contactId]);
return <div>…</div>;
}
As an alternative to the RollbarContext
component, you can use the useRollbarContext
hook in your [Functional Component]
to set the context
in the Rollbar.js client provided by the Provider
above in the React Tree.
Here's an example of using it in several components:
// src/pages/HomePage.js
import { useRollbarContext } from '@rollbar/react';
function HomePage(props) {
useRollbarContext('home#index');
return <div>…</div>;
}
// src/pages/UsersPage.js
import { useRollbarContext } from '@rollbar/react';
import UserTable from '../components/users/UserTable';
function UsersPage(props) {
useRollbarContext('users#list');
return <UserTable data={props.users} />;
}
// src/pages/UserDetailsPage.js
import { useRollbarContext } from '@rollbar/react';
import UserDetails from '../components/users/UserDetails';
function UserDetailsPage(props) {
useRollbarContext('users#details');
return <UserDetails user={props.user} />;
}
It's very usefull in Rollbar to log the identity of a person or user using your App for 2 major reasons:
- It allows you to know exactly who has been affected by an item or error in your App
- It allows Rollbar to tell you the impact a given item or error is having on your users
To make it convenient and easy to set the identity of a person in your React App, the @rollbar/react
package
has the userRollbarPerson
hook.
To use it, simply pass an Object
that has keys and values used to identify an individual user of your App,
and for any future events or messages logged to Rollbar will include that person data attached to the log.
Here is a simple example of using it once the current user has been determined:
import { useState } from 'react';
import { useRollbarPerson } from '@rollbar/react';
import LoggedInHome from './LoggedInHome';
import LoggedOutHome from './LoggedOutHome';
function Home() {
const [currentUser, setCurrentUser] = useState();
useRollbarPerson(currentUser);
useEffect(() => {
(async () => {
const user = await Auth.getCurrentUser();
setCurrentUser(user);
})();
});
if (currentUser != null) {
return <LoggedInHome />;
}
return <LoggedOutHome />;
}
Rollbar.js already provides automated Telemetry with the default configuration autoInstrument: true
in the client
which will capture useful telemetry events and data for you.
To provide more breadcrumbs useful for identifying the cause of an item or error, you can add your own capture events
that will be included in the Telemetry of an item in Rollbar with the useRollbarCaptureEvent
hook.
The useRollbarCaptureEvent
hook is designed to capture a new event in your [Functional Component] any time the
metadata
or level
you provide to the hook changes. On rerenders, no event is captured if there is not a change
to the references provided to those 2 arguments (utilizing the dependencies
array arg underneath within the call to
the built-in React useEffect
hook).
Here is an example of using useRollbarCaptureEvent
in the render cycle of a [Functional Component] to send a telemetry
event related to the data that will be rendered in the component
import { useEffect, useState } from 'react';
import { useRollbar, useRollbarCaptureEvent, LEVEL_INFO } from '@rollbar/react';
function BookDetails({ bookId }) {
const rollbar = useRollbar(); // <-- must have ancestor Provider, same with useRollbarCaptureEvent
const [book, setBook] = useState();
useEffect(async () => {
try {
const { data } = await getBook(bookId);
setBook(data.book);
} catch (error) {
rollbar.error('Error fetching book', error, { bookId }); // <-- use rollbar to log errors as normal
}
}, [bookId]);
useRollbarCaptureEvent(book, LEVEL_INFO); // <-- only fires when book changes
return <div>…</div>;
}