Skip to content

veritrans/raygun-spring-boot

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 

History

10 Commits
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

raygun-spring-boot

Features

  • Auto-configures a RaygunTemplate bean.
  • Integrations:
    • Spring Web MVC controllers in a Servlet environment
    • Spring Web Services endpoints
  • Can exclude exception types sent.
  • Customizable properties in the properties documentation.
  • Messages sending is asynchronous by default.
  • Auto-configures a mock RaygunClientFactory bean in tests.

Usage

Add the dependency in the implementation configuration.

dependencies {
    implementation 'com.midtrans:raygun-spring-boot-starter:0.7.3'
}

Set the raygun.api-key property or RAYGUN_APIKEY environment variable with the Raygun API key retrieved from the Raygun Application settings page.

In your application.properties file.

raygun.api-key={your-api-key-value}

A RaygunTemplate bean is auto-configured and can be autowired.

@Component
class UserService {
    final RaygunTemplate;

    UserService(RaygunTemplate raygunTemplate) {
        this.raygunTemplate = raygunTemplate;
    }

    void businessLogic() {
        try {
            //some business logic...
        } catch (Exception ex) {
            raygunTemplate.send(ex);
        }
    }
}

The Javadoc can be accessed in javadoc.io.

Support

Spring Boot Version Tested Supported
2.7.x yes yes
2.6.x yes no
2.5.x yes no
< 2.5.x no no

This starter has been tested with Spring Boot version 2.5.x, 2.6.x, and 2.7.x.

Usage with Spring Boot version below 2.5.x and above 2.7.x should work, but not tested.

Feature requests and bug fixes are only supported for Spring Boot version 2.7.x.

Integrations

Web MVC Servlet Integration

Web MVC Servlet Integration in Main

Uncaught exceptions thrown from @Controller and @RestController methods are logged and sent to Raygun.

Responses can be built using Spring Web MVC exception handling mechanism using exception annotated with @ResponseStatus or using @ExceptionHandler method in a @Controller or a @ControllerAdvice as documented in the reference documentation.

If the uncaught exceptions are sent in @ExceptionHandler methods, the uncaught exceptions will be sent to Raygun twice.

@RestController
class UserRestController {

    //The IndexOutOfBoundsException will be sent to Raygun once
    @GetMapping("/uncaught")
    void uncaught() {
        throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException();
    }

    //The NullPointerException will be sent to Raygun twice
    @GetMapping("/controllerAdvice")
    void controllerAdvice() {
        throw new NullPointerException();
    }

    //The response will be depends on the annotation and the custom Exception will be sent to Raygun
    @GetMapping("/responseStatus")
    void responseStatus() {
        throw new ResponseStatusException();
    }
}

@ControllerAdvice
class UserControllerAdvice {

    @Autowired
    RaygunTemplate raygunTemplate;

    @ExceptionHandler
    ResponseEntity<?> handle(NullPointerException ex) {
        raygunTemplate.send(ex);
        return ResponseEntity.internalServerError().build();
    }
}

@ResponseStatus(code = HttpStatus.BAD_GATEWAY, reason = "Bad Gateway")
class ResponseStatusException extends RuntimeException {

}

Web MVC Servlet Integration in Tests

The Web MVC integration is configured when using the @WebMvcTest annotation.

Uncaught exceptions will still be caught and logged, but they are not sent to Raygun. Please refer to the testing section.

@WebMvcTest
class UserWebMvcTest {

    @Autowired
    MockMvc mockMvc;

    //Exceptions thrown by controller methods are caught and logged, but not sent to Raygun
    @Test
    void responseStatus() throws Exception {
        mockMvc.perform(get("/responseStatus"))
            .andExpect(status().isBadGateway());
    }
}

Web Services Integration

Web Services Integration in Main

Uncaught exceptions thrown from @Endpoint methods are logged and sent to Raygun.

By default, responses for uncaught exceptions are SOAP Fault with the exception's message as the fault string. Custom responses for uncaught exceptions can be built using Spring Web Services exception handling mechanism using exceptions annotated with @SoapFault as documented in the reference documentation.

@Endpoint
class UserEndpoint {

    //The Fault response reason will be the exception message.
    @PayloadRoot(localPart = "uncaught")
    void uncaught() {
        throw new IndexOutOfBoundsException();
    }

    //The Fault response reason will be the annotation's faultStringOrReason if set or the exception message if not set.
    @PayloadRoot(localPart = "soapFault")
    void soapFault() {
        throw new SoapFaultException();
    }
}

@SoapFault(faultCode = FaultCode.SERVER, faultStringOrReason = "soapFault")
class SoapFaultException extends RuntimeException {

}

Web Services Integration in Tests

The Web Services integration is configured when using the @WebServiceServerTest annotation

Uncaught exceptions will still be caught and logged, but they are not sent to Raygun. Please refer to the testing section.

@WebServiceServerTest
class UserWebServiceServerTest {

    @Autowired
    MockWebServiceClient mockWebServiceClient;

    @Test //Exceptions thrown by endpoint methods are caught and logged, but not sent to Raygun
    void uncaught() {
        mockWebServiceClient
            .sendRequest(RequestCreators.withPayload(new StringSource("<uncaught></uncaught>")))
            .andExpect(ResponseMatchers.serverOrReceiverFault());
    }
}

Exceptions Exclusion

To exclude exceptions being sent, register exception types through a RaygunExceptionExcludeRegistrar bean.

@Component
class UserRaygunExcludeExceptionRegistrar implements RaygunExceptionExcludeRegistrar {

    @Override
    public void registerExceptions(RaygunExceptionExcludeRegistry registry) {
        registry.registerException(RuntimeException.class);
    }
}

Messages Sending

RaygunTemplate will use a TaskExecutor to send the Raygun mesages.

In an idiomatic Spring Boot application, a ThreadPoolTaskExecutor bean is auto-configured with a sensible defaults and can be customized as documented in the reference documentation.

Depending on how many TaskExecutor beans configured in the ApplicationContext, the behavior is different as below:

  • no TaskExecutor bean configured, RaygunTemplate will use a SyncTaskExecutor to send the messages synchronously,
  • one TaskExecutor bean configured, RaygunTemplate will use the configured TaskExecutor bean,
  • multiple TaskExecutor beans configured
    • no bean named raygunTaskExecutor configured, RaygunTemplate will use a SyncTaskExecutor to send the messages synchronously,
    • one TaskExecutor bean named raygunTaskExecutor configured, RaygunTemplate will use the raygunTaskExecutor bean.

To know the behaviors and tradeoffs of using ThreadPoolTaskExecutor please refer to RaygunTemplateMessagesSendingTest and RaygunTemplateMessagesRejectionTest.

Testing

In tests, RaygunTemplate bean is mocked and does not send exceptions to Raygun.

This will apply to @SpringBootTest and test slices.

@SpringBootTest
class UserTest {

    @Autowired
    RaygunTemplate raygunTemplate;

    //The RaygunTemplate does not send the exception to Raygun
    @Test
    void contextLoads() {
        raygunTemplate.send(new IllegalArgumentException());
    }
}

Example Applications

There are example Spring Boot applications provided in the repository.

Please add the raygun.api-key in the application's src/main/resources/application.properties file.

Commands for MacOS and Linux:

  • Command Line Application: ./gradlew raygun-spring-boot-starter:bootRun
  • Web Servlets Application: ./gradlew raygun-spring-boot-starter-web:bootRun
  • Web Services Application: ./gradlew raygun-spring-boot-starter-web-services:bootRun

Contributing

Please read the contributing guide.

About

Spring Boot Starter for Raygun

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages