Introducing Sentry 9
With Sentry 9, we help you prioritize rapid iteration so you can fix what’s important and stay in your workflow without distraction.
With Sentry 9, we help you prioritize rapid iteration so you can fix what’s important and stay in your workflow without distraction.
Most Sentry users (like you) are software engineers. That's why it's important that support for our platform be provided by other engineers. Learn how we approach this with our Support Engineering team.
We held our first Sentry Scouts Meetup in January, but never wrote up a recap about our excellent panel discussion. Until now.
Several days ago, Microsoft released the April 2018 Update (1803) of Windows 10. This release was an in-place installation of .NET Framework 4. Surprise! An app you created yesterday, or even years ago, could suddenly start crashing because of an OS update.
There are times you may suddenly see a spike in events that launches you towards your quota much faster than expected. We’d prefer you not have to worry about that, which is why we provide Spike Protection.
In A Comedy of Errors, we talk to engineers about the weirdest, worst, and most interesting issues they’ve encountered (and resolved) over the years.
As happy Rust users ourselves, it makes us even happier to be able to say that we now have a Sentry Rust SDK. This means you can now report panics, failures, and other types of incidents to Sentry.
It’s time we let the cat out of the bag, the rabbit out of the hat, the dog out of the car: Support for Minidump crash reports has officially landed in Sentry.
In Exception Perceptions we discuss Observability best practices through videos, tutorials, and technical examples. Think of it as your go-to for all Observability related questions.
In A Comedy of Errors, we talk to engineers about the weirdest, worst, and most interesting issues they’ve encountered (and resolved) over the years.
Rust has been great for Sentry! But talking to people who are new to Rust, it's hard to get rid of the feeling that Rust can be an... adventure. So here are some things not to do in Rust (and what to do instead).