Rollbar.configure do |config| # Without configuration, Rollbar is enabled in all environments. # To disable in specific environments, set config.enabled=false. config.access_token = ENV['ROLLBAR_TOCKEN'] # Here we'll disable in 'test': if Rails.env.test? || Rails.env.development? config.enabled = false end # By default, Rollbar will try to call the `current_user` controller method # to fetch the logged-in user object, and then call that object's `id`, # `username`, and `email` methods to fetch those properties. To customize: # config.person_method = "my_current_user" # config.person_id_method = "my_id" # config.person_username_method = "my_username" # config.person_email_method = "my_email" # If you want to attach custom data to all exception and message reports, # provide a lambda like the following. It should return a hash. # config.custom_data_method = lambda { {:some_key => "some_value" } } # Add exception class names to the exception_level_filters hash to # change the level that exception is reported at. Note that if an exception # has already been reported and logged the level will need to be changed # via the rollbar interface. # Valid levels: 'critical', 'error', 'warning', 'info', 'debug', 'ignore' # 'ignore' will cause the exception to not be reported at all. # config.exception_level_filters.merge!('MyCriticalException' => 'critical') # # You can also specify a callable, which will be called with the exception instance. # config.exception_level_filters.merge!('MyCriticalException' => lambda { |e| 'critical' }) # Enable asynchronous reporting (uses girl_friday or Threading if girl_friday # is not installed) # config.use_async = true # Supply your own async handler: # config.async_handler = Proc.new { |payload| # Thread.new { Rollbar.process_from_async_handler(payload) } # } # Enable asynchronous reporting (using sucker_punch) # config.use_sucker_punch # Enable delayed reporting (using Sidekiq) # config.use_sidekiq # You can supply custom Sidekiq options: # config.use_sidekiq 'queue' => 'default' # If you run your staging application instance in production environment then # you'll want to override the environment reported by `Rails.env` with an # environment variable like this: `ROLLBAR_ENV=staging`. This is a recommended # setup for Heroku. See: # https://devcenter.heroku.com/articles/deploying-to-a-custom-rails-environment config.environment = ENV['ROLLBAR_ENV'] || Rails.env end