Laravel 8.x, 9.x and 10.x

Laravel is supported using a native package: sentry-laravel.

This guide is for Laravel 8.x, 9.x and 10.x. We also provide instructions for the latest Laravel as well as Lumen-specific instructions.

Install the sentry/sentry-laravel package:

Copied
composer require sentry/sentry-laravel

Enable capturing unhandled exception to report to Sentry by making the following change to your App/Exceptions/Handler.php:

App/Exceptions/Handler.php
Copied
use Sentry\Laravel\Integration;

public function register(): void
{
    $this->reportable(function (Throwable $e) {
        Integration::captureUnhandledException($e);
    });
}

Configure the Sentry DSN with this command:

Copied
php artisan sentry:publish --dsn=https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0

It creates the config file (config/sentry.php) and adds the DSN to your .env file.

.env
Copied
SENTRY_LARAVEL_DSN=https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0

You can test your configuration using the provided sentry:test artisan command:

Copied
php artisan sentry:test

You can verify that Sentry is capturing errors in your Laravel application by creating a route that will throw an exception:

routes/web.php
Copied
Route::get('/debug-sentry', function () {
    throw new Exception('My first Sentry error!');
});

Visiting this route will trigger an exception that will be captured by Sentry.

Set traces_sample_rate in config/sentry.php or SENTRY_TRACES_SAMPLE_RATE in your .env to a value greater than 0.0. Setting a value greater than 0.0 will enable Performance Monitoring, null (the default) will disable Performance Monitoring.

.env
Copied
# Be sure to lower this value in production otherwise you could burn through your quota quickly.
SENTRY_TRACES_SAMPLE_RATE=1.0

The example configuration above will transmit 100% of captured traces. Be sure to lower this value in production or you could use up your quota quickly.

You can also be more granular with the sample rate by using the traces_sampler option. Learn more in Using Sampling to Filter Transaction Events.

Performance data is transmitted using a new event type called "transactions", which you can learn about in Distributed Tracing.

When Sentry is installed in your application, it will also be active when you are developing or running tests.

You most likely don't want errors to be sent to Sentry when you are developing or running tests. To avoid this, set the DSN value to null to disable sending errors to Sentry.

You can also do this by not defining SENTRY_LARAVEL_DSN in your .env or by defining it as SENTRY_LARAVEL_DSN=null.

If you do leave Sentry enabled when developing or running tests, it's possible for it to have a negative effect on the performance of your application or test suite.

Help improve this content
Our documentation is open source and available on GitHub. Your contributions are welcome, whether fixing a typo (drat!) or suggesting an update ("yeah, this would be better").