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Backtrace

Backtrace@release Build status

Backtrace@pre-release Build status

Backtrace's integration with C# applications allows customers to capture and report handled and unhandled C# exceptions to their Backtrace instance, instantly offering the ability to prioritize and debug software errors.

Usage

// replace with your endpoint url and token
var backtraceCredentials = 
	new BacktraceCredentials(@"https://myserver.sp.backtrace.io:6097", "4dca18e8769d0f5d10db0d1b665e64b3d716f76bf182fbcdad5d1d8070c12db0");
var backtraceClient = new BacktraceClient(backtraceCredentials);

try{
    //throw exception here
}
catch(Exception exception){
    await backtraceClient.SendAsync(new BacktraceReport(exception));
}

Table of contents

  1. Features Summary
  2. Supported .NET Frameworks
  3. Installation
    1. Prerequisites
    2. NuGet installation
  4. Running sample application
    1. Visual Studio
    2. .NET Core CLI
    3. Visual Studio for Mac
  5. Documentation
    1. Initialize new BacktraceClient
    2. Sending a report
    3. Events
    4. Customization
  6. Architecture
    1. BacktraceReport
    2. BacktraceClient
    3. BacktraceData
    4. BacktraceApi
    5. BacktraceDatabase
    6. ReportWatcher
  7. Good to know
  8. Release Notes

Features Summary

  • Light-weight C# client library that quickly submits C#/.NET exceptions and crashes to your Backtrace dashboard
    • Can include callstack, system metadata, custom metadata, and file attachments (e.g. minidump) if needed.
  • Supports a wide range of .NET versions such as .NET Framework, .NET Core, Mono, Xamarin and Unity. Read more here
  • Supports both CLI and IDE work environments
  • Supports asynchronous Tasks in .NET 4.5+
  • Supports offline database for error report storage and re-submission in case of network outage
  • Fully customizable and extendable event handlers and base classes for custom implementations
  • Available as a NuGet Package as well as a fully open-sourced Github Release.

Supported .NET Frameworks

  • .NET Framework 3.5 +
  • .NET Framework 4.5 +
    • getting information about application thread
    • handling unhandled application exceptions
  • .NET Standard:
    • .NET Core 2.0 application
    • Xamarin
    • Universal Windows Platform
  • Unity

Installation

Prerequisites

Development Environment

  • On Windows, we recommend Visual Studio 2017 or above for IDE. You can download and install Visual Studio here. As an alternative to Visual Studio you can use .NET Core command line interface, see installation guide here
  • On Mac OS X, you can download and install Visual Studio here if you prefer using an IDE. For command line, you should to download and install .NET Core 2.0 or above.
  • On Linux, Visual Studio Code is available as a light-weight IDE. Similarly, you can use .NET Core command line interface, see instruction for Linux here

NuGet

The Backtrace library is available on NuGet. You can read more about NuGet and how to download the packages here

Installing Backtrace via NuGet

You can install Backtrace via NuGet using the following commands:

Windows NuGet CLI:

Install-Package Backtrace

Linux/Mac OS X .NET Core CLI:

dotnet add package Backtrace

Running sample application

Visual Studio

Visual Studio allows you to build a project and run all available samples (includes support for .NET Core, .NET Framework 4.5, .NET Framework 3.5).

  • Double click .sln file or open project directory in Visual Studio.
  • In Solution Explorer navigate to directory Sample and set preferred project (.NET Core/Framework) as startup project.

Visual Studio

  • Open Program.cs class in any Backtrace Sample project and replace BacktraceCredential constructor patemeters with with your Backtrace endpoint URL (e.g. https://xxx.sp.backtrace.io:6098) and submission token:
    var backtraceCredentials = new BacktraceCredentials(@"https://myserver.sp.backtrace.io:6097", "4dca18e8769d0f5d10db0d1b665e64b3d716f76bf182fbcdad5d1d8070c12db0");
  • Press Ctrl+Shift+B to build solution
  • Press F5 to run the project
  • You should see new errors in your Backtrace instance. Refresh the Project page or Query Builder to see new details in real-time.

.NET Core command line

You can use .NET Core's CLI to run sample project on Windows, Mac OS and Linux. To run a sample project using .NET Core CLI:

  • While in solution directory, navigate to Backtrace.Core sample application:
    cd Backtrace.Core  
  • Open Program.cs in project Backtrace.Core and replace BacktraceCredential constructor parameters with with your Backtrace endpoint URL (e.g. https://xxx.sp.backtrace.io:6098) and submission token:
    var backtraceCredentials = new BacktraceCredentials(@"https://myserver.sp.backtrace.io:6097", "4dca18e8769d0f5d10db0d1b665e64b3d716f76bf182fbcdad5d1d8070c12db0");
  • Build the project:
    dotnet build  
  • When the build completes, run the project:
    dotnet run  
  • You should see new errors in your Backtrace instance. Refresh the Project page or Query Builder to see new details in real-time.

Visual Studio for MacOS

  • Open the Backtrace solution in Visual Studio, unload all projects except Backtrace, Backtrace.Tests and Backtrace.Core, and set Backtrace.Core as your startup project:

VisualStudioMacOS

  • Open Program.cs class in project Backtrace.Core and replace BacktraceCredential constructor parameters with with your Backtrace endpoint URL (e.g. https://xxx.sp.backtrace.io:6098) and submission token:
    var backtraceCredentials = new BacktraceCredentials(@"https://myserver.sp.backtrace.io:6097", "4dca18e8769d0f5d10db0d1b665e64b3d716f76bf182fbcdad5d1d8070c12db0");
  • Build the project.
  • Upon successful build, run the project.
  • You should see new errors in your Backtrace instance. Refresh the Project page or Query Builder to see new details in real-time.

Documentation

Initialize a new BacktraceClient

First create a BacktraceCredential instance with your Backtrace endpoint URL (e.g. https://xxx.sp.backtrace.io:6098) and submission token, and supply it as a parameter in the BacktraceClient constructor:

var credentials = new BacktraceCredentials("backtrace_endpoint_url", "token");
var backtraceClient = new BacktraceClient(credentials);

For more advanced usage of BacktraceClient, you can supply BacktraceClientConfiguration as a parameter. See the following example:

var credentials = new BacktraceCredentials("backtrace_endpoint_url", "token");
var configuration = new BacktraceClientConfiguration(credentials){
    ClientAttributes = new Dictionary<string, object>() { 
        { "attribute_name", "attribute_value" } },
    ReportPerMin = 3,
}
var backtraceClient = new BacktraceClient(configuration);

For more information on BacktraceClientConfiguration parameters please see Architecture section.

Notes:

  • If parameter reportPerMin is equal to 0, there is no limit on the number of error reports per minute. When the reportPerMin cap is reached, BacktraceClient.Send/BacktraceClient.SendAsync method will return false,
  • If you develop application behind the proxy you can pass WebProxy object to BacktraceCredentials object. We will try to use WebProxy object when user pass it to Backtrace. To setup proxy use property Proxy,
  • BacktraceClient allows you to unpack AggregateExceptions and send only exceptions that are available in InnerException property of AggregateException. By default BacktraceClient will send AggregateException information to Backtrace server. To avoid sending these reports, please override UnpackAggregateException and set value to true.

Database initialization

BacktraceClient allows you to customize the initialization of BacktraceDatabase for local storage of error reports by supplying a BacktraceDatabaseSettings parameter, as follows:

var dbSettings = new BacktraceDatabaseSettings("databaseDirectory"){
    MaxRecordCount = 100,
    MaxDatabaseSize = 1000,
    AutoSendMode = true,
    RetryBehavior = Backtrace.Types.RetryBehavior.ByInterval
};
var database = new BacktraceDatabase(dbSettings);
var credentials = new BacktraceCredentials("backtrace_endpoint_url", "token");
var configuration = new BacktraceClientConfiguration(credentials);
var backtraceClient = new BacktraceClient(configuration, database);

Notes:

  • If a valid databaseDirectory directory is supplied, the Backtrace library will generate and attach a minidump to each error report automatically. Otherwise, BacktraceDatabase will be disabled,
  • You can set backtraceClient.MiniDumpType to MiniDumpType.None if you don't want to generate minidump files.

Deduplication

Backtrace C# library allows you to aggregate the same reports. By using Backtrace deduplication mechanism you can aggregate the same reports and send only one message to Backtrace Api. As a developer you can choose deduplication options. Please use DeduplicationStrategy enum to setup possible deduplication rules or copy example below to setup deduplication strategy:

var dbSettings = new BacktraceDatabaseSettings(path)
{
    DeduplicationStrategy = DeduplicationStrategy.LibraryName | DeduplicationStrategy.Classifier | DeduplicationStrategy.Message,
}

Deduplication strategy enum types:

  • Ignore - ignore deduplication strategy,
  • Default - deduplication strategy will only use current strack trace to find duplicated reports,
  • Classifier - deduplication strategy will use stack trace and exception type to find duplicated reports,
  • Message - deduplication strategy will use stack trace and exception message to find duplicated reports,
  • LibraryName - deduplication strategy will use stack trace and faulting library name to find duplicated reports.

To combine all possible deduplication strategies please use code below:

DeduplicationStrategy = DeduplicationStrategy.LibraryName | DeduplicationStrategy.Classifier | DeduplicationStrategy.Message

Notes:

  • When you aggregate reports via Backtrace C# library, BacktraceDatabase will store number of the same reports in counter file.
  • Deduplication algorithm will include BacktraceReport Fingerprint and Factor properties. Fingerprint property will overwrite deduplication algorithm result. Factor property will change hash generated by deduplication algorithm.
  • By storing data in additional counter file we can read number of the same offline reports on application starts and send them to Backtrace when your internet connection back.
  • When C# library aggregate multiple reports into one diagnostic data, application will send only one request, not multiple,
  • BacktraceDatabase methods allows you to use aggregated diagnostic data together. You can check Hash property of BacktraceDatabaseRecord to check generated hash for diagnostic data and Counter to check how much the same records we detect.
  • BacktraceDatabase Count method will return number of all records stored in database (included deduplicated records),
  • BacktarceDatabase Delete method will remove record (with multiple deduplicated records) at the same time.
  • You can override default hash method by using GenerateHash delegate available in BacktraceDatabase object. When you add your own method implementation, BacktraceDatabase won't use default deduplication mechanism.

Sending an error report

BacktraceClient.Send/BacktraceClient.SendAsync method will send an error report to the Backtrace endpoint specified. There Send method is overloaded, see examples below:

Using BacktraceReport

The BacktraceReport class represents a single error report. (Optional) You can also submit custom attributes using the attributes parameter, or attach files by supplying an array of file paths in the attachmentPaths parameter.

try
{
  //throw exception here
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
    var report = new BacktraceReport(
        exception: exception,
        attributes: new Dictionary<string, object>() { { "key", "value" } },
        attachmentPaths: new List<string>() { @"file_path_1", @"file_path_2" }
    );
    var result = backtraceClient.Send(backtraceReport);
}

Notes:

  • if you initialize BacktraceClient with BacktraceDatabase and your application is offline or you pass invalid credentials to BacktraceClient, reports will be stored in database directory path,
  • for .NET 4.5+, we recommend to use SendAsync method,
  • if you don't want to use reflection to determine valid stack frame method name, you can pass false to reflectionMethodName. By default this value is equal to true,
  • BacktraceReport allows you to change default fingerprint generation algorithm. You can use Fingerprint property if you want to change fingerprint value. Keep in mind - fingerprint should be valid sha256 string,
  • BacktraceReport allows you to change grouping strategy in Backtrace server. If you want to change how algorithm group your reports in Backtrace server please override Factor property,
  • by default BacktraceReport include to exception information environment stack trace. If you want to change this behavior please use includeEnvironmentStacktrace parameter in BacktraceReport constructor. When includeEnvironmentStacktrace is false then report will only store information about exception stack trace,
  • Fingerprint will overwrite BacktraceReport deduplication strategy! In this case two different reports will use the same hash in deduplication algorithm, that could cause data lost,
  • Factor can change a result from deduplication algorithm. Hash generated by deduplication model properties will include Factor value.

If you want to use Fingerprint and Factor property you have to override default property values. See example below to check how to use these properties:

try
{
  //throw exception here
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
    var report = new BacktraceReport(...){
        FingerPrint = "sha256 string",
        Factor = exception.GetType().Name
    };
    ....
}

Asynchronous Send Support

For developers that use .NET 4.5+ and .NET Standard we recommend using SendAsync method, which uses asynchronous Tasks. Both Send and SendAsync method returns BacktraceResult. See example below:

try
{
  //throw exception here
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
    var report = new BacktraceReport(
        exception: exception,
        attributes: new Dictionary<string, object>() { { "key", "value" } },
        attachmentPaths: new List<string>() { @"file_path_1", @"file_path_2" }
    );
    var result = await backtraceClient.SendAsync(backtraceReport);
}

Other BacktraceReport Overloads

BacktraceClient can also automatically create BacktraceReport given an exception or a custom message using the following overloads of the BacktraceClient.Send method:

try
{
  //throw exception here
}
catch (Exception exception)
{
  //use extension method
  var report = exception.ToBacktraceReport();
  backtraceClient.Send(report);
  
  //pass exception to Send method
  backtraceClient.Send(exception);
  
  //pass your custom message to Send method
  await backtraceClient.SendAsync("Message");
}

Attaching custom event handlers

BacktraceClient allows you to attach your custom event handlers. For example, you can trigger actions before the Send method:

 //Add your own handler to client API

backtraceClient.BeforeSend =
    (Model.BacktraceData model) =>
    {
        var data = model;
        //do something with data for example:        
        data.Attributes.Add("eventAtrtibute", "EventAttributeValue");
        if(data.Classifier == null || !data.Classifier.Any())
        {
            data.Attachments.Add("path to attachment");
        }

        return data;
    };

BacktraceClient currently supports the following events:

  • BeforeSend
  • AfterSend
  • RequestHandler
  • OnReportStart
  • OnClientReportLimitReached
  • OnUnhandledApplicationException
  • OnServerResponse
  • OnServerError

Reporting unhandled application exceptions

BacktraceClient also supports reporting of unhandled application exceptions not captured by your try-catch blocks. To enable reporting of unhandled exceptions:

backtraceClient.HandleApplicationException();

Unhandled application exception handler will store your report in database. In case if you won't see your report in Backtrace, you will have to relaunch your application.

Custom client and report classes

You can extend BacktraceBase to create your own Backtrace client and error report implementation. You can refer to BacktraceClient for implementation inspirations.

Architecture

BacktraceReport

BacktraceReport is a class that describe a single error report. Keep in mind that BacktraceClient uses CallingAssembly method to retrieve information about your application.

BacktraceClient

BacktraceClient is a class that allows you to instantiate a client instance that interacts with BacktraceApi. This class sets up connection to the Backtrace endpoint and manages error reporting behavior (for example, saving minidump files on your local hard drive and limiting the number of error reports per minute). BacktraceClient extends BacktraceBase class.

BacktraceClient takes a BacktraceClientConfiguration parameter, which has the following properties:

  • Credentials - the BacktraceCredentials object to use for connection to the Backtrace server.
  • ClientAttributes - custom attributes to be submitted to Backtrace alongside the error report.
  • ReportPerMin - A cap on the number of reports that can be sent per minute. If ReportPerMin is equal to zero then there is no cap.

BacktraceData

BacktraceData is a serializable class that holds the data to create a diagnostic JSON to be sent to the Backtrace endpoint via BacktraceApi. You can add additional pre-processors for BacktraceData by attaching an event handler to the BacktraceClient.BeforeSend event. BacktraceData require BacktraceReport and BacktraceClient client attributes.

BacktraceApi

BacktraceApi is a class that sends diagnostic JSON to the Backtrace endpoint. BacktraceApi is instantiated when the BacktraceClient constructor is called. You use the following event handlers in BacktraceApi to customize how you want to handle JSON data:

  • RequestHandler - attach an event handler to this event to override the default BacktraceApi.Send method. A RequestHandler handler requires 3 parameters - uri, header and formdata bytes. Default Send method won't execute when a RequestHandler handler is attached.
  • OnServerError - attach an event handler to be invoked when the server returns with a 400 bad request, 401 unauthorized or other HTTP error codes.
  • OnServerResponse - attach an event handler to be invoked when the server returns with a valid response.

BacktraceApi can send synchronous and asynchronous reports to the Backtrace endpoint. To enable asynchronous report (default is synchronous) you have to set AsynchronousRequest property to true.

BacktraceResult

BacktraceResult is a class that holds response and result from a Send or SendAsync call. The class contains a Status property that indicates whether the call was completed (OK), the call returned with an error (ServerError), the call was aborted because client reporting limit was reached (LimitReached), or the call wasn't needed because developer use UnpackAggregateException property with empty AggregateException object (Empty). Additionally, the class has a Message property that contains details about the status. Note that the Send call may produce an error report on an inner exception, in this case you can find an additional BacktraceResult object in the InnerExceptionResult property.

BacktraceDatabase

BacktraceDatabase is a class that stores error report data in your local hard drive. If DatabaseSettings dones't contain a valid DatabasePath then BacktraceDatabase won't generate minidump files and store error report data.

BacktraceDatabase stores error reports that were not sent successfully due to network outage or server unavailability. BacktraceDatabase periodically tries to resend reports cached in the database. In BacktraceDatabaseSettings you can set the maximum number of entries (MaxRecordCount) to be stored in the database. The database will retry sending stored reports every RetryInterval seconds up to RetryLimit times, both customizable in the BacktraceDatabaseSettings.

BacktraceDatabaseSettings has the following properties:

  • DatabasePath - the local directory path where BacktraceDatabase stores error report data when reports fail to send
  • MaxRecordCount - Maximum number of stored reports in Database. If value is equal to 0, then there is no limit.
  • MaxDatabaseSize - Maximum database size in MB. If value is equal to 0, there is no limit.
  • AutoSendMode - if the value is true, BacktraceDatabase will automatically try to resend stored reports. Default is false.
  • RetryBehavior -
    • RetryBehavior.ByInterval - Default. BacktraceDatabase will try to resend the reports every time interval specified by RetryInterval.
    • RetryBehavior.NoRetry - Will not attempt to resend reports
  • RetryInterval - the time interval between retries, in seconds.
  • RetryLimit - the maximum number of times BacktraceDatabase will attempt to resend error report before removing it from the database.

If you want to clear your database or remove all reports after send method you can use Clear, Flush and FlushAsync methods.

ReportWatcher

ReportWatcher is a class that validate send requests to the Backtrace endpoint. If reportPerMin is set in the BacktraceClient constructor call, ReportWatcher will drop error reports that go over the limit. BacktraceClient check rate limit before BacktraceApi generate diagnostic json.

Good to know

Xamarin

You can use this Backtrace library with Xamarin if you change your HttpClient Implementation to Android. To change HttpClient settings, navigate to Android Options under Project Settings and click on Advanced button.

Xamarin Android Support

Release Notes

See release notes here.