Set Up Metrics
Learn how to measure the data points you care about by configuring Metrics in your Android app.
Upcoming API Changes
We'll be updating our API to ensure that metrics are explicitly connected to spans. This change will improve debugging capabilities by ensuring that metrics are always contextually linked with all your Sentry data through traces. You'll eventually need to migrate to the new APIs once released. Learn more.
Metrics are supported with Sentry Android SDK version 7.6.0
and above.
Sentry metrics help you pinpoint and solve issues that impact user experience and app performance by measuring the data points that are important to you. You can track things like processing time, event size, user signups, and conversion rates, then correlate them back to tracing data in order to get deeper insights and solve issues faster.
Here's how to add Metrics to your application:
MyApplication.kt
import io.sentry.android.core.SentryAndroid
SentryAndroid.init(this) { options ->
options.enableMetrics = true
}
Counters are one of the more basic types of metrics and can be used to count certain event occurrences.
To emit a counter, do the following:
Sentry.metrics()
.increment(
"button_login_click", // key
1.0, // value
null, // unit
mapOf( // tags
"provider" to "e-mail"
)
)
Distributions help you get the most insights from your data by allowing you to obtain aggregations such as p90
, min
, max
, and avg
.
To emit a distribution, do the following:
Sentry.metrics().distribution(
"image_download_duration",
150.0,
MeasurementUnit.Duration.MILLISECOND,
mapOf(
"type" to "thumbnail"
)
)
Sets are useful for looking at unique occurrences and counting the unique elements you added.
To emit a set, do the following:
Sentry.metrics().set(
"user_view",
"jane",
MeasurementUnit.Custom("username"),
mapOf(
"page" to "home"
)
)
Gauges let you obtain aggregates like min
, max
, avg
, sum
, and count
. They can be represented in a more space-efficient way than distributions, but they can't be used to get percentiles. If percentiles aren't important to you, we recommend using gauges.
To emit a gauge, do the following:
Sentry.metrics().gauge(
"page_load",
15.0,
MeasurementUnit.Duration.MILLISECOND,
mapOf(
"page" to "/home"
)
)
Timers can be used to measure the execution time of a specific block of code. They're implemented like distributions, but measured in seconds.
To emit a timer, do the following:
Sentry.metrics().timing("load_user_profile") {
// db.load() ...
}
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").