Issue Properties
Learn more about searchable issue properties.
Issues are an aggregate of one or more error events. Searchable issues properties include status, assignment, aggregate counts, and age. You can search by issue properties in the Issues page and in Dashboards in the widget builder, depending on your dataset selection.
Below is a list of keys and tokens that can be used in the issues search.
You'll only need to use query syntax for datetime and relative time searchable property types if you're using the Sentry API.
Returns issues created since the time defined by the value. The syntax is similar to the Unix find command. Supported suffixes: m - minutes
, h - hours
, d - days
, w - weeks
. For example, age:-24h
returns isssues that are new in the last 24 hours, while age:+12h
returns ones that are older than 12 hours. Entering age:+12h age:-24h
would return issues created between 12 and 24 hours ago.
- Type: relative time
Indicates if the app is in the foreground or background. Values are 1/0
or true/false
- Type: boolean
Returns issues assigned to the defined user(s) or team(s). Values can be a user ID (your email address), me
for yourself, none
for no assignee, my_teams
or #team-name
for teams you belong to.
- Type: team or org user
Returns issues that are assigned to or suggested to be assigned to the defined user(s) or team(s). Suggested assignees are found by matching ownership rules and suspect commits. Values can be a user ID (your email address), me
for yourself, none
for no assignee/suggestion, my_teams
or #team-name
for teams you belong to.
- Type: team or org user
Returns issues bookmarked by the defined user. Values can be your user ID (your email address) or me
for yourself.
- Type: team or org user
CPU architecture
- Type: string
Brand of the device
- Type: string
Family of the device. Typically, the common part of a model name across generations. For example, iPhone, Samsung Galaxy.
- Type: string
Deprecated
- Type: string
Internal hardware revision to identify the device exactly.
- Type: n/a
Describes the orientation of the device and can be either portrait
or landscape
.
- Type: string
Device screen density in pixels.
- Type: string
Number of dots per inch of the device screen.
- Type: string
Device screen height in pixels.
- Type: string
Device screen width in pixels.
- Type: string
Deprecated
- Type: UUID
Distinguishes build or deployment variants of the same release of an application. For example, the dist can be the build number of an Xcode build or the version code of an Android build.
- Type: string
Indicates whether the user has handled the exception — for example, using try...catch. An error is considered handled if all stack traces handle the error. Values are 1/0
or true/false
- Type: boolean
Indicates if the error occurred on the main thread. Values are 1/0
or true/false
- Type: boolean
An object describing the mechanism that created this exception.
- Type: array
The type of exception. For example, ValueError
.
- Type: array
The inversion of error.handled
.
- Type: boolean
Original value of a field that causes or exhibits the error.
- Type: array
Returns issues with matching datetime.
- Type: datetime
Type of the event (transaction, error, default, csp, and so on). The transaction type is unavailable in Issues.
- Type: string
Returns issues first seen within the given release. Can be an exact match on the version of a release, or first-release:latest
to pick the most recent release.
- Type: datetime
Returns issues with a matching first time seen. Syntax is the same as age
.
- Type: datetime
Full name of the city
- Type: string
ISO 3166-1 country code
- Type: string
Full name of the country
- Type: string
Returns results with the defined tag or field, but not the value of that tag or field. For example, entering has:user
would find events with the user
tag.
- Type: error
HTTP method of the request that created the event.
- Type: string
Identifies the web page from which the resource was requested.
- Type: string
HTTP status code, which indicates whether a response was successful. For example, 200
or 404
.
- Type: string
Full URL of the request that caused the error, but without any parameters
- Type: string
The event or replay id. In Issues, use only the ID value without the id
key.
- Type: UUID
The properties of an issue. Values can be: unresolved
, resolved
, archived
, assigned
, unassigned
, for_review
, linked
, or unlinked
. The for_review
value filters unresolved issues and only shows the recently unresolved or new issues that haven't been marked as "reviewed". The linked
and unlinked
values return issues based on whether they're linked to an external issue tracker or not.
- Type: status
The short issue code, for example SENTRY-ABC
.
- Type: string
The category of the issue. For example: error
, performance
, replay
and cron
.
- Type: string
The specific type of issue. For example issue.type:performance_n_plus_one_db_queries
returns the n plus one db query performance issues.
- Type: string
Datetime when the event was last seen. For example, lastSeen:+30d
returns issues last seen 30 days ago or more; lastSeen:-2d
returns issues last seen within the past two days. This is similar to age
.
- Type: datetime
Severity of the event (such as: fatal, error, warning). Always set to info for transactions.
- Type: string
Location where the error happened.
- Type: string
Returns errors with the matching message or transactions with matching transaction name. Also matches on any message containing the supplied value.Searching message:undefined
will match an event with a message of undefined is not an object
. Raw text searches (searches without the message
key) are also checked against this field. For errors, the message can be a concatenatenation of elements, so searches might include unexpected results.
- Type: string
The internal build revision of the operating system.
- Type: string
The independent kernel version string. This is typically the entire output of the uname
syscall.
- Type: string
The Linux distribution name. This maps to ID
in /etc/os-release/
.
- Type: string
The Linux distribution version. This maps to VERSION_ID
in /etc/os-release/
.
- Type: string
Name of the platform
- Type: string
The name of the project. In some pages of sentry.io, you can also filter on project using a dropdown.
- Type: string
The id of the project.
- Type: number
A release is a version of your code deployed to an environment. You can create a token with an exact match of the version of a release, or release:latest
to pick the most recent release. Learn more.
- Type: string
The number that identifies an iteration of your app. For example, CFBundleVersion
on iOS or versionCode
on Android. Learn more.
- Type: number
The unique identifier of the project/app. For example, CFBundleIdentifier
on iOS or packageName
on Android. Learn more.
- Type: string
The usage your release is seeing relative to other releases. Values can be adopted
, low
, or replaced
. Learn more.
- Type: string
A shorter version of the name; name without the package or short version of the hash. Learn more.
- Type: string
Name of the Sentry SDK that sent the event.
- Type: string
Version of the Sentry SDK that sent the event.
- Type: string
The absolute path to the source file. In events, this is an array; in issues, this is a single value.
- Type: array, single value
The path to the source file relative to the project root directory. In events, this is an array. In issues, this is a single value.
- Type: array, single value
Name of the function being called. In events, this is an array. In issues, this is a single value.
- Type: array, single value
Platform-specific module path. For example, sentry.interfaces.Stacktrace
. In events, this is an array. In issues, this is a single value.
- Type: array, single value
The "package" the frame was contained in. Depending on the platform, this can be different things. For C#, it can be the name of the assembly. For native code, it can be the path of the dynamic library or something else. In events, this is an array. In issues, this is a single value.
- Type: array, single value
Returns results with a matching count. (Same as count()
in events.)
- Type: number
The finish timestamp of the transaction. Returns events with matching datetime.
- Type: datetime
Title of the error or the transaction name.
- Type: string
A trace represents the record of the entire operation you want to measure or track — like page load, searched using the UUID generated by Sentry’s SDK.
- Type: UUID
For transactions, the name of the transaction. For errors, the name of the associated transaction.
- Type: string
- Type: string
An alternative, or addition, to the username. Sentry is aware of email addresses and can therefore display things such as Gravatars and unlock messaging capabilities.
- Type: string
Application-specific internal identifier for the user.
- Type: string
User's IP address. Sentry uses the IP address as a unique identifier for unauthenticated users.
- Type: string
Username, which is typically a better label than the user.id
.
- Type: string
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