Write Buffers
Sentry manages database row contention by buffering writes and flushing bulk changes to the database over a period of time. This is extremely helpful if you have high concurrency, especially if they’re frequently the same event.
For example, if you happen to receive 100,000 events/second, and 10% of those are reporting a connection issue to the database (where they’d get grouped together), enabling a buffer backend will change things so that each count update is actually put into a queue, and all updates are performed at the rate of how fast the queue can keep up.
To specify a backend, simply modify the SENTRY_BUFFER
and SENTRY_BUFFER_OPTIONS
values in your configuration:
SENTRY_BUFFER = 'sentry.buffer.base.Buffer'
Configuring the Redis backend requires the queue or you won’t see any gains (in fact you’ll just negatively impact your performance).
Configuration is straight forward:
SENTRY_BUFFER = 'sentry.buffer.redis.RedisBuffer'
By default, this will use the default
named Redis cluster. To use a different cluster, provide the cluster
option, as such:
SENTRY_BUFFER_OPTIONS = {
'cluster': 'buffer',
}
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").