Official bootstrap for running your own Sentry with Docker.
- Docker 19.03.6+
- Compose 1.28.0+
- 4 CPU Cores
- 8 GB RAM
- 20 GB Free Disk Space
Environment specific configurations can be done in the .env.custom
file. It will be located in the root directory of the Sentry installation.
By default, there exists no .env.custom
file. In this case, you can manually add this file by copying the .env
file to a new .env.custom
file and adjust your settings in the .env.custom
file.
Please keep in mind to check the .env
file for changes, when you perform an upgrade of Sentry, so that you can adjust your .env.custom
accordingly, if required.
To get started with all the defaults, simply clone the repo and run ./install.sh
in your local check-out. Sentry uses Python 3 by default since December 4th, 2020 and Sentry 21.1.0 is the last version to support Python 2.
During the install, a prompt will ask if you want to create a user account. If you require that the install not be blocked by the prompt, run ./install.sh --skip-user-prompt
.
Please visit our documentation for everything else.
Sentry comes with a cleanup cron job that prunes events older than 90 days
by default. If you want to change that, you can change the SENTRY_EVENT_RETENTION_DAYS
environment variable in .env
or simply override it in your environment. If you do not want the cleanup cron, you can remove the sentry-cleanup
service from the docker-compose.yml
file.
If you want to install a specific release of Sentry, use the tags/releases on this repo.
We continously push the Docker image for each commit made into Sentry, and other services such as Snuba or Symbolicator to our Docker Hub and tag the latest version on master as :nightly
. This is also usually what we have on sentry.io and what the install script uses. You can use a custom Sentry image, such as a modified version that you have built on your own, or simply a specific commit hash by setting the SENTRY_IMAGE
environment variable to that image name before running ./install.sh
:
SENTRY_IMAGE=getsentry/sentry:83b1380 ./install.sh
Note that this may not work for all commit SHAs as this repository evolves with Sentry and its satellite projects. It is highly recommended to check out a version of this repository that is close to the timestamp of the Sentry commit you are installing.
If you are using Linux and you need to use sudo
when running ./install.sh
, make sure to place the environment variable after sudo
:
sudo SENTRY_IMAGE=us.gcr.io/sentryio/sentry:83b1380 ./install.sh
Where you replace 83b1380
with the sha you want to use.