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Report Destinations
The following sections details the possible destinations for your crash reports: custom script, email, third-party backend, or any other destination you can imagine (if you implement the sender). And you can even send reports to multiple destinations.
- Sending reports to your own self-hosted script
- Adjusting the socket timeout
- Sending reports by email
- Implementing your own sender
Just use the formUri
parameter of the @ReportsCrashes
annotation in your Application
class :
@ReportsCrashes(formUri = "http://yourserver.com/yourscript",
formUriBasicAuthLogin = "yourlogin", // optional
formUriBasicAuthPassword = "y0uRpa$$w0rd", // optional
mode = ReportingInteractionMode.TOAST,
resToastText = R.string.crash_toast_text)
public class MyApplication extends Application {
...
The formUri can be over HTTPS (even with self signed certificates) and can require a BASIC HTTP authentication (pass
your login and password with formUriBasicAuthLogin
and formUriBasicAuthPassword
).
With the default configuration, your script will receive a POST request with report fields as POST parameters named like the
ReportField
enum
values.
Since ACRA v4.4.0, if you are sending reports over SSL using a self-signed certificate, you need to set the option
ReportsCrashes.disableSSLCertValidation
to true
.
Since ACRA v4.5.0, you can choose to send reports via an HTTP PUT request rather than an HTTP POST request.
Switching to PUT is done by setting the httpMethod
option to org.acra.sender.HttpSender.Method.PUT
.
When using a PUT request, ACRA adds automatically the Report ID at the end of the formUri
. For example, with the
following ACRA configuration:
@ReportsCrashes(formUri = "http://yourserver.com/yourscript",
formUriBasicAuthLogin = "yourlogin", // optional
formUriBasicAuthPassword = "y0uRpa$$w0rd", // optional
httpMethod = org.acra.sender.HttpSender.Method.PUT,
mode = ReportingInteractionMode.TOAST,
resToastText = R.string.crash_toast_text)
public class MyApplication extends Application {
...
a new report is sent to http://yourserver.com/yourscript/fe24835f-8117-4639-bfea-f57c77205771
.
fe24835f-8117-4639-bfea-f57c77205771
is a unique report identifier generated by ACRA (REPORT_ID field).
The defaults settings encode reports data key/value pairs as a form-urlencoded string.
Since ACRA v4.5.0, you have the option to send reports data encoded as a detailed JSON tree structure. You can see here 2 examples of the data generated with the default set of ReportFields.
Switching to JSON is done by setting the configuration option reportType
to org.acra.sender.HttpSender.Type.JSON
.
The default socket timeout for ACRA is 8 seconds and if your server does not respond quickly enough then ACRA will timeout the socket connection and you can experience this as empty reports on the server.
If you are experiencing timeouts when sending reports, you can adjust the socket timeout with the socketTimeout
option (time in milliseconds).
For some applications, sending reports to a Google Docs Form or other Http based solutions is not an option. The
problem is that they require the INTERNET
permission.
For pure offline applications, users might even be frightened to grant this permission and can be suspicious about the real goal of the app or the developer.
To get crash reports without granting INTERNET
permission, you can use the mailTo
setting from @ReportsCrashes
:
@ReportsCrashes(formUri = "http://yourserver.com/yourscript",
mailTo = "[email protected]",
mode = ReportingInteractionMode.TOAST,
resToastText = R.string.crash_toast_text)
public class MyApplication extends Application {
...
Including a full report could be quite difficult due to the data size. Default fields included in email reports are:
ReportField.USER_COMMENT
ReportField.ANDROID_VERSION
ReportField.APP_VERSION_NAME
ReportField.BRAND
ReportField.PHONE_MODEL
ReportField.CUSTOM_DATA
ReportField.STACK_TRACE
You can override the report fields list using the customReportContent
option in the @ReportsCrashes
annotation:
@ReportsCrashes(mailTo = "[email protected]",
customReportContent = { ReportField.APP_VERSION_CODE, ReportField.APP_VERSION_NAME, ReportField.ANDROID_VERSION, ReportField.PHONE_MODEL, ReportField.CUSTOM_DATA, ReportField.STACK_TRACE, ReportField.LOGCAT },
mode = ReportingInteractionMode.TOAST,
resToastText = R.string.crash_toast_text)
public class MyApplication extends Application {
...
Emails are sent with an ACTION_SEND
intent. This means that the following steps are required for the application user
before any report is sent:
- pick preferred email client (if no default app set)
- review & actually send the email
Since ACRA v4.0, you can implement your own report sender:
syntax for ACRA 4.0 to 4.7
public class YourOwnSender implements ReportSender {
public YourOwnSender(... your params ...){
// initialize your sender with needed parameters
}
@Override
public void send(CrashReportData report) throws ReportSenderException {
// Iterate over the CrashReportData instance and do whatever
// you need with each pair of ReportField key / String value
}
}
Syntax for ACRA 4.8+
public class YourOwnSender implements ReportSender {
**// NB requires a no arg constructor.**
@Override
public void send(Context context, CrashReportData report) throws ReportSenderException {
// Iterate over the CrashReportData instance and do whatever
// you need with each pair of ReportField key / String value
}
}
Several ReportSender
implementations are already available:
-
HttpSender
: (default whenformUri
is set) send reports to a server-side component located at a configurable URI viaformUri
. Reports can be sent via PUT or POST request and as FORM or JSON encoded data. -
EmailIntentSender
: keeps only a selected set of fields and puts them in an Intent to be send by another application.
Once your sender has been created, you have to declare it to ACRA.
ACRA 4.8+ instructions
You can either declare your ReportSender(s) via the reportSenderFactoryClasses
attriute of the ReporttCrashes
annotation. Eg
@ReportCrashes{
...
reportSenderFactoryClasses = {your.funky.ReportSender.class, other.funky.ReportSender.class}
}
public class YourApplication extends Application {
@Override
public void onCreate() {
ACRA.init(this);
YourOwnSender yourSender = new YourOwnSender(whatever, parameters, needed);
ACRA.getErrorReporter().setReportSender(yourSender);
super.onCreate();
}
}
Or your configure them programmatically BEFORE calling ACRA.init()
.
@ReportCrashes{
...
}
public class YourApplication extends Application {
@Override
public void onCreate() {
Class[] myReportSenderClasses = ...
ACRAConfiguration config = new ACRAConfigurationFactory().create(this);
config.setReportSenderFactoryClasses(myReportSenderClasses)
ACRA.init(this, config);
super.onCreate();
}
}
pre ACRA 4.8 instructions
Declare your ReportSenders in your Application
class, in the onCreate()
method, right after the ACRA.init()
call:
@Override
public void onCreate() {
ACRA.init(this);
YourOwnSender yourSender = new YourOwnSender(whatever, parameters, needed);
ACRA.getErrorReporter().setReportSender(yourSender);
super.onCreate();
}
NB pre ACRA 4.8 instructions: For advanced usage, there is a full set of available methods to manage the list of active ReportSenders:
-
setReportSender(ReportSender)
: sets a new sender as the single active sender -
addReportSender(ReportSender)
: adds a new sender to the list of active senders, without removing all previous active senders -
removeReportSender(ReportSender)
: removes a specific instance of a sender -
removeReportSenders(Class)
: removes all active instances of a specific ReportSender implementation -
removeAllReportSenders()
: clears the list of active ReportSenders