#fpErrorNotifierPlugin
The plugin for those people how want to feel confident in your code. If something goes wrong you are the first to be notified about it. The email not only contains an error message but a bunch of useful information.
It takes control over the system and catches every error: exceptions, fatal errors, notices, memory limit error, php parse errors and so on. It easy to customize because the plugin was made as a set of components: message, driver, handler, decorator.
- Symfony 1.1 - 1.4
php symfony plugin:install fpErrorNotifierPlugin
git clone git://github.com/makasim/fpErrorNotifierPlugin.git
git clone git://github.com/makasim/fpErrorNotifierPlugin.git
cd fpErrorNotifierPlugin
git tag
# check out the latest tag - 1.0.0 for this example
git checkout 1.0.0
class ProjectConfiguration extends sfProjectConfiguration
{
public function setup()
{
$this->enablePlugins('fpErrorNotifierPlugin');
}
}
The general way of useing the plugin is to send emails about each error has happend on the server (including exceptions, notice, fatal and so on). Let's look at this example to khow how to do it with this plugin.
First we need to install the plugin. It was described earlier and it is a common symfony plugin installation Second we have to create notify.yml in any of the project config dir (I will store it in SF_ROOT_DIR/config/notify.yml) with a next content:
notify.yml
all:
driver:
class: fpErrorNotifierDriverMailNative
options:
to: '[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]'
from: '[email protected]'
That's it. Now we have all errors and exceptions caught and sent to the development team members.
After you setup the plugin it starts to work. By default it logs the last error into a file in the log dir. To change this behavior you need to create notify.yml in project or app config folder.
So let's say I copy notify.yml from plugin's config directory to SF_ROOT_DIR/config/notify.yml
notify.yml
prod:
all:
handler:
class: fpErrorNotifierHandler
options: {}
message:
class: fpErrorNotifierMessage
options: {}
helper:
class: fpErrorNotifierMessageHelper
options: {}
decorator:
class: fpErrorNotifierDecoratorHtml
options: {}
driver:
class: fpErrorNotifierDriverNull
options: {}
As you can see we have some stuff like handler, message, helper, decorator and driver:
- Handler - it is a most valuable things. Because it cauth any errors and handle it
- Message - is just a data container.
- Helper - helps to fill the message with an information (like fill message from Exception instance).
- Decorator - it wrapps the message and know hot the message can be rendered.
- Driver - it is a object which knows where to send or store the message.
There are two handlers which comes with the plugin:
- fpErrorNotifierHandler - base implementation
- fpErrorNotifierHandlerIgnore - extended version with some ignoring abilities.
fpErrorNotifierHandler does not take any options and can be configerd like this:
notify.yml
all:
handler:
class: fpErrorNotifierHandler
options: {}
fpErrorNotifierHandlerIgnore:
notify.yml
all:
handler:
class: fpErrorNotifierHandlerIgnore
options:
ignore_@: false
ignore_errors: [<?php echo E_ERROR ?>, <?php echo E_NOTICE ?>]
ignore_exceptions: [FooException]
log_ignored: true
ignore_duplication: true
ignore_duplication_time: 10 # seconds
You can avoid sending duplicated errors for some period of time. Ignore some php errors or exception. Also it is possible to get notifications that happend under the '@' command.
There are four drivers comes with the plugin:
- fpErrorNotifierDriverMailNative - use php's mail function to send an email.
notify.yml
all:
driver:
class: fpErrorNotifierDriverMailNative
options:
to: '[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]'
from: '[email protected]'
- fpErrorNotifierDriverMailSymfony - use a mailer (It should be Swift) configured via factories.yml. It is taken from sfContext.
notify.yml
all:
driver:
class: fpErrorNotifierDriverMailSymfony
options:
to: '[email protected],[email protected],[email protected]'
from: '[email protected]'
It is an example of SWIFT mailer configuration with gmail.com account
factories.yml
mailer:
class: sfMailer
param:
logging: %SF_LOGGING_ENABLED%
charset: %SF_CHARSET%
delivery_strategy: realtime
transport:
class: Swift_SmtpTransport
param:
host: smtp.gmail.com
port: 587
encryption: tls
username: [email protected]
password: 'password'
- fpErrorNotifierDriverFile - store the last error to the file (It can be helpfull for testing services in development process).
notify.yml
driver:
class: sfErrorNotifierDriverFile
options:
path: '%SF_LOG_DIR%/last-error.html'
- fpErrorNotifierDriverNull - just does do nothing
You can render the message as simple text or html (set by default).
- fpErrorNotifierDecoratorHtml
notify.yml
all:
decorator:
class: fpErrorNotifierDecoratorHtml
options: {}
- fpErrorNotifierDecoratorText
notify.yml
all:
decorator:
class: fpErrorNotifierDecoratorText
options: {}
<?php
$message = fpErrorNotifier::getInstance()->decoratedMessage('A Custom message title');
$message->addSection('Detailed info', array('Detail 1' => 'Foo', 'Detail 2' => 'Bar'));
fpErrorNotifier::getInstance()->driver()->notify($message);
But this code creates a hard coded relation between your code and the plugin isn't it? It can be done this way but it is not a good idea. So how can we do it better? Below we are sending absolutly the same message using sfEventDispatcher:
<?php
$dispatcher = sfContext::getInstance()->getEventDispatcher();
$event = new sfEvent('A Custom message title', 'notify.send_message', array('Detail 1' => 'Foo', 'Detail 2' => 'Bar'));
$dispatcher->notify($event);
<?php
function addMoreErrorInfo(sfEvent $event)
{
$message = $event->getSubject();
$message->addSection('Detailed info', array('Detail 1' => 'Foo', 'Detail 2' => 'Bar'));
}
// notify.decorate_message for adding additional info to custom simple messages
fpErrorNotifier::getInstance()->dispather()->connect('notify.decorate_exception', 'addMoreErrorInfo');
// then when an error happend this event would be raised and additional info added.
<?php
$driver = new sfErrorNotifierDriverMailNative(array(
'to' => '[email protected]',
'from,' => '[email protected]'));
It's used sfPhpunitPlugin as a testing framework.
So to run test you need this plugin first. Then you can run this command to execute the plugin tests.
./symfony phpunit --only-plugin=fpErrorNotifierPlugin
I am very welcome for any comments suggestions, bug fixes, implementations and so on. You can create a ticket at my github repository or make a fork and do your changes.
- fpErrorNotifierHandlerIgnore have to more flexible