Screenshots
Learn more about taking screenshots when an error occurs. Sentry pairs the screenshot with the original event, giving you additional insight into issues.
Sentry makes it possible to automatically take a screenshot and include it as an attachment when a user experiences an error, an exception or a crash.
This feature is only available for SDKs with a user interface, like the ones for mobile and desktop applications. It's also limited by whether taking a screenshot is possible or not. For example, in some environments, like native iOS, taking a screenshot requires the UI thread, which often isn't available in the event of a crash. Another example where a screenshot might not be available is when the event happens before the screen starts to load. So inherently, this feature is a best effort solution.
Because screenshots may contain PII, they are an opt-in feature.
Enable screenshots by setting the attachScreenshot
option to true
and wrap your root widget with SentryWidget
.
await SentryFlutter.init(
(options) {
options.attachScreenshot = true;
},
appRunner: () => runApp(
SentryWidget(
child: MyApp(),
),
),
);
By default, Flutter limits screenshot captures to once every 2 seconds to minimize performance impact. While this debounce interval cannot be changed, you can customize capture behavior by implementing the beforeCaptureScreenshot
callback in SentryFlutter.init
.
This callback gives you fine-grained control over screenshot captures based on event and hint data, allowing you to implement conditional logic.
Return true
to capture the screenshot, or false
to skip it.
The shouldDebounce
flag is set to true
when debounce is active, meaning it will block the screenshot from being taken. If you want to capture screenshots regardless of the debounce, you can ignore the shouldDebounce
flag.
options.beforeCaptureScreenshot = (event, hint, shouldDebounce) async {
// If shouldDebounce is active, skip capturing
if (shouldDebounce) {
return false;
}
// Capture screenshot if it's a fatal event
return event.level == SentryLevel.fatal;
};
The masking feature is enabled by default for screenshots, but can be disabled or configured by adjusting the options.privacy
option.
Modifying this parameter will also affect masking
for Session Replay
.
Masking in the Sentry Flutter SDK is based on Widget types, e.g. Image
, not the string representation of the type (i.e. we check whether a widgetInstance
should be masked by checking if (widgetInstance is Image)
instead of if (widgetInstance.runtimeType == 'Image')
). This means we can ensure masking works regardless of obfuscation in release builds and also works for subclasses. This approach allows the SDK to automatically mask widgets that are part of the Flutter SDK itself. However, for third-party widgets, you need to manually configure the privacy settings to mask their content. Read more about Third Party Widgets below.
The following options can be configured in the options.privacy
field of your Sentry Flutter SDK, in SentryFlutter.init((options) { ... })
:
Key | Type | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
maskAllText | bool | true | Mask all text content. Draws a rectangle of text bounds with text color on top. Currently Text , EditableText and RichText widgets are masked. |
maskAllImages | bool | true | Mask content of all images. Draws a rectangle of image bounds with image's dominant color on top. Currently Image widgets are masked. |
maskAssetImages | bool | true | Mask asset images coming from the root asset bundle. |
mask<T extends Widget>() | void | / | Mask given widget type T (or subclasses of T ). Note: masking rules are called in the order they're added so if a previous rule already makes a decision, this rule won't be called. |
unmask<T extends Widget>() | void | / | Unmask given widget type T (or subclasses of T ). Note: masking rules are called in the order they're added so if a previous rule already makes a decision, this rule won't be called. |
maskCallback<T extends Widget>() | void | / | Provide a custom callback to decide whether to mask the widget of class T (or subclasses of T ). Note: masking rules are called in the order they're added so if a previous rule already makes a decision, this rule won't be called. |
For example, you can explicitly mask or unmask widgets by type, or you can even have a callback to decide whether a specific widget instance should be masked:
options.privacy.mask<IconButton>();
options.privacy.unmask<Image>();
options.privacy.maskCallback<Text>(
(Element element, Text widget) =>
(widget.data?.contains('secret') ?? false)
? SentryMaskingDecision.mask
: SentryMaskingDecision.continueProcessing);
If you find that data isn't being masked with the default settings, please let us know by creating a GitHub issue.
To disable masking for Screenshots
and Session Replay
(not to be used on applications with sensitive data):
options.privacy.maskAllText = false;
options.privacy.maskAllImages = false;
The Sentry Flutter SDK cannot automatically mask widgets from third party packages. You need to manually configure the privacy configuration to mask the content of these widgets.
For example, if you are using the FlutterMap package, you need to add the following privacy configuration:
options.privacy.mask<FlutterMap>();
If one is available, you'll see a thumbnail of the screenshot when you click on a specific issue from the Issues page.
Once you've clicked on the event ID of a specific issue, you'll be able to see an overview of all the attachments as well as associated events in the "Attachments" tab.
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").