React Component Names
Learn how Sentry's React Native SDK allows you to monitor your components.
You can set up Sentry's React Native SDK to use React component names instead of element names. So instead of looking at generic names like this:
View > Touchable > View > Text
You can see exactly which React component was used, as in the example below:
MyCard (View, MyCard.ts) > MyButton (Touchable, MyCard.ts) > View > Text
Once you've enabled capturing, you'll be able to see the specific name of the component that was interacted with in breadcrumbs and spans. This removes the ambiguity of having to guess by looking at a generic name, which becomes more difficult the larger your application is.
We're working to release more features that will leverage component name capturing in the future and highly recommended that you configure your project to use it.
- Install React Native SDK
5.25.0-alpha.3or newer. - Ensure the React components you want to capture are in
.jsxor.tsxfile formats.
Add the @sentry/react-native/metro plugin to your Metro configuration and enable the reactComponentAnnotation option:
metro.config.jsconst { getDefaultConfig } = require("@react-native/metro-config");
const { withSentryConfig } = require("@sentry/react-native/metro");
const config = getDefaultConfig(__dirname);
module.exports = withSentryConfig(config, {
annotateReactComponents: true,
});
The Sentry React Native Metro plugin applies @sentry/babel-plugin-component-annotate, which parses your application's JSX source code at build time and adds additional data attributes to it. These attributes then appear on the nodes of your application's build, indicating the React component name and file that each node is sourced from.
Here's an example of a component named MyAwesomeComponent in the file myAwesomeComponent.jsx:
function MyAwesomeComponent() {
return <Text>This is a really cool and awesome component!</Text>;
}
Here's what the resulting node would look like if your bundler had applied the plugin and built your project:
<Text
data-sentry-component="MyAwesomeComponent"
data-sentry-source-file="myAwesomeComponent.jsx"
>
This is a really cool and awesome component!
</Text>
The Sentry browser SDK will pick off the value from these data attributes and collect them when your components are interacted with.
- Lear more about Sentry's React Native Metro bundler plugin.
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").