bugsnag 2.8.12 → 2.8.13

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@@ -1,6 +1,23 @@
1
1
  Changelog
2
2
  =========
3
3
 
4
+ 2.8.13
5
+ ------
6
+
7
+ ### Bug Fixes
8
+
9
+ * Fix crash during heroku Rake task when an environment variable was empty
10
+ | [#261](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/issues/261)
11
+
12
+ ### Enhancements
13
+
14
+ * Various warning fixes
15
+ | [Taylor Fausak](https://github.com/tfausak)
16
+ | [#254](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/pull/254)
17
+ * Make the list of vendor paths configurable
18
+ | [Jean Boussier](https://github.com/byroot)
19
+ | [#253](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/pull/253)
20
+
4
21
  2.8.12
5
22
  ------
6
23
 
data/README.md CHANGED
@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
1
- Bugsnag Notifier for Ruby
1
+ Bugsnag Notifier for Ruby <img src="https://travis-ci.org/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby.svg?branch=master" alt="build status" class="build-status">
2
2
  =========================
3
3
 
4
4
  The Bugsnag Notifier for Ruby gives you instant notification of exceptions
@@ -15,17 +15,31 @@ capturing exceptions from your applications.
15
15
  Contents
16
16
  --------
17
17
 
18
- - [How to Install](#how-to-install)
19
- - [Sending Custom Data With Exceptions](#sending-custom-data-with-exceptions)
20
- - [Sending Handled Exceptions](#sending-handled-exceptions)
21
- - [Configuration](#configuration)
22
- - [Bugsnag Middleware](#bugsnag-middleware)
23
- - [Deploy Tracking](#deploy-tracking)
24
- - [EventMachine Apps](#eventmachine-apps)
18
+ - [Getting Started](#getting-started)
19
+ - [Installation](#installation)
20
+ - [Rake Integration](#rake-integration)
21
+ - [Sending a Test Notification](#sending-a-test-notification)
22
+ - [Usage](#usage)
23
+ - [Catching and Reporting Exceptions](#catching-and-reporting-exceptions)
24
+ - [Sending Non-fatal Exceptions](#sending-non-fatal-exceptions)
25
+ - [Deploy Tracking](#deploy-tracking)
26
+ - [Callbacks](#callbacks)
25
27
  - [Demo Applications](#demo-applications)
28
+ - [Support](#support)
29
+ - [Contributing](#contributing)
30
+ - [License](#license)
26
31
 
27
- How to Install
28
- --------------
32
+ - [Additional Documentation](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/tree/master/docs)
33
+ - [Configuration](docs/Configuration.md)
34
+ - [Notification Options](docs/Notification Options.md)
35
+
36
+
37
+
38
+ Getting Started
39
+ ---------------
40
+
41
+
42
+ ### Installation
29
43
 
30
44
  1. Add the `bugsnag` gem to your `Gemfile`
31
45
 
@@ -58,247 +72,7 @@ How to Install
58
72
  The Bugsnag module will read the `BUGSNAG_API_KEY` environment variable if you
59
73
  do not configure one automatically.
60
74
 
61
- 4. **Rack/Sinatra apps only**: Activate the Bugsnag Rack middleware
62
-
63
- ```ruby
64
- use Bugsnag::Rack
65
- ```
66
-
67
- **Sinatra**: Note that `raise_errors` must be enabled. If you are using custom
68
- error handlers, then you will need to notify Bugsnag explicitly:
69
-
70
- ```ruby
71
- error 500 do
72
- Bugsnag.auto_notify($!)
73
- erb :"errors/500"
74
- end
75
- ```
76
-
77
- Sending Custom Data With Exceptions
78
- -----------------------------------
79
-
80
- It is often useful to send additional meta-data about your app, such as
81
- information about the currently logged in user, along with any
82
- exceptions, to help debug problems.
83
-
84
- ### Rails Apps
85
-
86
- By default Bugsnag includes some information automatically. For example, we
87
- send all the HTTP headers for requests. Additionally if you're using Warden or
88
- Devise, the id, name and email of the current user are sent.
89
-
90
- To send additional information, in any rails controller you can define a `before_bugsnag_notify` callback, which allows you to add this additional data by calling `add_tab` on the exception notification object. Please see the [Notification Object](#notification-object) for details on the notification parameter.
91
-
92
- ```ruby
93
- class MyController < ApplicationController
94
- # Define the filter
95
- before_bugsnag_notify :add_user_info_to_bugsnag
96
-
97
- # Your controller code here
98
-
99
- private
100
- def add_user_info_to_bugsnag(notif)
101
- # Set the user that this bug affected
102
- # Email, name and id are searchable on bugsnag.com
103
- notif.user = {
104
- email: current_user.email,
105
- name: current_user.name,
106
- id: current_user.id
107
- }
108
-
109
- # Add some app-specific data which will be displayed on a custom
110
- # "Diagnostics" tab on each error page on bugsnag.com
111
- notif.add_tab(:diagnostics, {
112
- product: current_product.name
113
- })
114
- end
115
- end
116
- ```
117
-
118
- ### Rails API Apps
119
-
120
- If you are building an API using the [rails-api](https://github.com/rails-api/rails-api) gem, your controllers will inherit from `ActionController::API` instead of `ActionController::Base`.
121
-
122
- In this case, the `before_bugsnag_notify` filter will not be automatically available in your controllers. In order to use it, you will need to include the module `Bugsnag::Rails::ControllerMethods`.
123
-
124
- ```ruby
125
- class ApplicationController < ActionController::API
126
-
127
- # Include module which defines the before_bugsnag_notify filter
128
- include Bugsnag::Rails::ControllerMethods
129
-
130
- # Other code here
131
- end
132
- ```
133
-
134
- ### Other Ruby Apps
135
-
136
- In other ruby apps, you can provide lambda functions to execute before any `Bugsnag.notify` calls as follows. Don't forget to clear the callbacks at the end of each request or session. In Rack applications like Sinatra, this is automatically done for you.
137
-
138
- ```ruby
139
- # Set a before notify callback
140
- Bugsnag.before_notify_callbacks << lambda {|notif|
141
- notif.add_tab(:user_info, {
142
- name: current_user.name
143
- })
144
- }
145
-
146
- # Your app code here
147
-
148
- # Clear the callbacks
149
- Bugsnag.before_notify_callbacks.clear
150
- ```
151
-
152
- ### Notification Object
153
-
154
- The notification object is passed to all [before bugsnag notify](#sending-custom-data-with-exceptions) callbacks and is used to manipulate the error report before it is transmitted.
155
-
156
- #### add_tab
157
-
158
- Call add_tab on a notification object to add a tab to the error report so that it would appear on your dashboard.
159
-
160
- ```ruby
161
- notif.add_tab(:user_info, {
162
- name: current_user.name
163
- })
164
- ```
165
-
166
- The first parameter is the tab name that will appear in the error report and the second is the key, value list that will be displayed in the tab.
167
-
168
- #### remove_tab
169
-
170
- Removes a tab completely from the error report
171
-
172
- ```ruby
173
- notif.remove_tab(:request)
174
- ```
175
-
176
- #### ignore!
177
-
178
- Calling ignore! on a notification object will cause the notification to not be sent to bugsnag. This means that you can choose dynamically not to send an error depending on application state or the error itself.
179
-
180
- ```ruby
181
- notif.ignore! if foo == 'bar'
182
- ```
183
-
184
- #### grouping_hash
185
-
186
- Sets the grouping hash of the error report. All errors with the same grouping hash are grouped together. This is an advanced usage of the library and mis-using it will cause your errors not to group properly in your dashboard.
187
-
188
- ```ruby
189
- notif.grouping_hash = "#{exception.message}#{exception.class}"
190
- ```
191
-
192
- #### severity
193
-
194
- Set the severity of the error. Severity can be `error`, `warning` or `info`.
195
-
196
- ```ruby
197
- notif.severity = "error"
198
- ```
199
-
200
- #### context
201
-
202
- Set the context of the error report. This is notionally the location of the error and should be populated automatically. Context is displayed in the dashboard prominently.
203
-
204
- ```ruby
205
- notif.context = "billing"
206
- ```
207
-
208
- #### user
209
-
210
- You can set or read the user with the user property of the notification. The user will be a hash of `email`, `id` and `name`.
211
-
212
- ```ruby
213
- notif.user = {
214
- id: current_user.id,
215
- email: current_user.email,
216
- name: current_user.name
217
- }
218
- ```
219
-
220
- #### exceptions
221
-
222
- Allows you to read the exceptions that will be combined into the report.
223
-
224
- ```ruby
225
- puts "#{notif.exceptions.first.message} found!"
226
- ```
227
-
228
- #### meta_data
229
-
230
- Provides access to the meta_data in the error report.
231
-
232
- ```ruby
233
- notif.ignore! if notif.meta_data[:sidekiq][:retry_count] > 2
234
- ```
235
-
236
- ### Exceptions with Meta Data
237
-
238
- If you include the `Bugsnag::MetaData` module into your own exceptions, you can
239
- associate meta data with a particular exception.
240
-
241
- ```ruby
242
- class MyCustomException < Exception
243
- include Bugsnag::MetaData
244
- end
245
-
246
- exception = MyCustomException.new("It broke!")
247
- exception.bugsnag_meta_data = {
248
- :user_info => {
249
- name: current_user.name
250
- }
251
- }
252
-
253
- raise exception
254
- ```
255
-
256
- You can read more about how callbacks work in the
257
- [Bugsnag Middleware](#bugsnag-middleware) documentation below.
258
-
259
-
260
- Sending Handled Exceptions
261
- ----------------------------
262
-
263
- If you would like to send non-fatal exceptions to Bugsnag, you can call
264
- `Bugsnag.notify`:
265
-
266
- ```ruby
267
- Bugsnag.notify(RuntimeError.new("Something broke"))
268
- ```
269
-
270
- ### Custom Data
271
-
272
- You can also send additional meta-data with your exception:
273
-
274
- ```ruby
275
- Bugsnag.notify(RuntimeError.new("Something broke"), {
276
- :user => {
277
- :username => "bob-hoskins",
278
- :registered_user => true
279
- }
280
- })
281
- ```
282
-
283
- ### Severity
284
-
285
- You can set the severity of an error in Bugsnag by including the severity option when
286
- notifying bugsnag of the error,
287
-
288
- ```ruby
289
- Bugsnag.notify(RuntimeError.new("Something broke"), {
290
- :severity => "error",
291
- })
292
- ```
293
-
294
- Valid severities are `error`, `warning` and `info`.
295
-
296
- Severity is displayed in the dashboard and can be used to filter the error list.
297
- By default all crashes (or unhandled exceptions) are set to `error` and all
298
- `Bugsnag.notify` calls default to `warning`.
299
-
300
- Rake Integration
301
- ----------------
75
+ ### Rake Integration
302
76
 
303
77
  Rake integration is automatically enabled in Rails 3/4 apps, so providing you load the environment
304
78
  in your Rake tasks you dont need to do anything to get Rake support. If you choose not to load
@@ -322,24 +96,9 @@ YourApp::Application.load_tasks
322
96
  > Note: We also configure Bugsnag in the Rakefile, so the tasks that do not load the full
323
97
  environment can still notify Bugsnag.
324
98
 
325
- Standard Ruby Scripts
326
- ---------------------
327
-
328
- If you are running a standard ruby script, you can ensure that all exceptions are sent to Bugsnag by
329
- adding the following code to your app:
330
-
331
- ```ruby
332
- at_exit do
333
- if $!
334
- Bugsnag.notify($!)
335
- end
336
- end
337
- ```
99
+ ### Sending a Test Notification
338
100
 
339
- Testing Integration
340
- -------------------
341
-
342
- To test that bugsnag is properly configured, you can use the test_exception rake task like this,
101
+ To test that bugsnag is properly configured, you can use the `test_exception` rake task:
343
102
 
344
103
  ```bash
345
104
  rake bugsnag:test_exception
@@ -347,244 +106,91 @@ rake bugsnag:test_exception
347
106
 
348
107
  A test exception will be sent to your bugsnag dashboard if everything is configured correctly.
349
108
 
350
- Configuration
351
- -------------
352
-
353
- To configure additional Bugsnag settings, use the block syntax and set any
354
- settings you need on the `config` block variable. For example:
355
-
356
- ```ruby
357
- Bugsnag.configure do |config|
358
- config.api_key = "your-api-key-here"
359
- config.notify_release_stages = ["production", "development"]
360
- end
361
- ```
362
-
363
- ###api_key
364
-
365
- Your Bugsnag API key (required).
366
-
367
- ```ruby
368
- config.api_key = "your-api-key-here"
369
- ```
370
-
371
- ###release_stage
372
-
373
- If you would like to distinguish between errors that happen in different
374
- stages of the application release process (development, production, etc)
375
- you can set the `release_stage` that is reported to Bugsnag.
376
-
377
- ```ruby
378
- config.release_stage = "development"
379
- ```
380
-
381
- In rails apps this value is automatically set from `RAILS_ENV`, and in rack
382
- apps it is automatically set to `RACK_ENV`. Otherwise the default is
383
- "production".
109
+ Usage
110
+ -----
384
111
 
385
- ###notify_release_stages
112
+ ### Catching and Reporting Exceptions
386
113
 
387
- By default, we will notify Bugsnag of exceptions that happen in any
388
- `release_stage`. If you would like to change which release stages
389
- notify Bugsnag of exceptions you can set `notify_release_stages`:
390
-
391
- ```ruby
392
- config.notify_release_stages = ["production", "development"]
393
- ```
394
-
395
- ###endpoint
396
-
397
- By default, we'll send crashes to *notify.bugsnag.com* to display them on
398
- your dashboard. If you are using *Bugsnag Enterprise* you'll need to set
399
- this to be your *Event Server* endpoint, for example:
400
-
401
- ```ruby
402
- config.endpoint = "bugsnag.example.com:49000"
403
- ```
404
-
405
- ###auto_notify
406
-
407
- By default, we will automatically notify Bugsnag of any fatal exceptions
408
- in your application. If you want to stop this from happening, you can set
409
- `auto_notify`:
410
-
411
- ```ruby
412
- config.auto_notify = false
413
- ```
414
-
415
- ###use_ssl
416
-
417
- Enforces all communication with bugsnag.com be made via ssl. You can turn
418
- this off if necessary.
419
-
420
- ```ruby
421
- config.use_ssl = false
422
- ```
423
-
424
- By default, `use_ssl` is set to true.
425
-
426
- <!-- Custom anchor for linking from alerts -->
427
- <div id="set-project-root"></div>
428
- ###project_root
429
-
430
- We mark stacktrace lines as `inProject` if they come from files inside your
431
- `project_root`. In rails apps this value is automatically set to `RAILS_ROOT`,
432
- otherwise you should set it manually:
433
-
434
- ```ruby
435
- config.project_root = "/var/www/myproject"
436
- ```
437
-
438
- ###app_version
439
-
440
- If you want to track which versions of your application each exception
441
- happens in, you can set `app_version`. This is set to `nil` by default.
442
-
443
- ```ruby
444
- config.app_version = "2.5.1"
445
- ```
446
-
447
- ###params_filters
448
-
449
- Sets which keys should be filtered out from `params` hashes before sending
450
- them to Bugsnag. Use this if you want to ensure you don't send sensitive data
451
- such as passwords, and credit card numbers to our servers. You can add both
452
- strings and regular expressions to this array. When adding strings, keys which
453
- *contain* the string will be filtered. When adding regular expressions, any
454
- keys which *match* the regular expression will be filtered.
455
-
456
- ```ruby
457
- config.params_filters += ["credit_card_number", /^password$/]
458
- ```
459
-
460
- By default, `params_filters` is set to `[/authorization/i, /cookie/i,
461
- /password/i, /secret/i]`, and for rails apps, imports all values from
462
- `Rails.configuration.filter_parameters`.
463
-
464
- ###ignore_classes
465
-
466
- Sets for which exception classes we should not send exceptions to bugsnag.com.
467
-
468
- ```ruby
469
- config.ignore_classes << "ActiveRecord::StatementInvalid"
470
- ```
471
-
472
- You can also provide a lambda function here to ignore by other exception
473
- attributes or by a regex:
474
-
475
- ```ruby
476
- config.ignore_classes << lambda {|ex| ex.message =~ /timeout/}
477
- ```
478
-
479
- By default, `ignore_classes` contains the following:
480
-
481
- ```ruby
482
- [
483
- "ActiveRecord::RecordNotFound",
484
- "ActionController::RoutingError",
485
- "ActionController::InvalidAuthenticityToken",
486
- "CGI::Session::CookieStore::TamperedWithCookie",
487
- "ActionController::UnknownAction",
488
- "AbstractController::ActionNotFound"
489
- ]
490
- ```
491
-
492
- ###ignore_user_agents
493
-
494
- Sets an array of Regexps that can be used to ignore exceptions from
495
- certain user agents.
496
-
497
- ```ruby
498
- config.ignore_user_agents << %r{Chrome}
499
- ```
500
-
501
- By default, `ignore_user_agents` is empty, so exceptions caused by all
502
- user agents are reported.
114
+ Bugsnag Ruby works out of the box with Rails, Sidekiq, Resque, DelayedJob (3+), Mailman, Rake and Rack. It
115
+ should be easy to add support for other frameworks, either by sending a pull request here or adding a hook
116
+ to those projects.
503
117
 
504
- ###proxy_host
118
+ #### Rack/Sinatra Apps
505
119
 
506
- Sets the address of the HTTP proxy that should be used for requests to bugsnag.
120
+ Activate the Bugsnag Rack middleware
507
121
 
508
122
  ```ruby
509
- config.proxy_host = "10.10.10.10"
123
+ use Bugsnag::Rack
510
124
  ```
511
125
 
512
- ###proxy_port
513
-
514
- Sets the port of the HTTP proxy that should be used for requests to bugsnag.
126
+ **Sinatra**: Note that `raise_errors` must be enabled. If you are
127
+ using custom error handlers, then you will need to notify Bugsnag
128
+ explicitly:
515
129
 
516
130
  ```ruby
517
- config.proxy_port = 1089
131
+ error 500 do
132
+ Bugsnag.auto_notify($!)
133
+ erb :"errors/500"
134
+ end
518
135
  ```
519
136
 
520
- ###proxy_user
137
+ #### Custom Ruby Scripts
521
138
 
522
- Sets the user that should be used to send requests to the HTTP proxy for requests to bugsnag.
139
+ **Custom Ruby Scripts**: If you are running a standard ruby script,
140
+ you can ensure that all exceptions are sent to Bugsnag by adding
141
+ the following code to your app:
523
142
 
524
143
  ```ruby
525
- config.proxy_user = "proxy_user"
144
+ at_exit do
145
+ if $!
146
+ Bugsnag.notify($!)
147
+ end
148
+ end
526
149
  ```
527
150
 
528
- ###proxy_password
529
-
530
- Sets the password for the user that should be used to send requests to the HTTP proxy for requests to bugsnag.
531
-
532
- ```ruby
533
- config.proxy_password = "proxy_secret_password_here"
534
- ```
151
+ #### EventMachine Apps
535
152
 
536
- ###timeout
537
- By default the timeout for posting errors to Bugsnag is 15 seconds, to change this
538
- you can set the `timeout`:
153
+ If your app uses [EventMachine](http://rubyeventmachine.com/) you'll need to
154
+ manually notify Bugsnag of errors. There are two ways to do this in your
155
+ EventMachine apps, first you should implement `EventMachine.error_handler`:
539
156
 
540
157
  ```ruby
541
- config.timeout = 10
158
+ EventMachine.error_handler{|e|
159
+ Bugsnag.notify(e)
160
+ }
542
161
  ```
543
162
 
544
- ###logger
545
-
546
- Sets which logger to use for Bugsnag log messages. In rails apps, this is
547
- automatically set to use `Rails.logger`, otherwise it will be set to
548
- `Logger.new(STDOUT)`.
549
-
550
- ###middleware
551
-
552
- Provides access to the middleware stack, see the
553
- [Bugsnag Middleware](#bugsnag-middleware) section below for details.
554
-
555
- ###app_type
556
-
557
- You can set the type of application executing the current code by using `app_type`:
163
+ If you want more fine-grained error handling, you can use the
164
+ [errback](http://eventmachine.rubyforge.org/EventMachine/Deferrable.html#errback-instance_method)
165
+ function, for example:
558
166
 
559
167
  ```ruby
560
- config.app_type = "resque"
168
+ EventMachine::run do
169
+ server = EventMachine::start_server('0.0.0.0', PORT, MyServer)
170
+ server.errback {
171
+ EM.defer do
172
+ Bugsnag.notify(RuntimeError.new("Something bad happened"))
173
+ end
174
+ }
175
+ end
561
176
  ```
562
177
 
563
- This is usually used to represent if you are running in a Rails server, Sidekiq job or
564
- Rake task for example. Bugsnag will automatically detect most application types for you.
178
+ For this to work, include [Deferrable](http://eventmachine.rubyforge.org/EventMachine/Deferrable.html)
179
+ in your `MyServer`, then whenever you want to raise an error, call `fail`.
565
180
 
566
- ###send_environment
181
+ ### Sending Non-fatal Exceptions
567
182
 
568
- Bugsnag can transmit your rack environment to help diagnose issues. This environment
569
- can sometimes contain private information so Bugsnag does not transmit by default. To
570
- send your rack environment, set the `send_environment` option to `true`.
183
+ If you would like to send non-fatal exceptions to Bugsnag, you can call
184
+ `Bugsnag.notify`:
571
185
 
572
186
  ```ruby
573
- config.send_environment = true
187
+ Bugsnag.notify(RuntimeError.new("Something broke"))
574
188
  ```
575
189
 
576
- ###send_code
577
-
578
- Bugsnag automatically sends a small snippet of the code that crashed to help you diagnose
579
- even faster from within your dashboard. If you don't want to send this snippet you can
580
- set the `send_code` option to `false`.
190
+ Additional data can be sent with exceptions as an options hash as detailed in the [Notification Options](docs/Notification Options.md) documentation, including some [options specific to non-fatal exceptions](docs/Notification Options.md#handled-notification-options).
581
191
 
582
- ```ruby
583
- config.send_code = false
584
- ```
585
192
 
586
- Bugsnag Middleware
587
- ------------------
193
+ ### Callbacks
588
194
 
589
195
  The Bugsnag Notifier for Ruby provides its own middleware system, similar to
590
196
  the one used in Rack applications. Middleware allows you to execute code
@@ -626,28 +232,6 @@ You can also view the order of the currently activated middleware by running `ra
626
232
  Check out Bugsnag's [built in middleware classes](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/tree/master/lib/bugsnag/middleware)
627
233
  for some real examples of middleware in action.
628
234
 
629
- ### Multiple projects
630
-
631
- If you want to divide errors into multiple Bugsnag projects, you can specify the API key as a parameter to `Bugsnag.notify`:
632
-
633
- ```ruby
634
- rescue => e
635
- Bugsnag.notify e, api_key: "your-api-key-here"
636
- end
637
- ```
638
-
639
- ### Grouping hash
640
-
641
- If you want to override Bugsnag's grouping algorithm, you can specify a grouping hash key as a parameter to `Bugsnag.notify`:
642
-
643
- ```ruby
644
- rescue => e
645
- Bugsnag.notify e, grouping_hash: "this-is-my-grouping-hash"
646
- end
647
- ```
648
-
649
- All errors with the same groupingHash will be grouped together within the bugsnag dashboard.
650
-
651
235
 
652
236
  Deploy Tracking
653
237
  ---------------
@@ -731,45 +315,6 @@ For more information, check out the [deploy tracking api](https://bugsnag.com/do
731
315
  documentation.
732
316
 
733
317
 
734
- EventMachine Apps
735
- -----------------
736
-
737
- If your app uses [EventMachine](http://rubyeventmachine.com/) you'll need to
738
- manually notify Bugsnag of errors. There are two ways to do this in your
739
- EventMachine apps, first you should implement `EventMachine.error_handler`:
740
-
741
- ```ruby
742
- EventMachine.error_handler{|e|
743
- Bugsnag.notify(e)
744
- }
745
- ```
746
-
747
- If you want more fine-grained error handling, you can use the
748
- [errback](http://eventmachine.rubyforge.org/EventMachine/Deferrable.html#errback-instance_method)
749
- function, for example:
750
-
751
- ```ruby
752
- EventMachine::run do
753
- server = EventMachine::start_server('0.0.0.0', PORT, MyServer)
754
- server.errback {
755
- EM.defer do
756
- Bugsnag.notify(RuntimeError.new("Something bad happened"))
757
- end
758
- }
759
- end
760
- ```
761
-
762
- For this to work, include [Deferrable](http://eventmachine.rubyforge.org/EventMachine/Deferrable.html)
763
- in your `MyServer`, then whenever you want to raise an error, call `fail`.
764
-
765
- Integrations
766
- ------------
767
-
768
- Bugsnag ruby works out of the box with Rails, Sidekiq, Resque, DelayedJob (3+), Mailman, Rake and Rack. It
769
- should be easy to add support for other frameworks, either by sending a pull request here or adding a hook
770
- to those projects.
771
-
772
-
773
318
  Demo Applications
774
319
  -----------------
775
320
 
@@ -777,28 +322,22 @@ Demo Applications
777
322
  examples include Rails, Sinatra, Rack, Padrino integrations, etc.
778
323
 
779
324
 
780
- Reporting Bugs or Feature Requests
781
- ----------------------------------
782
-
783
- Please report any bugs or feature requests on the github issues page for this
784
- project here:
325
+ Support
326
+ -------
785
327
 
786
- <https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/issues>
328
+ * [Additional Documentation](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/tree/master/docs)
329
+ * [Search open and closed issues](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/issues?utf8=✓&q=is%3Aissue) for similar problems
330
+ * [Report a bug or request a feature](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/issues/new)
787
331
 
788
332
 
789
333
  Contributing
790
334
  ------------
791
335
 
792
- We'd love you to file issues and send pull requests. If you need help getting started, see [CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/blob/master/CONTRIBUTING.md)
793
-
794
-
795
- Build Status
796
- ------------
797
- [![Build Status](https://secure.travis-ci.org/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby.png)](http://travis-ci.org/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby)
336
+ We'd love you to file issues and send pull requests. The [contributing guidelines](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/CONTRIBUTING.md) details the process of building and testing `bugsnag-ruby`, as well as the pull request process. Feel free to comment on [existing issues](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/issues) for clarification or starting points.
798
337
 
799
338
 
800
339
  License
801
340
  -------
802
341
 
803
342
  The Bugsnag ruby notifier is free software released under the MIT License.
804
- See [LICENSE.txt](https://github.com/bugsnag/bugsnag-ruby/blob/master/LICENSE.txt) for details.
343
+ See [LICENSE.txt](LICENSE.txt) for details.