trustieforge/config/newrelic.yml

225 lines
9.3 KiB
YAML

#
# This file configures the New Relic Agent. New Relic monitors Ruby, Java,
# .NET, PHP, Python and Node applications with deep visibility and low
# overhead. For more information, visit www.newrelic.com.
#
# Generated January 23, 2015
#
# This configuration file is custom generated for Trustie
# Here are the settings that are common to all environments
common: &default_settings
# ============================== LICENSE KEY ===============================
# You must specify the license key associated with your New Relic
# account. This key binds your Agent's data to your account in the
# New Relic service.
license_key: '9b481f5c9ec07de722dcaaa17b38d0d1efff32c0'
# Agent Enabled (Ruby/Rails Only)
# Use this setting to force the agent to run or not run.
# Default is 'auto' which means the agent will install and run only
# if a valid dispatcher such as Mongrel is running. This prevents
# it from running with Rake or the console. Set to false to
# completely turn the agent off regardless of the other settings.
# Valid values are true, false and auto.
#
# agent_enabled: auto
# Application Name Set this to be the name of your application as
# you'd like it show up in New Relic. The service will then auto-map
# instances of your application into an "application" on your
# dashboard page. If you want to map this instance into multiple
# apps, like "AJAX Requests" and "All UI" then specify a semicolon
# separated list of up to three distinct names, or a yaml list.
# Defaults to the capitalized RAILS_ENV or RACK_ENV (i.e.,
# Production, Staging, etc)
#
# Example:
#
# app_name:
# - Ajax Service
# - All Services
#
# Caution: If you change this name, a new application will appear in the New
# Relic user interface with the new name, and data will stop reporting to the
# app with the old name.
#
# See https://newrelic.com/docs/site/renaming-applications for more details
# on renaming your New Relic applications.
#
app_name: My Application
# When "true", the agent collects performance data about your
# application and reports this data to the New Relic service at
# newrelic.com. This global switch is normally overridden for each
# environment below. (formerly called 'enabled')
monitor_mode: true
# Developer mode should be off in every environment but
# development as it has very high overhead in memory.
developer_mode: false
# The newrelic agent generates its own log file to keep its logging
# information separate from that of your application. Specify its
# log level here.
log_level: info
# Optionally set the path to the log file This is expanded from the
# root directory (may be relative or absolute, e.g. 'log/' or
# '/var/log/') The agent will attempt to create this directory if it
# does not exist.
# log_file_path: 'log'
# Optionally set the name of the log file, defaults to 'newrelic_agent.log'
# log_file_name: 'newrelic_agent.log'
# The newrelic agent communicates with the service via https by default. This
# prevents eavesdropping on the performance metrics transmitted by the agent.
# The encryption required by SSL introduces a nominal amount of CPU overhead,
# which is performed asynchronously in a background thread. If you'd prefer
# to send your metrics over http uncomment the following line.
# ssl: false
#============================== Browser Monitoring ===============================
# New Relic Real User Monitoring gives you insight into the performance real users are
# experiencing with your website. This is accomplished by measuring the time it takes for
# your users' browsers to download and render your web pages by injecting a small amount
# of JavaScript code into the header and footer of each page.
browser_monitoring:
# By default the agent automatically injects the monitoring JavaScript
# into web pages. Set this attribute to false to turn off this behavior.
auto_instrument: true
# Proxy settings for connecting to the New Relic server.
#
# If a proxy is used, the host setting is required. Other settings
# are optional. Default port is 8080.
#
# proxy_host: hostname
# proxy_port: 8080
# proxy_user:
# proxy_pass:
# The agent can optionally log all data it sends to New Relic servers to a
# separate log file for human inspection and auditing purposes. To enable this
# feature, change 'enabled' below to true.
# See: https://newrelic.com/docs/ruby/audit-log
audit_log:
enabled: false
# Tells transaction tracer and error collector (when enabled)
# whether or not to capture HTTP params. When true, frameworks can
# exclude HTTP parameters from being captured.
# Rails: the RoR filter_parameter_logging excludes parameters
# Java: create a config setting called "ignored_params" and set it to
# a comma separated list of HTTP parameter names.
# ex: ignored_params: credit_card, ssn, password
capture_params: false
# Transaction tracer captures deep information about slow
# transactions and sends this to the New Relic service once a
# minute. Included in the transaction is the exact call sequence of
# the transactions including any SQL statements issued.
transaction_tracer:
# Transaction tracer is enabled by default. Set this to false to
# turn it off. This feature is only available at the Professional
# and above product levels.
enabled: true
# Threshold in seconds for when to collect a transaction
# trace. When the response time of a controller action exceeds
# this threshold, a transaction trace will be recorded and sent to
# New Relic. Valid values are any float value, or (default) "apdex_f",
# which will use the threshold for an dissatisfying Apdex
# controller action - four times the Apdex T value.
transaction_threshold: apdex_f
# When transaction tracer is on, SQL statements can optionally be
# recorded. The recorder has three modes, "off" which sends no
# SQL, "raw" which sends the SQL statement in its original form,
# and "obfuscated", which strips out numeric and string literals.
record_sql: obfuscated
# Threshold in seconds for when to collect stack trace for a SQL
# call. In other words, when SQL statements exceed this threshold,
# then capture and send to New Relic the current stack trace. This is
# helpful for pinpointing where long SQL calls originate from.
stack_trace_threshold: 0.500
# Determines whether the agent will capture query plans for slow
# SQL queries. Only supported in mysql and postgres. Should be
# set to false when using other adapters.
# explain_enabled: true
# Threshold for query execution time below which query plans will
# not be captured. Relevant only when `explain_enabled` is true.
# explain_threshold: 0.5
# Error collector captures information about uncaught exceptions and
# sends them to New Relic for viewing
error_collector:
# Error collector is enabled by default. Set this to false to turn
# it off. This feature is only available at the Professional and above
# product levels.
enabled: true
# To stop specific errors from reporting to New Relic, set this property
# to comma-separated values. Default is to ignore routing errors,
# which are how 404's get triggered.
ignore_errors: "ActionController::RoutingError,Sinatra::NotFound"
# If you're interested in capturing memcache keys as though they
# were SQL uncomment this flag. Note that this does increase
# overhead slightly on every memcached call, and can have security
# implications if your memcached keys are sensitive
# capture_memcache_keys: true
# Application Environments
# ------------------------------------------
# Environment-specific settings are in this section.
# For Rails applications, RAILS_ENV is used to determine the environment.
# For Java applications, pass -Dnewrelic.environment <environment> to set
# the environment.
# NOTE if your application has other named environments, you should
# provide newrelic configuration settings for these environments here.
development:
<<: *default_settings
# Turn on communication to New Relic service in development mode
monitor_mode: true
app_name: My Application (Development)
# Rails Only - when running in Developer Mode, the New Relic Agent will
# present performance information on the last 100 transactions you have
# executed since starting the mongrel.
# NOTE: There is substantial overhead when running in developer mode.
# Do not use for production or load testing.
developer_mode: true
test:
<<: *default_settings
# It almost never makes sense to turn on the agent when running
# unit, functional or integration tests or the like.
monitor_mode: false
# Turn on the agent in production for 24x7 monitoring. NewRelic
# testing shows an average performance impact of < 5 ms per
# transaction, you can leave this on all the time without
# incurring any user-visible performance degradation.
production:
<<: *default_settings
monitor_mode: true
# Many applications have a staging environment which behaves
# identically to production. Support for that environment is provided
# here. By default, the staging environment has the agent turned on.
staging:
<<: *default_settings
monitor_mode: true
app_name: My Application (Staging)