Sentry shipped on two fronts: expanding AI-powered capabilities across the platform, and systematizing observability data collection. Seer graduated from error analysis to automated fixes, now leveraging Claude to generate patches for identified bugs. Meanwhile, metrics support rolled out systematically across SDKs—Go, Ruby, Java, iOS, Flutter, .NET, and Unity all gained metrics APIs—while the metrics product itself matured into alerting and dashboard widgets. Developer workflow improvements landed too: code mappings now upload in bulk via CLI instead of one-by-one, and session replay filters became saveable queries. Size Analysis graduated from beta, uptime monitors gained custom alert configuration, and organization-level data forwarding consolidated settings for routing errors to Splunk, Segment, and SQS.
Dashboard and monitoring capabilities expanded across multiple fronts. Custom dashboards graduated from basic charts to rich content—markdown widgets landed alongside overhauled chart legends—while uptime monitors gained custom success criteria configuration and metrics alerting entered open beta.
February expanded observability across SDKs and debugging workflows. The Kotlin Multiplatform SDK shipped logs support, while .NET and Unity gained metrics, and Android native crash reporting improved with Tombstone support. Size Analysis graduated to general availability for mobile app monitoring, organization-level data forwarding consolidated configuration across Splunk, Segment, and Amazon SQS integrations, and the Trace Explorer added cross-event querying in beta to filter spans by their relationship to other trace events.