Tree Shaking

Learn how to reduce Sentry bundle size by tree shaking unused code.

The Sentry SDK supports tree shaking in various ways. To fully utilize the tree shaking capabilities of modern bundlers like webpack or Rollup, some additional configurations must be applied. If you want to minimize the bundle size of the Sentry SDK, we recommend reading through this page and applying the tree shaking configurations as shown.

The Sentry SDK ships with code that is not strictly required for it to collect your errors. This includes code to debug your Sentry configuration or code to enable tracing, for example. While debug code can be very useful in development environments, it's not typically necessary to include it in your production bundles where it takes up valuable space. The JavaScript SDK includes special flags in its CommonJS and ESM distributions, which can be used to facilitate tree shaking (removal) of this kind of code during the build process.

Anything that you don't import and use will automatically be tree shaken away when using any modern bundler like Webpack, Rollup, Vite, or similar. This means that optional integrations like Replay, BrowserTracing, BrowserProfiling, and any unused utility methods won't be included in your bundle unless you import and use them yourself. The rest of this page relates to ways to tree shake internal SDK code, which isn't strictly required unless you use certain features.

This configuration is available starting with v2.9.0 of the bundler plugins.

If you're using one of our bundler plugins, you can use the bundleSizeOptimizations configuration option to tree shake optional code:

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// For example, the @sentry/webpack-plugin passed to the webpack config
sentryPlugin({
  // other config
  bundleSizeOptimizations: {
    excludeDebugStatements: true,
    excludePerformanceMonitoring: true,
    excludeReplayIframe: true,
    excludeReplayShadowDom: true,
    excludeReplayWorker: true,
  },
});

For more details, see the documentation for the specific bundler plugin you're using:

If you want to tree shake optional code, remove the code from your build output by replacing various flags in the Sentry SDK.

The following flags are available:

__SENTRY_DEBUG__

Replacing this flag with false will tree shake any SDK code that's related to debug logging.

__SENTRY_TRACING__

Replacing this flag with false will tree shake any SDK code that's related to tracing.

__SENTRY_TRACING__ must not be replaced with false when you're using any tracing-related SDK features (for example,Sentry.startTransaction()). This flag is intended to be used in combination with packages like @sentry/next or @sentry/sveltekit, which automatically include the tracing functionality.

To tree shake Sentry debug code in your webpack bundles, we recommend using webpack's DefinePlugin:

webpack.config.js
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const webpack = require("webpack");

module.exports = {
  // ... other options
  plugins: [
    new webpack.DefinePlugin({
      __SENTRY_DEBUG__: false,
      __SENTRY_TRACING__: false,
      __RRWEB_EXCLUDE_IFRAME__: true,
      __RRWEB_EXCLUDE_SHADOW_DOM__: true,
      __SENTRY_EXCLUDE_REPLAY_WORKER__: true,
    }),
    // ... other plugins
  ],
};

If you're using rollup.js, we recommend using Rollup's replace plugin:

rollup.config.js
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import replace from "@rollup/plugin-replace";
import { terser } from "rollup-plugin-terser";

export default {
  // ... other options
  treeshake: "smallest", // recommended for best tree shaking results
  plugins: [
    replace({
      __SENTRY_DEBUG__: false,
      __SENTRY_TRACING__: false,
      __RRWEB_EXCLUDE_IFRAME__: true,
      __RRWEB_EXCLUDE_SHADOW_DOM__: true,
      __SENTRY_EXCLUDE_REPLAY_WORKER__: true,
    }),
    // ... other plugins (best placed after)
  ],
};

By default, the Sentry SDK sets up a list of default integrations that extend your SDK functionality. You can also add additional or custom integrations to your SDK configuration. If you don't want to include default integrations in your config, you can disable them and add your custom array of integrations. However, if you also want to tree shake the unused default integrations, you can do so by creating a Client yourself. By doing this, you essentially bypass Sentry.init which normally creates a Client for you.

The following example shows how to create and bind a Client which enables tree shaking of unused default integrations:

main.js
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import {
  BrowserClient,
  breadcrumbsIntegration,
  dedupeIntegration,
  defaultStackParser,
  getCurrentScope,
  globalHandlersIntegration,
  makeFetchTransport,
  linkedErrorsIntegration,
} from "@sentry/browser";

const client = new BrowserClient({
  // all options you normally pass to Sentry.init
  dsn: "your DSN",
  // ...
  transport: makeFetchTransport,
  stackParser: defaultStackParser,
  // Only the integrations listed here will be used
  integrations: [
    breadcrumbsIntegration(),
    globalHandlersIntegration(),
    linkedErrorsIntegration(),
    dedupeIntegration(),
  ],
});

getCurrentScope().setClient(client);
client.init();

In contrast to Sentry.init, the Client constructor expects options of type ClientOptions instead of Options. This means that the ClientOptions.integrations property is the final array of all integrations that will be used.

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