# This file configures the New Relic Agent. New Relic monitors # Java applications with deep visibility and low overhead. For more details and additional # configuration options visit https://docs.newrelic.com/docs/agents/java-agent/configuration/java-agent-configuration-config-file. # # <%= generated_for_user %> # # This section is for settings common to all environments. # Do not add anything above this next line. common: &default_settings # ============================== LICENSE KEY =============================== # You must specify the license key associated with your New Relic # account. For example, if your license key is 12345 use this: # license_key: '12345' # The key binds your Agent's data to your account in the New Relic service. license_key: '<%= license_key %>' # Agent Enabled # Use this setting to disable the agent instead of removing it from the startup command. # Default is true. agent_enabled: true # Set the name of your application as you'd like it show up in New Relic. # If enable_auto_app_naming is false, the agent reports all data to this application. # Otherwise, the agent reports only background tasks (transactions for non-web applications) # to this application. To report data to more than one application # (useful for rollup reporting), separate the application names with ";". # For example, to report data to "My Application" and "My Application 2" use this: # app_name: My Application;My Application 2 # This setting is required. Up to 3 different application names can be specified. # The first application name must be unique. app_name: My Application # To enable high security, set this property to true. When in high # security mode, the agent will use SSL and obfuscated SQL. Additionally, # request parameters and message parameters will not be sent to New Relic. high_security: false # Set to true to enable support for auto app naming. # The name of each web app is detected automatically # and the agent reports data separately for each one. # This provides a finer-grained performance breakdown for # web apps in New Relic. # Default is false. enable_auto_app_naming: false # Set to true to enable component-based transaction naming. # Set to false to use the URI of a web request as the name of the transaction. # Default is true. enable_auto_transaction_naming: true # The agent uses its own log file to keep its logging # separate from that of your application. Specify the log level here. # This setting is dynamic, so changes do not require restarting your application. # The levels in increasing order of verboseness are: # off, severe, warning, info, fine, finer, finest # Default is info. log_level: info # Log all data sent to and from New Relic in plain text. # This setting is dynamic, so changes do not require restarting your application. # Default is false. audit_mode: false # The number of backup log files to save. # Default is 1. log_file_count: 1 # The maximum number of kbytes to write to any one log file. # The log_file_count must be set greater than 1. # Default is 0 (no limit). log_limit_in_kbytes: 0 # Override other log rolling configuration and roll the logs daily. # Default is false. log_daily: false # The name of the log file. # Default is newrelic_agent.log. log_file_name: newrelic_agent.log # The log file directory. # Default is the logs directory in the newrelic.jar parent directory. #log_file_path: # 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. The username and password # settings will be used to authenticate to Basic Auth challenges # from a proxy server. Proxy scheme will allow the agent to # connect through proxies using the HTTPS scheme. #proxy_host: hostname #proxy_port: 8080 #proxy_user: username #proxy_password: password #proxy_scheme: https # Limits the number of lines to capture for each stack trace. # Default is 30 max_stack_trace_lines: 30 # Provides the ability to configure the attributes sent to New Relic. These # attributes can be found in transaction traces, traced errors, Insight's # transaction events, and Insight's page views. attributes: # When true, attributes will be sent to New Relic. The default is true. enabled: true #A comma separated list of attribute keys whose values should # be sent to New Relic. #include: # A comma separated list of attribute keys whose values should # not be sent to New Relic. #exclude: # 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 not available to Lite accounts and is automatically disabled. # Default is true. 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 the "Frustrated" Apdex level # (greater than four times the apdex_t value). # Default is apdex_f. 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. # Default is obfuscated. record_sql: obfuscated # Set this to true to log SQL statements instead of recording them. # SQL is logged using the record_sql mode. # Default is false. log_sql: false # 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. # Default is 0.5 seconds. stack_trace_threshold: 0.5 # Determines whether the agent will capture query plans for slow # SQL queries. Only supported for MySQL and PostgreSQL. # Default is true. explain_enabled: true # Threshold for query execution time below which query plans will not # not be captured. Relevant only when `explain_enabled` is true. # Default is 0.5 seconds. explain_threshold: 0.5 # Use this setting to control the variety of transaction traces. # The higher the setting, the greater the variety. # Set this to 0 to always report the slowest transaction trace. # Default is 20. top_n: 20 # Error collector captures information about uncaught exceptions and # sends them to New Relic for viewing. error_collector: # This property enables the collection of errors. If the property is not # set or the property is set to false, then errors will not be collected. # Default is true. enabled: true # Use this property to exclude specific exceptions from being reported as errors # by providing a comma separated list of full class names. # The default is to exclude akka.actor.ActorKilledException. If you want to override # this, you must provide any new value as an empty list is ignored. ignore_errors: akka.actor.ActorKilledException # Use this property to exclude specific http status codes from being reported as errors # by providing a comma separated list of status codes. # The default is to exclude 404s. If you want to override # this, you must provide any new value as an empty list is ignored. ignore_status_codes: 404 # Transaction Events are used for Histograms and Percentiles. Unaggregated data is collected # for each web transaction and sent to the server on harvest. transaction_events: # Set to false to disable transaction events. # Default is true. enabled: true # Events are collected up to the configured amount. Afterwards, events are sampled to # maintain an even distribution across the harvest cycle. # Default is 2000. Setting to 0 will disable. max_samples_stored: 2000 # Distributed tracing lets you see the path that a request takes through your distributed system. # Enabling distributed tracing changes the behavior of some New Relic features, so carefully consult the transition # guide before you enable this feature: https://docs.newrelic.com/docs/apm/distributed-tracing/getting-started/transition-guide-distributed-tracing # Default is false. distributed_tracing: enabled: false # Cross Application Tracing adds request and response headers to # external calls using supported HTTP libraries to provide better # performance data when calling applications monitored by other New Relic Agents. cross_application_tracer: # Set to false to disable cross application tracing. # Default is true. enabled: true # Thread profiler measures wall clock time, CPU time, and method call counts # in your application's threads as they run. # This feature is not available to Lite accounts and is automatically disabled. thread_profiler: # Set to false to disable the thread profiler. # Default is true. enabled: true # 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 inserts API calls in compiled JSPs to # inject the monitoring JavaScript into web pages. Not all rendering engines are supported. # See https://docs.newrelic.com/docs/agents/java-agent/instrumentation/new-relic-browser-java-agent#manual_instrumentation # for instructions to add these manually to your pages. # Set this attribute to false to turn off this behavior. auto_instrument: true class_transformer: # This instrumentation reports the name of the user principal returned from # HttpServletRequest.getUserPrincipal() when servlets and filters are invoked. com.newrelic.instrumentation.servlet-user: enabled: false com.newrelic.instrumentation.spring-aop-2: enabled: false # This instrumentation reports metrics for resultset operations. com.newrelic.instrumentation.jdbc-resultset: enabled: false # Classes loaded by classloaders in this list will not be instrumented. # This is a useful optimization for runtimes which use classloaders to # load dynamic classes which the agent would not instrument. classloader_excludes: groovy.lang.GroovyClassLoader$InnerLoader, org.codehaus.groovy.runtime.callsite.CallSiteClassLoader, com.collaxa.cube.engine.deployment.BPELClassLoader, org.springframework.data.convert.ClassGeneratingEntityInstantiator$ObjectInstantiatorClassGenerator, org.mvel2.optimizers.impl.asm.ASMAccessorOptimizer$ContextClassLoader, gw.internal.gosu.compiler.SingleServingGosuClassLoader, # User-configurable custom labels for this agent. Labels are name-value pairs. # There is a maximum of 64 labels per agent. Names and values are limited to 255 characters. # Names and values may not contain colons (:) or semicolons (;). labels: # An example label #label_name: label_value # Application Environments # ------------------------------------------ # Environment specific settings are in this section. # You can use the environment to override the default settings. # For example, to change the app_name setting. # Use -Dnewrelic.environment= on the Java startup command line # to set the environment. # The default environment is production. # NOTE if your application has other named environments, you should # provide configuration settings for these environments here. development: <<: *default_settings app_name: My Application (Development) test: <<: *default_settings app_name: My Application (Test) production: <<: *default_settings staging: <<: *default_settings app_name: My Application (Staging)