--- package: "@sentry/nextjs" version: "^10.51.0" tier: core decision: approved date: 2026-05-14 deciders: [Danijel Martinek] adr: adr-014 filter-results: license: MIT types: native maintenance: active boundary-fit: pass shadow-check: pass eu-residency: ok cve-scan: clean named-consumer: pass socketRisk: clean verification-commands: - npm view @sentry/nextjs license - npm view @sentry/nextjs version - pnpm audit --audit-level=moderate accepted-cves: [] --- ## Filter: license `npm view @sentry/nextjs license` returns `MIT`. MIT is on the allowlist. ## Filter: types `@sentry/nextjs` is authored in TypeScript and ships its own `.d.ts` declaration files. No separate `@types/` package is needed. ## Filter: maintenance Actively maintained by Sentry Inc. The 10.x line sees regular releases tracking Next.js releases. Used by thousands of production Next.js apps; issue tracker shows prompt engagement. ## Filter: boundary-fit ADR-014 designates Sentry as the error-capture and tracing backend. The ESLint `no-restricted-imports` rule (ADR-014 §6) allowlists `@sentry/*` only within `core-shared/instrumentation/sentry/**`, the apps' `instrumentation*.{ts,mjs}` / `next.config.{mjs}` entry points, and the `core-testing/setup/no-sentry.ts` mock. Feature packages MUST NOT import `@sentry/*` directly — they consume only the vendor-neutral `ITracer`/`ILogger` interfaces. ## Filter: shadow-check `@sentry/nextjs` is the sole Next.js error-monitoring SDK in the workspace. No competing APM or crash-reporter library (Datadog, New Relic, Rollbar, Bugsnag) is present or proposed. ## Filter: eu-residency Sentry offers EU-region data residency (hosted at `de.sentry.io`). The workspace's `WEB_NEXT_SENTRY_DSN` can point to an EU-hosted project; the SDK routes all payloads to the DSN host. PII scrubbing at the OTel processor layer (ADR-017, ADR-014 §4) ensures only scrubbed data leaves the process. ## Filter: cve-scan `pnpm audit --audit-level=moderate` reports no advisories against `@sentry/nextjs` at the time of this trace. ## Filter: named-consumer `packages/core-shared/src/instrumentation/sentry/` holds the Sentry adapter pair (`SentryTracer`, `SentryLogger`). `apps/web-next/instrumentation.ts` and `apps/web-next/next.config.mjs` are the concrete Next.js-side consumers. Both are named, non-hypothetical consumers. ## Prompt: replaces No prior error monitoring or distributed tracing library was in place. `@sentry/nextjs` replaces ad-hoc `console.error` logging that provided no stack context, no distributed trace correlation, and no session replay for diagnosing reproduction steps. ## Prompt: migration-cost-out Moderate. The interface boundary (ADR-014 §1) limits feature-package blast radius to zero — feature code never imports `@sentry/nextjs`. Removal would require swapping the `SentryTracer`/`SentryLogger` adapter pair in `core-shared/instrumentation/sentry/` for a new adapter, updating `apps/web-next/instrumentation.ts` and `next.config.mjs`, and dropping the `WEB_NEXT_SENTRY_DSN` env var. The scope is bounded and mechanical. ## Prompt: alternatives-considered 1. **Datadog APM** — Stronger distributed tracing primitives, but higher cost, heavier SDK footprint, and no built-in session replay. Evaluated and deferred. 2. **New Relic** — Enterprise-grade but requires a New Relic account and agent; no native Next.js SDK at the time of evaluation. 3. **Direct OpenTelemetry export** — Deferred to ADR-017 for the OTel migration layer; Sentry remains the exporter via `@sentry/opentelemetry` bridge. See ADR-014 for the full decision rationale.