Experimental JavaScript Tracer!
This project is experimental and under active development. Use it at your own risk.
npm install --save dd-trace
Node >= 4 is required.
const tracer = require('dd-trace').init({
service: 'example'
})
const express = require('express')
const app = express()
app.get('/hello/:name', (req, res) => {
const options = {
resource: '/hello/:name',
type: 'web',
tags: {
'span.kind': 'server',
'http.method': 'GET',
'http.url': req.url,
'http.status_code': '200'
}
}
tracer.trace('say_hello', options, span => {
res.send(`Hello, ${req.params.name}!`)
span.finish()
})
})
app.listen(3000)
Options can be configured as a parameter to the init()
method
or as environment variables.
Config | Environment Variable | Default | Description |
---|---|---|---|
debug | DD_TRACE_DEBUG | false | Enable debug logging in the tracer. |
service | DD_SERVICE_NAME | The service name to be used for this program. | |
hostname | DD_TRACE_AGENT_HOSTNAME | localhost | The address of the trace agent that the tracer will submit to. |
port | DD_TRACE_AGENT_PORT | 8126 | The port of the trace agent that the tracer will submit to. |
flushInterval | 2000 | Interval in milliseconds at which the tracer will submit traces to the agent. | |
experimental | {} | Experimental features can be enabled all at once using boolean true or individually using key/value pairs. Available experimental features: asyncHooks . |
|
plugins | true | Whether or not to enable automatic instrumentation of external libraries using the built-in plugins. |
The following libraries are instrumented automatically by default:
- Express (version 4)
This library is OpenTracing compliant, so once the tracer is initialized it can be used as a global tracer.
const tracer = require('dd-trace').init()
const opentracing = require('opentracing')
opentracing.initGlobalTracer(tracer)
Then the tracer will be available with opentracing.globalTracer()
.
See the OpenTracing JavaScript documentation and API for more details.
Before contributing to this open source project, read our CONTRIBUTING.md.
Since this project supports multiple Node versions, using a version manager such as nvm is recommended.
To get started once you have a Node version installed, run:
$ npm install
Before running the tests, the data stores need to be running. The easiest way to start all of them is to use the provided docker-compose configuration:
$ docker-compose up -d
To run the unit tests, use:
$ npm test
To run the unit tests continuously in watch mode while developing, use:
$ npm run tdd
We use ESLint to make sure that new code is conform to our coding standards.
To run the linter, use:
$ npm run lint
We rely on CircleCI 2.0 for our tests. If you want to test how the CI behaves locally, you can use the CircleCI Command Line Interface as described here: https://circleci.com/docs/2.0/local-jobs/
After installing the circleci
CLI, simply run one of the following:
$ circleci build --job lint
$ circleci build --job build-node-4
$ circleci build --job build-node-6
$ circleci build --job build-node-8
$ circleci build --job build-node-latest
When two or more approaches must be compared, please write a benchmark
in the benchmark/index.js
module so that we can keep track of the
most efficient algorithm. To run your benchmark, just:
$ npm run bench