Adds support for Cloud Profiler to Node.js applications
A comprehensive list of changes in each version may be found in
the CHANGELOG.
Read more about the client libraries for Cloud APIs, including the older
Google APIs Client Libraries, in Client Libraries Explained.
Table of contents:
Quickstart
Before you begin
- Select or create a Cloud Platform project.
- Enable the Cloud Profiler API.
- Set up authentication with a service account so you can access the
API from your local workstation.
Installing the client library
npm install @google-cloud/profiler
Prerequisites
-
Your application will need to be using Node.js 10.4.1 or greater or Node.js
-
The profiler will not be enabled when using earlier versions of 10 because
versions of Node.js 10 prior to 10.4.1 are impacted by
this issue,
which can cause garbage collection to take several minutes when heap profiling
is enabled.
-
@google-cloud/profiler
depends on the
pprof
module, a module with a native
component that is used to collect profiles with v8's CPU and Heap profilers.
You may need to install additional dependencies to build the pprof
module.
- For Linux:
pprof
has prebuilt binaries available for Linux and Alpine
Linux for Node 10 and 12. No additional dependencies are required. - For other environments: when using
@google-cloud/profiler
on environments
that pprof
does not have prebuilt binaries for, the module
node-gyp
will be used to
build binaries. See node-gyp
's
documentation
for information on dependencies required to build binaries with node-gyp
.
-
You will need a project in the [Google Developers Console][cloud-console].
Your application can run anywhere, but the profiler data is associated with a
particular project.
-
You will need to enable the Cloud Profiler API for your project.
Basic Set-up
-
Install @google-cloud/profiler
with npm
or add
to your package.json
.
npm install --save @google-cloud/profiler
-
Include and start the profiler at the beginning of your application:
require('@google-cloud/profiler').start().catch((err) => {
console.log(`Failed to start profiler: ${err}`);
});
Some environments require a configuration to be passed to the start()
function. For more details on this, see instructions for running
outside of Google Cloud Platform, on
App Engine flexible environment,
on Google Compute Engine,
and on Google Container Engine.
-
If you are running your application locally, or on a machine where you are
using the [Google Cloud SDK][gcloud-sdk], make sure to log in with the
application default credentials:
gcloud beta auth application-default login
Alternatively, you can set GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
. For more
details on this, see Running elsewhere
Configuration
See the default configuration for a list of possible
configuration options. These options can be passed to the agent through the
object argument to the start command shown below:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({disableTime: true});
Alternatively, you can provide the configuration through a config file. This
can be useful if you want to load our module using --require
on the command
line (which requires and starts the agent) instead of editing your main script.
The GCLOUD_PROFILER_CONFIG
environment variable should point to your
configuration file.
export GCLOUD_PROFILER_CONFIG=./path/to/your/profiler/configuration.js
Changing log level
The profiler writes log statements to the console log for diagnostic purposes.
By default, the log level is set to warn. You can adjust this by setting
logLevel
in the config. Setting logLevel
to 0 will disable logging,
1 sets log level to error, 2 sets it to warn (default), 3 sets it to info,
and 4 sets it to debug.
So, for example, to start the profiler with the log level at debug, you would
do this:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({logLevel: 4});
Disabling heap or time profile collection
By default, the profiler collects both heap profiles, which show memory
allocations, and time profiles, which capture how much wall-clock time is spent
in different locations of the code. Using the configuration, it is possible to
disable the collection of either type of profile.
To disable time profile collection, set disableTime
to true:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({disableTime: true});
To disable heap profile collection, set disableHeap
to true:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({disableHeap: true});
Running on Google Cloud Platform
There are three different services that can host Node.js applications within
Google Cloud Platform: Google App Engine flexible environment, Google Compute
Engine, and Google Container Engine. After installing @google-cloud/profiler
in your project and ensuring that the environment you are using uses a
supported version of Node.js, follow the service-specific instructions to
enable the profiler.
Running on App Engine flexible environment
To enable the profiling agent for a Node.js program running in the App Engine
flexible environment, import the agent at the top of your application’s main
script or entry point by including the following code snippet:
require('@google-cloud/profiler').start();
You can specify which version of Node.js you're using by adding a snippet like
the following to your package.json
:
"engines": {
"node": ">=10.4.1"
}
The above snippet will ensure that you're using 10.4.1 or greater.
Deploy your application to App Engine Flexible environment as usual.
Running on Google Compute Engine
To enable the profiling agent for a Node.js program running in the Google
Compute Engine environment, import the agent at the top of your application’s
main script or entry point by including the following code snippet:
require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({
serviceContext: {
service: 'your-service',
version: '1.0.0'
}
});
Running on Google Container Engine
To enable the profiling agent for a Node.js program running in the Google
Container Engine environment, import the agent at the top of your application’s
main script or entry point by including the following code snippet:
require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({
serviceContext: {
service: 'your-service',
version: '1.0.0'
}
});
Running on Istio
On Istio, the GCP Metadata server may not be available for a few seconds after
your application has started. When this occurs, the profiling agent may fail
to start because it cannot initialize required fields. One can retry when
starting the profiler with the following snippet.
const profiler = require('@google-cloud/profiler');
async function startProfiler() {
for (let i = 0; i < 3; i++) {
try {
await profiler.start({
serviceContext: {
service: 'your-service',
version: '1.0.0',
},
});
} catch(e) {
console.log(`Failed to start profiler: ${e}`);
}
await new Promise(r => setTimeout(r, 1000));
}
}
startProfiler();
Running elsewhere
You can still use @google-cloud/profiler
if your application is running
outside of Google Cloud Platform, for example, running locally, on-premise, or
on another cloud provider.
- You will need to specify your project id and the service you want the
collected profiles to be associated with, and (optionally) the version of
the service when starting the profiler:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({
projectId: 'project-id',
serviceContext: {
service: 'your-service',
version: '1.0.0'
}
});
- You will need to provide credential for your application.
-
If you are running your application on a development machine or test
environment where you are using the [gcloud
command line tools][gcloud-sdk],
and are logged using gcloud beta auth application-default login
, you
already have sufficient credentials, and a service account key is not
required.
-
You can provide credentials via
[Application Default Credentials][app-default-credentials]. This is the
recommended method.
1. [Create a new JSON service account key][service-account].
2. Copy the key somewhere your application can access it. Be sure not
to expose the key publicly.
3. Set the environment variable GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
to
the full path to the key. The profiler will automatically look for
this environment variable.
-
You may set the keyFilename
or credentials
configuration field to the
full path or contents to the key file, respectively. Setting either of these
fields will override either setting GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS
or
logging in using gcloud
.
This is how you would set keyFilename
:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({
projectId: 'project-id',
serviceContext: {
service: 'your-service',
version: '1.0.0'
},
keyFilename: '/path/to/keyfile'
});
This is how you would set credentials
:
await require('@google-cloud/profiler').start({
projectId: 'project-id',
serviceContext: {
service: 'your-service',
version: '1.0.0'
},
credentials: {
client_email: 'email',
private_key: 'private_key'
}
});
Samples
Samples are in the samples/
directory. The samples' README.md
has instructions for running the samples.
The Cloud Profiler Node.js Client API Reference documentation
also contains samples.
Supported Node.js Versions
Our client libraries follow the Node.js release schedule.
Libraries are compatible with all current active and maintenance versions of
Node.js.
Client libraries targetting some end-of-life versions of Node.js are available, and
can be installed via npm dist-tags.
The dist-tags follow the naming convention legacy-(version)
.
Legacy Node.js versions are supported as a best effort:
- Legacy versions will not be tested in continuous integration.
- Some security patches may not be able to be backported.
- Dependencies will not be kept up-to-date, and features will not be backported.
Legacy tags available
legacy-8
: install client libraries from this dist-tag for versions
compatible with Node.js 8.
Versioning
This library follows Semantic Versioning.
This library is considered to be General Availability (GA). This means it
is stable; the code surface will not change in backwards-incompatible ways
unless absolutely necessary (e.g. because of critical security issues) or with
an extensive deprecation period. Issues and requests against GA libraries
are addressed with the highest priority.
More Information: Google Cloud Platform Launch Stages
Contributing
Contributions welcome! See the Contributing Guide.
Please note that this README.md
, the samples/README.md
,
and a variety of configuration files in this repository (including .nycrc
and tsconfig.json
)
are generated from a central template. To edit one of these files, make an edit
to its template in this
directory.
License
Apache Version 2.0
See LICENSE