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@newrelic/apollo-server-plugin

Apollo Server plugin that adds New Relic Node.js agent instrumentation.

  • 1.0.1
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New Relic Apollo Server plugin Apollo Server Plugin CI

New Relic's official Apollo Server plugin for use with the Node.js agent.

This plugin expects the Node.js agent newrelic npm package has already been installed in your application.

Installation

npm install newrelic
npm install @newrelic/apollo-server-plugin
// index.js
const plugin = require('@newrelic/apollo-server-plugin')

// imported from supported module
const server = new ApolloServer({
  typeDefs,
  resolvers,
  plugins: [plugin]
})

Getting started

The @newrelic/apollo-server-plugin exports a createPlugin function that does accept limited configuration. Since Apollo Server will invoke any function passed to plugins, invoking this yourself is not required unless you plan to override specific configuration.

To use the plugin without specific configuration, you can pass the function in directly similar to:

// index.js
const plugin = require('@newrelic/apollo-server-plugin')

// imported from supported module
const server = new ApolloServer({
  typeDefs,
  resolvers,
  plugins: [plugin]
})

Usage

The New Relic plugin is known to work with the following Apollo Server modules:

  • apollo-server
  • apollo-server-express
  • apollo-server-hapi
  • apollo-server-koa
  • apollo-server-fastify
  • apollo-server-lambda

Note: Because fastify is not fully instrumented in the Node.js Agent, transactions will be prefixed with WebTransaction\Nodejs.

Other plugins may work, depending on their underlying implementation, but have not been verified.

Interaction with other Apollo Plugins

Transaction and segment/span timings may be affected by other plugins used in the Apollo Server setup. In order to get more accurate resolver timings, it is recommended to add the New Relic plugin last.

const server = new ApolloServer({
  typeDefs,
  resolvers,
  plugins: [
    other_plugin,
    newrelic_plugin
  ]
})

Configuration

Configuration may be passed into the createPlugin function to override specific values. To override configuration, invoke the createPlugin function prior to passing to Apollo Server. The configuration object and all properties are optional.

const plugin = createPlugin({
  captureScalars: true,
  captureIntrospectionQueries: true,
  captureServiceDefinitionQueries: true,
  captureHealthCheckQueries: true
})
  • [captureScalars = false] Enable capture of timing of fields resolved with the GraphQLScalarType return type. This may be desired when performing time intensive calculations to return a scalar value. This is not recommended for queries that return a large number of pre-calculated scalar fields.

    NOTE: query/mutation resolvers will always be captured even if returning a scalar type.

  • [captureIntrospectionQueries = false] Enable capture of timings for an IntrospectionQuery.

  • [captureServiceDefinitionQueries = false] Enable capture of timings for a Service Definition query received from an Apollo Federated Gateway Server.

  • [captureHealthCheckQueries = false] Enable capture of timings for a Health Check query received from an Apollo Federated Gateway Server.

Apollo Federation Support

The New Relic plugin will work with an Apollo Federated Server out of the box. Just pass the plugin to the Federated Gateway Apollo Server. With the federated server you will get:

  • Distributed Tracing support
  • Transaction naming
  • Operation naming
  • Metrics

Resolver spans are not supported for the Federated Gateway Server. We strongly recommend adding the plugin to your sub-graph servers which will generate all the data you get with the Federated Server as well as resolver spans.

// Federated Gateway Server index.js
const plugin = require('@newrelic/apollo-server-plugin')

const gateway = new ApolloGateway({
  serviceList: [
    { name: 'server1', url: SERVER_1_URL },
    { name: 'server2', url: SERVER_2_URL }
  ]
});

const server = new ApolloServer({
  gateway,
  plugins: [ plugin ]
});
// Sub-Graph server index.js
const { buildFederatedSchema } = require('@apollo/federation');
const plugin = require('@newrelic/apollo-server-plugin')

const server = new ApolloServer({
  schema: buildFederatedSchema([{ typeDefs, resolvers }]),
  plugins: [ plugin ]
});

NOTE: @apollo/federation and @apollo/gateway are currently 0.x versions and may break with future versions prior to 1.x release from Apollo.

Transactions

Transaction Documentation

Transactions are captured as web transactions, associated with the underlying framework (Express, Koa, etc.), and named based on the GraphQL operations executed.

Here's an example query and how that may be represented in NR One.

query {
  libraries {
    books {
      title
      author {
        name
      }
    }
  }
}

post /query/<anonymous>/libraries.books

For more information on how transactions are named, including how query errors may impact naming, please see the transaction documentation.

Metrics

Metrics Documentation

Two new metrics have been introduced to understand the behavior of your GraphQL operations within and across transactions.

Operation Metrics

/GraphQL/operation/ApolloServer/[operation-type]/[operation-name]/[deepest-unique-path]

Operation metrics are very similar to how transaction names are constructed including the operation type, operation name and deepest unique path. These metrics represent the durations of the individual queries or mutations and can be used to compare outside of the context of individual transactions which may have multiple queries.

If you would like to have a list of the top 10 slowest operations, the following query can be used to pull the data on demand or as a part of a dashboard. The 'Bar' chart type is a recommended visualization for this query.

FROM Metric SELECT average(newrelic.timeslice.value) * 1000 WHERE appName = '[YOUR APP NAME]' WITH METRIC_FORMAT 'GraphQL/operation/ApolloServer/{operation}' FACET operation LIMIT 10
Field Resolve Metrics

/GraphQL/resolve/ApolloServer/[field-name]

Resolve metrics capture the duration spent resolving a particular piece of requested GraphQL data. These can be useful to find specific resolvers that may contribute to slowing down incoming queries.

If you would like to have a list of the top 10 slowest resolves, the following query can be used to pull the data on demand or as a part of a dashboard. The 'Bar' chart type is a recommended visualization for this query.

FROM Metric
SELECT average(newrelic.timeslice.value) * 1000 WHERE appName = '[YOUR APP NAME]' WITH METRIC_FORMAT 'GraphQL/resolve/ApolloServer/{field}' FACET field LIMIT 10

For more information on metrics and some recommended visualizations, please see the metrics documentation.

Segments and Spans

Segments and Spans

Segments and spans (when Distributed Tracing enabled) are captured for GraphQL operations, field resolution and additional work (when instrumented) that occurs as a part of field resolution such as making a query to a database.

Operation Segments/Spans

/GraphQL/operation/ApolloServer/[operation-type]/[operation-name]/[deepest-unique-path]

Operation segments/spans include the operation type, operation name and deepest unique path. These represent the individual duration and attributes of a specific invocation within a transaction or trace.

The operation type and operation name are captured as attributes on a segment or span as well as the query with obfuscated arguments.

For more information on collected attributes, see the segments and spans documentation

Field Resolve Segments/Spans

/GraphQL/resolve/ApolloServer/[path]

Resolve segments/spans leverage the resolution path of the individual field to best differentiate within a given trace or transaction. For example, libraries.books might be used instead of just books. These represent the individual duration and attributes of a specific field being resolved as a part of the GraphQL operation.

The field name, return type, parent type, path and arguments (disabled by default) are all captured as attributes.

For more information on collected attributes, including enabling args capture, see the segments and spans documentation

Errors

The agent will notice GraphQL errors that get sent back to the client.

Depend on where the error was thrown, these will be associated with either the operation span or the specific field resolve span (Distribute Tracing enabled) to enable further debugging of issues.

Testing

The module includes a suite of unit and functional tests which should be used to verify that your changes don't break existing functionality.

All tests are stored in tests/ and are written using Tap with the extension .tap.js.

To run the full suite, run: npm test.

Individual test scripts include:

npm run unit
npm run integration
npm run versioned

Support

Should you need assistance with New Relic products, you are in good hands with several support diagnostic tools and support channels.

This troubleshooting framework steps you through common troubleshooting questions.

New Relic offers NRDiag, a client-side diagnostic utility that automatically detects common problems with New Relic agents. If NRDiag detects a problem, it suggests troubleshooting steps. NRDiag can also automatically attach troubleshooting data to a New Relic Support ticket. Remove this section if it doesn't apply.

If the issue has been confirmed as a bug or is a feature request, file a GitHub issue.

Support Channels

Privacy

At New Relic we take your privacy and the security of your information seriously, and are committed to protecting your information. We must emphasize the importance of not sharing personal data in public forums, and ask all users to scrub logs and diagnostic information for sensitive information, whether personal, proprietary, or otherwise.

We define “Personal Data” as any information relating to an identified or identifiable individual, including, for example, your name, phone number, post code or zip code, Device ID, IP address, and email address.

For more information, review New Relic’s General Data Privacy Notice.

Contribute

We encourage your contributions to improve the New Relic Apollo Server plugin! Keep in mind that when you submit your pull request, you'll need to sign the CLA via the click-through using CLA-Assistant. You only have to sign the CLA one time per project.

If you have any questions, or to execute our corporate CLA (which is required if your contribution is on behalf of a company), drop us an email at opensource@newrelic.com.

If you would like to contribute to this project, review these guidelines.

To all contributors, we thank you! Without your contribution, this project would not be what it is today. We also host a community project page dedicated to the New Relic Apollo Server plugin.

A note about vulnerabilities

As noted in our security policy, New Relic is committed to the privacy and security of our customers and their data. We believe that providing coordinated disclosure by security researchers and engaging with the security community are important means to achieve our security goals.

If you believe you have found a security vulnerability in this project or any of New Relic's products or websites, we welcome and greatly appreciate you reporting it to New Relic through HackerOne.

License

The New Relic Apollo Server plugin is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.

The New Relic Apollo Server plugin also uses source code from third-party libraries. You can find full details on which libraries are used and the terms under which they are licensed in the third-party notices document.

FAQs

Package last updated on 25 Aug 2021

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