What is @sentry/node?
The @sentry/node package is a tool designed for real-time monitoring and fixing crashes in Node.js applications. It provides error tracking and performance monitoring, helping developers to quickly identify, diagnose, and fix problems in their applications. Sentry integrates seamlessly with your existing codebase, offering a range of features to enhance application reliability and user experience.
What are @sentry/node's main functionalities?
Error Tracking
Automatically capture exceptions and errors in your Node.js applications. The code initializes Sentry with your project's DSN and demonstrates how an uncaught exception is automatically reported to Sentry.
const Sentry = require('@sentry/node');
Sentry.init({ dsn: 'YOUR_DSN_HERE' });
app.get('/', function mainHandler(req, res) {
throw new Error('Broke!');
});
Performance Monitoring
Track the performance of your application, including request times and slow operations. This code sample starts a transaction, simulates an operation with a timeout, and then finishes the transaction, which is then reported to Sentry for performance analysis.
const Sentry = require('@sentry/node');
const transaction = Sentry.startTransaction({ op: 'test', name: 'My First Test Transaction' });
setTimeout(() => {
transaction.finish();
}, 99);
Custom Event Capturing
Send custom messages or events to Sentry. This is useful for capturing non-exception events that are significant for your application's health monitoring and diagnostics.
const Sentry = require('@sentry/node');
Sentry.captureMessage('Something went wrong', 'error');
Other packages similar to @sentry/node
bugsnag-js
Bugsnag provides error monitoring for web, mobile, and server applications. Similar to @sentry/node, it offers real-time error reporting and allows for detailed error diagnostics and performance monitoring. Bugsnag differentiates itself with features tailored to mobile app monitoring.
rollbar
Rollbar offers real-time error tracking and debugging tools for developers. Like @sentry/node, it supports multiple programming languages and frameworks, including Node.js. Rollbar emphasizes its ability to help teams with workflow integrations and automated error grouping for efficient management.
raygun
Raygun provides crash reporting, real-user monitoring, and deployment tracking. It's similar to @sentry/node in its core functionalities of error tracking and performance monitoring but also offers unique features like user journey tracking and version comparisons to understand the impact of deployments.
Official Sentry SDK for Node
Installation
npm install @sentry/node
yarn add @sentry/node
Usage
Sentry should be initialized as early in your app as possible. It is essential that you call Sentry.init
before you
require any other modules in your application, otherwise auto-instrumentation of these modules will not work.
You need to create a file named instrument.js
that imports and initializes Sentry:
const Sentry = require('@sentry/node');
import * as Sentry from '@sentry/node';
Sentry.init({
dsn: '__DSN__',
});
You need to require or import the instrument.js
file before importing any other modules in your application. This is
necessary to ensure that Sentry can automatically instrument all modules in your application:
import './instrument';
import http from 'http';
ESM Support
When running your application in ESM mode, you should use the Node.js
--import
command line option to ensure that Sentry is loaded before
the application code is evaluated.
Adjust the Node.js call for your application to use the --import
parameter and point it at instrument.js
, which
contains your Sentry.init
() code:
node --import ./instrument.mjs app.mjs
If it is not possible for you to pass the --import
flag to the Node.js binary, you can alternatively use the
NODE_OPTIONS
environment variable as follows:
NODE_OPTIONS="--import ./instrument.mjs" npm run start
Links
8.31.0
Important Changes
- feat(node): Add
dataloader
integration (#13664)
This release adds a new integration for the dataloader
package. The Node
SDK (and all SDKs that depend on it) will now automatically instrument dataloader
instances. You can also add it
manually:
Sentry.init({
integrations: [Sentry.dataloaderIntegration()],
});
Other Changes
- feat(browser): Add navigation
activationStart
timestamp to pageload span (#13658) - feat(gatsby): Add optional
deleteSourcemapsAfterUpload
(#13610) - feat(nextjs): Give app router prefetch requests a
http.server.prefetch
op (#13600) - feat(nextjs): Improve Next.js serverside span data quality (#13652)
- feat(node): Add
disableInstrumentationWarnings
option (#13693) - feat(nuxt): Adding
experimental_basicServerTracing
option to Nuxt module (#13643) - feat(nuxt): Improve logs about adding Node option 'import' (#13726)
- feat(replay): Add
onError
callback + other small improvements to debugging (#13721) - feat(replay): Add experimental option to allow for a checkout every 6 minutes (#13069)
- feat(wasm): Unconditionally parse instruction addresses (#13655)
- fix: Ensure all logs are wrapped with
consoleSandbox
(#13690) - fix(browser): Try multiple options for
lazyLoadIntegration
script parent element lookup (#13717) - fix(feedback): Actor color applies to feedback icon (#13702)
- fix(feedback): Fix form width on mobile devices (#13068)
- fix(nestjs): Preserve original function name on
SentryTraced
functions (#13684) - fix(node): Don't overwrite local variables for re-thrown errors (#13644)
- fix(normalize): Treat Infinity as NaN both are non-serializable numbers (#13406)
- fix(nuxt): Use correct server output file path (#13725)
- fix(opentelemetry): Always use active span in
Propagator.inject
(#13381) - fix(replay): Fixes potential out-of-order segments (#13609)
Work in this release was contributed by @KyGuy2002, @artzhookov, and @julianCast. Thank you for your contributions!