Performance Monitoring
By default, Sentry error events will not get trace context unless you configure the scope with the transaction, as illustrated in the example below.
If you’re adopting Performance in a high-throughput environment, we recommend testing prior to deployment to ensure that your service’s performance characteristics maintain expectations.
const Sentry = require("@sentry/node");
const Tracing = require("@sentry/tracing");
// Note: You MUST import the package for tracing to work
const http = require("http");
Sentry.init({
dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0",
integrations: [
// enable HTTP calls tracing
new Sentry.Integrations.Http({ tracing: true }),
],
// We recommend adjusting this value in production, or using tracesSampler
// for finer control
tracesSampleRate: 1.0,
});
const transaction = Sentry.startTransaction({
op: "transaction",
name: "My Transaction",
});
// Note that we set the transaction as the span on the scope.
// This step makes sure that if an error happens during the lifetime of the transaction
// the transaction context will be attached to the error event
Sentry.configureScope(scope => {
scope.setSpan(transaction);
});
let request;
try {
// this should generate an http span
request = http.get("http://sentry.io", res => {
console.log(`STATUS: ${res.statusCode}`);
console.log(`HEADERS: ${JSON.stringify(res.headers)}`);
});
// this error event should have trace context
foo();
} catch (err) {
Sentry.captureException(err);
}
request.on("close", () => {
transaction.finish();
});
Custom Instrumentation
To instrument a specific region of your code, you can create a transaction to capture it.
The following example creates a transaction for a part of the code that contains an expensive operation (for example, processItem
), and sends the result to Sentry:
app.use(function processItems(req, res, next) {
const item = getFromQueue();
const transaction = Sentry.startTransaction({
op: "task",
name: item.getTransaction(),
});
// processItem may create more spans internally (see next examples)
processItem(item, transaction).then(() => {
transaction.finish();
next();
});
});
Retrieving a Transaction
In cases where you want to attach Spans to an already ongoing Transaction you can use Sentry.getCurrentHub().getScope().getTransaction()
. This function will return a Transaction
in case there is a running Transaction otherwise it returns undefined
. If you are using our Express integration by default we attach the Transaction to the Scope. So you could do something like this:
app.get("/success", function successHandler(req, res) {
const transaction = Sentry.getCurrentHub()
.getScope()
.getTransaction();
if (transaction) {
let span = transaction.startChild({
op: "encode",
description: "parseAvatarImages",
});
// Do something
span.finish();
}
res.status(200).end();
});
Connecting Services
If you are also using Performance Monitoring for JavaScript, depending on where your request originates, you can connect traces:
- For requests that start in your backend, by adding a meta tag in your HTML template that contains tracing information.
- For requests that start in JavaScript, by the SDK setting a header on requests to your backend.
Otherwise, backend services with Performance Monitoring connect automatically.
- Package:
- npm:@sentry/node
- Version:
- 8.24.0
- Repository:
- https://github.com/getsentry/sentry-javascript