Skip to content

SolarWinds APM Instrumentation Agent for Node.js

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

solarwinds/solarwinds-apm-node

Repository files navigation

SolarWinds APM

The solarwinds-apm module provides SolarWinds instrumentation for Node.js.

It supports most commonly used databases, frameworks, and packages automatically. An API (a.k.a Custom SDK) allows anything to be instrumented. A SolarWinds account is required to view traces & metrics.

Dependencies

This is a Linux Only package with no Mac or Windows support. When installed on Mac or Windows (for development) it will degrade gracefully.

It is compatible with Node versions 14, 16 and 18. See node status for more.

It is dependent on solarwinds-apm-bindings binary add-on.

Binary dependency

The SolarWinds APM Agent will first attempt to install a prebuilt binary add-on using node-pre-gyp. Prebuilt binaries are provided for various versions of Alpine, Centos, Amazon Linux and Red Hat Enterprise Linux.

Only if finding an appropriate prebuilt binary fails, will the agent attempt to build the binary add-on from source using node-gyp. In such a case, the target platform should include the build toolchain.

Building with node-gyp (via node-pre-gyp) requires:

  • Python (2 or 3 depending on version of npm)
  • make
  • A proper C/C++ compiler toolchain, like GCC

Installing

The solarwinds-apm module is available on npm and can be installed by navigating to your app root and running:

npm install --save solarwinds-apm

Authorizing

The agent requires a service key, obtained from the SolarWinds dashboard. This is set via the SW_APM_SERVICE_KEY environment variable, make sure it is available in the environment where your application is running:

export SW_APM_SERVICE_KEY="api-token-here:your-service-name"

A service key is composed of an API token and the name of the service you're installing on. The SolarWinds platform onboarding flow provides the full service key.

Loading

To load the agent into your application you can use one of two methods: require solarwinds-apm in your application start command (run time), or require solarwinds-apm in your entry point file before any other require() calls (build time).

Below are simple examples:

At Start (preferred)

node -r solarwinds-apm <app.js>

In Code

// must be first require
require('solarwinds-apm')

const express = require('express')
const app = express()
app.get('/', (req, res) => res.send('Hello World!'))
app.listen(3000, () => console.log('Example app listening on port 3000!'))

Now restart your app and you should see data in your SolarWinds dashboard in a minute or two.

Important!

solarwinds-apm should be the first file required.

If, for example, you are using the esm package to enable ES module syntax (import rather than require) and you use the following command to invoke your program node -r esm index.js then esm.js is loaded first and solarwinds-apm is unable to instrument modules. You can use it, just make sure to require solarwinds-apm first, e.g., node -r solarwinds-apm -r esm index.js.

If you are using the custom instrumentation SDK then a reference to the SDK must be obtained, like const apm = require('solarwinds-apm'). If you use the command line option to require solarwinds-apm (e.g. node -r solarwinds-apm -r esm index.js) you can access the SDK using const apm = global[Symbol.for('solarwinds-apm')]

Configuration

See the Configuration Guide

Upgrading

To upgrade an existing installation, navigate to your app root and run:

npm install --save solarwinds-apm@latest

Support

If you find a bug or would like to request an enhancement, feel free to file an issue. For all other support requests, please email [email protected].

License

Copyright (c) 2016 - 2022 SolarWinds, LLC

Released under the Apache License 2.0