Node-report is now supported as part of Node.js itself.
node-report
Delivers a human-readable diagnostic summary, written to file.
The report is intended for development, test and production
use, to capture and preserve information for problem determination.
It includes JavaScript and native stack traces, heap statistics,
platform information and resource usage etc. With the report enabled,
reports can be triggered on unhandled exceptions, fatal errors, signals
and calls to a JavaScript API.
Supports Node.js versions 8, 10 and 12 on AIX, Linux, macOS, SmartOS and
Windows. Node.js 12 and later contain similar functionality in the built-in
Diagnostic Report feature.
NOTE: This repo will be archived and the npm package will be sunset
in lieu of Diagnostic Report, when Node.js 10 enters End-of-Life.
A report will be triggered automatically on unhandled exceptions and fatal
error events (for example out of memory errors), and can also be triggered
by sending a USR2 signal to a Node.js process (not supported on Windows).
A report can also be triggered via an API call from a JavaScript
application.
var nodereport = require('node-report');
nodereport.triggerReport();
The content of a report can also be returned as a JavaScript string via an
API call from a JavaScript application.
var nodereport = require('node-report');
var report_str = nodereport.getReport();
console.log(report_str);
The API can be used without adding the automatic exception and fatal error
hooks and the signal handler, as follows:
var nodereport = require('node-report/api');
nodereport.triggerReport();
Content of the report consists of a header section containing the event
type, date, time, PID and Node version, sections containing JavaScript and
native stack traces, a section containing V8 heap information, a section
containing libuv handle information and an OS platform information section
showing CPU and memory usage and system limits. An example report can be
triggered using the Node.js REPL:
When a report is triggered, start and end messages are issued to stderr
and the filename of the report is returned to the caller. The default filename
includes the date, time, PID and a sequence number. Alternatively, a filename
can be specified as a parameter on the triggerReport() call.
nodereport.triggerReport("myReportName");
Both triggerReport() and getReport() can take an optional Error object
as a parameter. If an Error object is provided, the message and stack trace
from the object will be included in the report in the JavaScript Exception Details section.
When using node-report to handle errors in a callback or an exception handler
this allows the report to include the location of the original error as well
as where it was handled.
If both a filename and Error object are passed to triggerReport() the
Error object should be the second parameter.
To see examples of reports generated from these events you can run the
demonstration applications provided in the node-report github repository. These are
Node.js applications which will prompt you to trigger the required event.
api.js - report triggered by JavaScript API call.
exception.js - report triggered by unhandled exception.
fatalerror.js - report triggered by fatal error on JavaScript heap out of memory.
loop.js - looping application, report triggered using kill -USR2 <pid>.
THIS PROJECT HAS BEEN ARCHIVED.
Node-report is now supported as part of Node.js itself.
node-report
Delivers a human-readable diagnostic summary, written to file.
The report is intended for development, test and production use, to capture and preserve information for problem determination. It includes JavaScript and native stack traces, heap statistics, platform information and resource usage etc. With the report enabled, reports can be triggered on unhandled exceptions, fatal errors, signals and calls to a JavaScript API.
Supports Node.js versions 8, 10 and 12 on AIX, Linux, macOS, SmartOS and Windows. Node.js 12 and later contain similar functionality in the built-in Diagnostic Report feature.
NOTE: This repo will be archived and the npm package will be sunset in lieu of Diagnostic Report, when Node.js 10 enters End-of-Life.
Usage
A report will be triggered automatically on unhandled exceptions and fatal error events (for example out of memory errors), and can also be triggered by sending a USR2 signal to a Node.js process (not supported on Windows).
A report can also be triggered via an API call from a JavaScript application.
The content of a report can also be returned as a JavaScript string via an API call from a JavaScript application.
The API can be used without adding the automatic exception and fatal error hooks and the signal handler, as follows:
Content of the report consists of a header section containing the event type, date, time, PID and Node version, sections containing JavaScript and native stack traces, a section containing V8 heap information, a section containing libuv handle information and an OS platform information section showing CPU and memory usage and system limits. An example report can be triggered using the Node.js REPL:
When a report is triggered, start and end messages are issued to stderr and the filename of the report is returned to the caller. The default filename includes the date, time, PID and a sequence number. Alternatively, a filename can be specified as a parameter on the
triggerReport()call.Both
triggerReport()andgetReport()can take an optionalErrorobject as a parameter. If anErrorobject is provided, the message and stack trace from the object will be included in the report in theJavaScript Exception Detailssection. When using node-report to handle errors in a callback or an exception handler this allows the report to include the location of the original error as well as where it was handled. If both a filename andErrorobject are passed totriggerReport()theErrorobject should be the second parameter.Configuration
Additional configuration is available using the following APIs:
Configuration on module initialization is also available via environment variables:
Examples
To see examples of reports generated from these events you can run the demonstration applications provided in the node-report github repository. These are Node.js applications which will prompt you to trigger the required event.
api.js- report triggered by JavaScript API call.exception.js- report triggered by unhandled exception.fatalerror.js- report triggered by fatal error on JavaScript heap out of memory.loop.js- looping application, report triggered using kill-USR2 <pid>.License
Licensed under the MIT License.