This module implements Distributed Tracing with AWS X-Ray for Nest.js services.
- Supported Environments
- HTTP (express.js)
- Clients
HttpService
/HttpModule
- Manually create new Subsegments to trace custom functions
⚠️ If you want to use@narando/nest-xray
with NestJS Version 6 or 7, please use the v1 release.The v2 release is only compatible with NestJS Version 8 or 9 and @nestjs/axios
>=0.0.5 <=0.1.0
.
Install this module and aws-xray-sdk
:
$ npm i @narando/nest-xray aws-xray-sdk
Register the TracingModule
with your app module:
import { TracingModule } from "@narando/nest-xray";
@Module({
imports: [TracingModule.forRoot({ serviceName: "your-service-name" })],
})
export class AppModule {}
An environment is responsible for automatically reading the trace metadata from the incoming request (if available), creating a segment for the processing that happens in the service and recording additional metadata about the request.
There are multiple available environment candidates in Nest.js. By default most applications use the HTTP application model, where they define a @Controller
and use express
or fastify
in the background.
For this application type, the HttpEnvironment
tries to read an existing trace segment from the X-Amzn-Trace-Id
, and then creates a new segment and adds the URL and other information about the request to the segment. This segment is then made available throughout the request, Clients can now read the segment and add subsegment for the calls that are made through them.
The HttpEnvironment
is activated by default in @narando/nest-xray
.
Currently no other environments are supported.
If you are interested in contributing:
Building and supporting more environments would greatly improve the usefulness of this package.
Potential environments could be:
@nestjs/graphql
@nestjs/websockets
@nestjs/microservices
AWS Lambda
- where the trace metadata is presented in environment variables, see #67
The HttpEnvironment
checks whether the X-Amzn-Trace-Id
header is set and valid, and then creates a segment that references this origin trace.
When the request succeeds or fails, the environment adds the current time and the success/error status to the segment.
This environment is mostly implemented through the express middleware of the official aws-xray-sdk
To trace calls made to a different service, you can either use a premade client, or use the TracingService#createSubSegment
method to manually instrument the client of your choosing.
The premade clients will automatically create a subsegment for all requests made, and track the duration and response code.
This client is a drop-in replacement for the HttpService
from @nestjs/axios
.
To use it, you must only replace the imports like this:
- import { HttpModule } from "@nestjs/axios"
+ import { HttpTracingModule } from "@narando/nest-xray"
@Module({
imports: [
- HttpModule.registerAsync({
+ HttpTracingModule.registerAsync({
useFactory: async (config: ConfigService) => ({
baseURL: config.get("api.base_url"),
timeout: config.get("api.http_timeout"),
headers: {
"user-agent": config.get("api.http_user_agent")
}
}),
inject: [ConfigService]
})
],
providers: [APIService],
exports: [APIService]
})
export class APIModule {}
Keep using HttpService
as before, and all requests are traced as Subsegment and the necessary header for the downstream service is added to the the request.
If the premade clients are not sufficient or you want more control, you can use the TracingService
.
You can use it to create new subsegments and to access the currently set segment and subsegment.
Once you have access to a segment/subsegment, you can add any data you want to it.
import { TracingService } from "@narando/nest-xray";
@Injectable()
export class ExternalAPIClient {
constructor(
private readonly client: ExternalModule,
private readonly tracingService: TracingService
) {}
async doThing() {
// Create Subsegment for any Function
const subSegment = this.tracingService.createSubSegment("external-doThing");
let response;
try {
response = await client.doThing();
} catch (err) {
subSegment.close(err);
throw err;
}
subSegment.close();
}
}
We use async_hooks
to store the traces and aws-xray-sdk
to interact with AWS X-Ray.
This module uses the Node.js API async_hooks
to persist the Segment without having to explicitly pass it around to every function involved. It is what enables the "automatic" part of this module.
This API is currently not considered stable, though I have not yet seen any issues (besides slightly worse performance) from using it. This stability is currently being worked on in nodejs/diagnostics#124.
AsyncContext
is an experimental integration of async_hooks
into the Nest.js ecosystem. It was initially developed by Kamil Mysliwiec in nestjs/nest#1407 but not merged because async_hooks
are not yet stable.
I adopted his implementation into this module for following reasons:
a) It implements all the hard parts with async_hooks
and provides enough functionality for our use cases.
b) It was developed by the Nest.js Maintainer and is proposed to be merged into Nest.js. If this happens, we may be able to switch to the official implementation without changing any usages of the module.
The TracingCoreModule combines the AsyncContext
with the official AWSXRay
client. It exports the TracingService
, that can be used by other modules to implement additional tracing behaviour (e.g. tracing outgoing http requests).
- The XRay Daemon Address can only be configured through the environment variable.
This repository is published under the MIT License.