@dmytry-s/instrumentation-express
v0.39.0
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OpenTelemetry instrumentation for `express` http web application framework
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OpenTelemetry Express Instrumentation for Node.js
This module provides automatic instrumentation for the express
module, which may be loaded using the @opentelemetry/sdk-trace-node
package and is included in the @opentelemetry/auto-instrumentations-node
bundle.
If total installation size is not constrained, it is recommended to use the @opentelemetry/auto-instrumentations-node
bundle with @opentelemetry/sdk-node for the most seamless instrumentation experience.
Compatible with OpenTelemetry JS API and SDK 1.0+
.
Installation
This instrumentation relies on HTTP calls to also be instrumented. Make sure you install and enable both, otherwise you will not see any spans being exported from the instrumentation.
npm install --save @opentelemetry/instrumentation-http @opentelemetry/instrumentation-express
Supported Versions
^4.0.0
Usage
OpenTelemetry Express Instrumentation allows the user to automatically collect trace data and export them to their backend of choice, to give observability to distributed systems.
To load the instrumentation, specify it in the Node Tracer's configuration:
const { NodeTracerProvider } = require('@opentelemetry/sdk-trace-node');
const { registerInstrumentations } = require('@opentelemetry/instrumentation');
const { HttpInstrumentation } = require('@opentelemetry/instrumentation-http');
const { ExpressInstrumentation } = require('@opentelemetry/instrumentation-express');
const provider = new NodeTracerProvider();
provider.register();
registerInstrumentations({
instrumentations: [
// Express instrumentation expects HTTP layer to be instrumented
new HttpInstrumentation(),
new ExpressInstrumentation(),
],
});
See examples/express for a short example.
Caveats
Because of the way express works, it's hard to correctly compute the time taken by asynchronous middlewares and request handlers. For this reason, the time you'll see reported for asynchronous middlewares and request handlers still only represent the synchronous execution time, and not any asynchronous work.
Express Instrumentation Options
Express instrumentation has few options available to choose from. You can set the following:
| Options | Type | Example | Description |
| ------- | ---- | ------- | ----------- |
| ignoreLayers
| IgnoreMatcher[]
| [/^\/_internal\//]
| Ignore layers that by match. |
| ignoreLayersType
| ExpressLayerType[]
| ['request_handler']
| Ignore layers of specified type. |
| spanNameHook
| SpanNameHook
| () => 'my-span-name'
| Can be used to customize span names by returning a new name from the hook. |
| requestHook
| ExpressRequestCustomAttributeFunction (function)
| (span, info) => {}
| Function for adding custom attributes on Express request. Receives params: Span, ExpressRequestInfo
. |
ignoreLayers
accepts an array of elements of types:
string
for full match of the path,RegExp
for partial match of the path,function
in the form of(path) => boolean
for custom logic.
ignoreLayersType
accepts an array of following strings:
router
is the name ofexpress.Router()
,middleware
,request_handler
is the name for anything that's not a router or a middleware.
spanNameHook
is invoked with 2 arguments:
info: ExpressRequestInfo
containing the incoming Express.js request, the current route handler creating a span andExpressLayerType
- the type of the handling layer.defaultName: string
- original name proposed by the instrumentation.
requestHook
is invoked with 2 arguments:
span: Span
- the span associated with the express request.info: ExpressRequestInfo
containing the incoming Express.js request, the current route handler creating a span andExpressLayerType
- the type of the handling layer.
NOTE: ExpressRequestInfo.request
is typed as any
. If you want type support make sure you have @types/express
installed then you can use ExpressRequestInfo<express.Request>
Ignore a whole Express route
In order to ignore whole traces that represent a given Express route, use
the ignoreIncomingRequestHook
option from
@opentelemetry/instrumentation-http
against the route path. Ideally, this
shouldn't be necessary since spans should a have low cardinality and minimize
interaction between instrumentation libraries but
@opentelemetry/instrumentation-express
renames the root span from
@opentelemetry/instrumentation-http
in order to get things in order.
registerInstrumentations({
instrumentations: [
// Express instrumentation expects HTTP layer to be instrumented
new HttpInstrumentation({
ignoreIncomingRequestHook(req) {
// Ignore spans from static assets.
const isStaticAsset = !!req.url.match(/^\/static\/.*$/);
return isStaticAsset;
}
}),
new ExpressInstrumentation(),
],
});
Using requestHook
Instrumentation configuration accepts a custom "hook" function which will be called for every instrumented Express layer involved in a request. Custom attributes can be set on the span or run any custom logic per layer.
Here is a simple example that adds to the request handler span some attributes based on the Express request attributes:
import { ExpressInstrumentation, ExpressLayerType } from "@opentelemetry/instrumentation-express"
const expressInstrumentation = new ExpressInstrumentation({
requestHook: function (
span: Span,
info: ExpressRequestInfo,
) {
if (info.layerType === ExpressLayerType.REQUEST_HANDLER) {
span.setAttribute(
'http.method',
info.request.method
);
span.setAttribute(
'express.base_url',
info.request.baseUrl
);
}
}
});
Semantic Conventions
This package uses @opentelemetry/semantic-conventions
version 1.22+
, which implements Semantic Convention Version 1.7.0
Attributes collected:
| Attribute | Short Description |
| ------------ | ---------------------------------- |
| http.route
| The matched route (path template). |
Useful links
- For more information on OpenTelemetry, visit: https://opentelemetry.io/
- For more about OpenTelemetry JavaScript: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-js
- For help or feedback on this project, join us in GitHub Discussions
License
Apache 2.0 - See LICENSE for more information.