nstats
v5.0.0
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A fast and compact way to get all your network and process stats for your node application.
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Nstats
A fast and compact way to get all your network and process stats for your node application. Websocket, http/s, express and prometheus compatible!
Installation
$ npm install nstats
Quick Start (Express)
// ws is a websocket server (ws.js) and httpServer is an http or https node server.
var nstats = require('nstats')(ws, httpServer);
//use it with express
app.use(nstats.express());
//display the stats!
console.log(nstats.data); // non-stringifyed
console.log(nstats.toJson()) // stringifyed
console.log(nstats.toPrometheus()) // prometheus format
Quick Start (Fastify 4.x.x)
// ws is a websocket server (ws.js) and httpServer is an http or https node server.
var nstats = require('nstats')();
//use it with express
app.register(nstats.fastify(),{
ignored_routes:['/metrics','/health']
});
app.get('/metrics', (req, res) => {
res.code(200).send(nstats.toPrometheus());
});
app.get('/health', (req, res) => res.code(200).send('All Systems Nominal'));
//display the stats!
console.log(nstats.data); // non-stringifyed
console.log(nstats.toJson()) // stringifyed
console.log(nstats.toPrometheus()) // prometheus format
Grafana Sample
Import the Grafana Dashboard example inside the Grafana folder to view the the stats in a graph like manner.
Example
const express = require('express');
const nstats = require('nstats');
const WebSocket = require('ws');
const app = express();
const server = require('http').createServer(app);
const port = 3042;
const wss = new WebSocket.Server({ server });
var stats = require('nstats')(wss, server);
stats.interval = 500;
stats.serverName = "TestServer";
wss.on('connection', function connection(ws) {
ws.on('message', function incoming(message) {
ws.send(message);
});
});
app.use(stats.express());
app.get('/', (req, res) => res.send());
app.get('/metrics', (req, res) => res.send(stats.toPrometheus()));
app.get('/stats', (req, res) => {
res.type('json')
stats.calc(()=>res.send(stats.toJson()));
});
server.listen(port, () => console.log(`Example app listening on port ${port}!`));
##Properties
####stats.data
The stats.data
object is a JavaScript object containing all the stats.
{
"uptime": 209.653,
"totalMemory": "29.17",
"activeSockets": 2,
"responseOverhead": {
"avg": 0.5810644392156861,
"highest": 5.175994,
"lowest": 0.260562,
"total": 148.17143199999995
},
"avgWriteKBs": "3.26",
"avgReadKBs": "0.28",
"avgPacketsSecond": "1.22",
"totalBytesWritten": 700381,
"totalMBytesWritten": 0.67,
"totalBytesRead": 60813,
"totalMBytesRead": 0.06,
"writeKBS": "0.00",
"readKBS": "0.00",
"packetsSecond": "0.00",
"totalPackets": 255,
"http": {
"GET": {
"200": 255
}
}
}
feel free to add your own stats you want to keep track off too!
stats.data['foo'] = "some dank stat";
####stats.interval
A time in milliseconds on when the stats will refresh and calculate.
stats.interval = 5000; // default is 1 second
Set this to 0 if you do not want it to loop.
##Methods
stats.addWeb(req,res,sTime)
A method to add network usage for http requests not done with express or w.s. res is optional if you want stats.data.http data. sTime (The start time of when you received the req BigInt) is optional if you want responseOverhead data.
var req = http.get("http://google.com", function(res) {
res.on('end', function() {
stats.addWeb(req, res);
});
});
Since its not express or ws, it does not know about it.
stats.calc()
A method to allow you to manually trigger when the stats are computed.
optional call back can be passed to let you know its done.
stats.calc(function(){
//its done!
console.log(stats.data);
});