react-native-client for statsd. originally forked from https://github.com/msiebuhr/node-statsd-client to add react-native support
[![Build Status]
var SDC = require('react-native-statsd-client'),
sdc = new SDC({host: 'statsd.example.com'});
var timer = new Date();
sdc.increment('some.counter'); // Increment by one.
sdc.gauge('some.gauge', 10); // Set gauge to 10
sdc.timing('some.timer', timer); // Calculates time diff
sdc.histogram('some.histogram', 10, {foo: 'bar'}) // Histogram with tags
sdc.close(); // Optional - stop NOW
- add dependency to package.json & npm install
- react-native link react-native-udp
- add dependency to package.json & npm install
- add to android/settings.gradle:
include ':react-native-udp'
project(':react-native-udp').projectDir = new File(rootProject.projectDir, '../node_modules/react-native-udp/android/')
- add to android/app/build.gradle dependencies:
compile project(':react-native-udp')
- add to MainApplication.java:
import com.tradle.react.UdpSocketsModule; <-- add this
return Arrays.<ReactPackage>asList(
new MainReactPackage(),
new UdpSocketsModule() <-- add this
);
var SDC = require('react-native-statsd-client'),
sdc = new SDC({host: 'statsd.example.com', port: 8124});
Global options:
prefix
: Prefix all stats with this value (default""
).tcp
: User specifically wants to use tcp (defaultfalse
).socketTimeout
: Dual-use timer. Will flush metrics every interval. For UDP, it auto-closes the socket after this long without activity (default 1000 ms; 0 disables this). For TCP, it auto-closes the socket aftersocketTimeoutsToClose
number of timeouts have elapsed without activity.tags
: Object of string key/value pairs which will be appended on to all StatsD payloads (excluding raw payloads) (default{}
)
UDP options:
host
: Where to send the stats (defaultlocalhost
).port
: Port to contact the statsd-daemon on (default8125
).ipv6
: Use IPv6 instead of IPv4 (defaultfalse
).
TCP options:
host
: Where to send the stats (defaultlocalhost
).port
: Port to contact the statsd-daemon on (default8125
).socketTimeoutsToClose
: Number of timeouts in which the socket auto-closes if it has been inactive. (default10
;1
to auto-close after a single timeout).
HTTP options:
host
: The URL to send metrics to (default:http://localhost
).headers
: Additional headers to send (default{}
)method
: What HTTP method to use (defaultPUT
)
To debug, set the environment variable NODE_DEBUG=statsd-client
when running your program.
Counters are supported, both as raw .counter(metric, delta)
and with the
shortcuts .increment(metric, [delta=1])
and .decrement(metric, [delta=-1])
:
sdc.increment('systemname.subsystem.value'); // Increment by one
sdc.decrement('systemname.subsystem.value', -10); // Decrement by 10
sdc.counter('systemname.subsystem.value', 100); // Increment by 100
Sends an arbitrary number to the back-end:
sdc.gauge('what.you.gauge', 100);
sdc.gaugeDelta('what.you.gauge', 20); // Will now count 120
sdc.gaugeDelta('what.you.gauge', -70); // Will now count 50
sdc.gauge('what.you.gauge', 10); // Will now count 10
Send unique occurences of events between flushes to the back-end:
sdc.set('your.set', 200);
Keep track of how fast (or slow) your stuff is:
var start = new Date();
setTimeout(function () {
sdc.timing('random.timeout', start);
}, 100 * Math.random());
If it is given a Date
, it will calculate the difference, and anything else
will be passed straight through.
And don't let the name (or nifty interface) fool you - it can measure any kind of number, where you want to see the distribution (content lengths, list items, query sizes, ...)
Many implementations (though not the official one from Etsy) support
histograms as an alias/alternative for timers. So aside from the fancy bits
with handling dates, this is much the same as .timing()
.
Passes a raw string to the underlying socket. Useful for dealing with custom statsd-extensions in a pinch.
sdc.raw('foo.bar:123|t|@0.5|#key:value');
All the methods above support metric level tags as their last argument. Just like global tags, the format for metric tags is an object of string key/value pairs. Tags at the metric level overwrite global tags with the same key.
sdc.gauge('gauge.with.tags', 100, {foo: 'bar'});
There's also a helper for measuring stuff in Express.js via middleware:
var SDC = require('statsd-client');
var app = express();
sdc = new SDC({...});
app.use(sdc.helpers.getExpressMiddleware('somePrefix'));
// or
app.get('/',
sdc.helpers.getExpressMiddleware('otherPrefix'),
function (req, res, next) { req.pipe(res); });
app.listen(3000);
This will count responses by status-code (prefix.<statuscode>
) and the
overall response-times.
It can also measure per-URL (e.g. PUT to /:user/:thing
will become
PUT_user_thing
by setting the timeByUrl: true
in the options
-object:
app.use(sdc.helpers.getExpressMiddleware('prefix', { timeByUrl: true }));
As the names can become rather odd in corner-cases (esp. regexes and non-REST
interfaces), you can specify another value by setting res.locals.statsdUrlKey
at a later point.
The /
page will appear as root
(e.g. GET_root
) in metrics while any not found route will appear as {METHOD}_unknown_express_route
. You can change that name by setting the notFoundRouteName
in the middleware options.
There's also a helper for measuring stuff with regards to a callback:
var SDC = requrire('statsd-client');
sdc = new SDC({...});
function doSomethingAsync(arg, callback) {
callback = sdc.helpers.wrapCallback('somePrefix', callback);
// ... do something ...
return callback(null);
}
The callback is overwritten with a shimmed version that counts the
number of errors (prefix.err
) and successes (prefix.ok
) and
the time of execution of the function (prefix.time
).
You invoked the shimmed callback exactly the same way as though
there was no shim at all. Yes, you get metrics for your function in
a single line of code.
Note that the start of execution time is marked as soon as you
invoke sdc.helpers.wrapCallback()
.
You can also provide more options:
sdc.helpers.wrapCallback('somePrefix', callback, {
tags: { foo: 'bar' }
});
By default, the socket is closed if it hasn't been used for a second (see
socketTimeout
in the init-options), but it can also be force-closed with
.close()
:
var start = new Date();
setTimeout(function () {
sdc.timing('random.timeout', start); // 2 - implicitly re-creates socket.
sdc.close(); // 3 - Closes socket after last use.
}, 100 * Math.random());
sdc.close(); // 1 - Closes socket early.
The call is idempotent, so you can call it "just to be sure". And if you submit new metrics later, the socket will automatically be re-created, and a new timeout-timer started.
The library supports getting "child" clients with extra prefixes, to help with making sane name-spacing in apps:
// Create generic client
var sdc = new StatsDClient({host: 'statsd.example.com', prefix: 'systemname'});
sdc.increment('foo'); // Increments 'systemname.foo'
... do great stuff ...
// Subsystem A
var sdcA = sdc.getChildClient('a');
sdcA.increment('foo'); // Increments 'systemname.a.foo'
// Subsystem B
var sdcB = sdc.getChildClient('b');
sdcB.increment('foo'); // Increments 'systemname.b.foo'
Internally, they all use the same socket, so calling .close()
on any of them
will allow the entire program to stop gracefully.
Check the GitHub issues.
- Add support for TCP
- Add support for http
- statsd-tail - A simple program to grab statsd-data on localhost
- hot-shots - Another popular statsd client for Node.js
- statsd - The canonical server
ISC - see LICENSE.