Skip to content

Tyler-Murphy/node-datadog-metrics

 
 

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

datadog-metrics

Buffered metrics reporting via the DataDog HTTP API.

NPM Version Build Status Downloads Stats

Datadog-metrics lets you collect application metrics through DataDog's HTTP API. Using the HTTP API has the benefit that you don't need to install the DataDog Agent (StatsD). Just get an API key, install the module and you're ready to go.

The downside of using the HTTP API is that it can negatively affect your app's performance. Datadog-metrics solves this issue by buffering metrics locally and periodically flushing them to DataDog.

Installation

npm install datadog-metrics --save

Example

Save the following into a file named example_app.js:

var metrics = require('datadog-metrics');
metrics.init({ host: 'myhost', prefix: 'myapp.' });

function collectMemoryStats() {
    var memUsage = process.memoryUsage();
    metrics.gauge('memory.rss', memUsage.rss);
    metrics.gauge('memory.heapTotal', memUsage.heapTotal);
    metrics.gauge('memory.heapUsed', memUsage.heapUsed);
};

setInterval(collectMemoryStats, 5000);

Run it:

DATADOG_API_KEY=YOUR_KEY DEBUG=metrics node example_app.js

Tutorial

There's also a longer tutorial that walks you through setting up a monitoring dashboard on DataDog using datadog-metrics.

Usage

DataDog API key

Make sure the DATADOG_API_KEY environment variable is set to your DataDog API key. You can find the API key under Integrations > APIs. You only need to provide the API key, not the APP key. However, you can provide an APP key if you want by setting the DATADOG_APP_KEY environment variable.

Module setup

There are three ways to use this module to instrument an application. They differ in the level of control that they provide.

Use case #1: Just let me track some metrics already!

Just require datadog-metrics and you're ready to go. After that you can call gauge, increment and histogram to start reporting metrics.

var metrics = require('datadog-metrics');
metrics.gauge('mygauge', 42);

Use case #2: I want some control over this thing!

If you want more control you can configure the module with a call to init. Make sure you call this before you use the gauge, increment and histogram functions. See the documentation for init below to learn more.

var metrics = require('datadog-metrics');
metrics.init({ host: 'myhost', prefix: 'myapp.' });
metrics.gauge('mygauge', 42);

Use case #3: Must. Control. Everything.

If you need even more control you can create one or more BufferedMetricsLogger instances and manage them yourself:

var metrics = require('datadog-metrics');
var metricsLogger = new metrics.BufferedMetricsLogger({
    apiKey: 'TESTKEY',
    host: 'myhost',
    prefix: 'myapp.',
    flushIntervalSeconds: 15,
    defaultTags: ['env:staging', 'region:us-east-1']
});
metricsLogger.gauge('mygauge', 42);

API

Initialization

metrics.init(options)

Where options is an object and can contain the following:

  • host: Sets the hostname reported with each metric. (optional)
    • Setting a hostname is useful when you're running the same application on multiple machines and you want to track them separately in DataDog.
  • prefix: Sets a default prefix for all metrics. (optional)
    • Use this to namespace your metrics.
  • flushIntervalSeconds: How often to send metrics to DataDog. (optional)
    • This defaults to 15 seconds. Set it to 0 to disable auto-flushing which means you must call flush() manually.
  • apiKey: Sets the DataDog API key. (optional)
    • It's usually best to keep this in an environment variable. Datadog-metrics looks for the API key in DATADOG_API_KEY by default.
  • appKey: Sets the DataDog APP key. (optional)
    • It's usually best to keep this in an environment variable. Datadog-metrics looks for the APP key in DATADOG_APP_KEY by default.
  • defaultTags: Default tags used for all metric reporting. (optional)
    • Set tags that are common to all metrics.
  • agent: custom https agent (optional)

Example:

metrics.init({ host: 'myhost', prefix: 'myapp.' });

Gauges

metrics.gauge(key, value[, tags[, timestamp]])

Record the current value of a metric. They most recent value in a given flush interval will be recorded. Optionally, specify a set of tags to associate with the metric. This should be used for sum values such as total hard disk space, process uptime, total number of active users, or number of rows in a database table. The optional timestamp is in milliseconds since 1 Jan 1970 00:00:00 UTC, e.g. from Date.now().

Example:

metrics.gauge('test.mem_free', 23);

Counters

metrics.increment(key[, value[, tags[, timestamp]]])

Increment the counter by the given value (or 1 by default). Optionally, specify a list of tags to associate with the metric. This is useful for counting things such as incrementing a counter each time a page is requested. The optional timestamp is in milliseconds since 1 Jan 1970 00:00:00 UTC, e.g. from Date.now().

Example:

metrics.increment('test.requests_served');
metrics.increment('test.awesomeness_factor', 10);

Histograms

metrics.histogram(key, value[, tags[, timestamp]])

Sample a histogram value. Histograms will produce metrics that describe the distribution of the recorded values, namely the minimum, maximum, average, count and the 75th, 85th, 95th and 99th percentiles. Optionally, specify a list of tags to associate with the metric. The optional timestamp is in milliseconds since 1 Jan 1970 00:00:00 UTC, e.g. from Date.now().

Example:

metrics.histogram('test.service_time', 0.248);

Flushing

metrics.flush([onSuccess[, onError]])

Calling flush sends any buffered metrics to DataDog. Unless you set flushIntervalSeconds to 0 it won't be necessary to call this function.

It can be useful to trigger a manual flush by calling if you want to make sure pending metrics have been sent before you quit the application process, for example.

Logging

Datadog-metrics uses the debug library for logging at runtime. You can enable debug logging by setting the DEBUG environment variable when you run your app.

Example:

DEBUG=metrics node app.js

Tests

npm test

Release History

  • 0.8.1
    • FIX: don't increment count when value is 0 (Thanks to @haspriyank)
  • 0.8.0
    • allow passing in custom https agent (Thanks to @flovilmart)
  • 0.7.0
    • update metric type counter to count as counter is deprecated by Datadog (Thanks to @dustingibbs)
  • 0.6.1
  • 0.6.0
    • FIX: call onSuccess on flush even if buffer is empty (Thanks to @mousavian)
  • 0.5.0
    • ADD: ability to set custom timestamps (Thanks to @ronny)
    • FIX: 0 as valid option for flushIntervalSeconds (thanks to @dkMorlok)
  • 0.4.0
    • ADD: Initialize with a default set of tags (thanks to @spence)
  • 0.3.0
    • FIX: Don't overwrite metrics with the same key but different tags when aggregating them (Thanks @akrylysov and @RavivIsraeli!)
    • ADD: Add success/error callbacks to metrics.flush() (Thanks @akrylysov!)
    • ADD: Allow DataDog APP key to be configured (Thanks @gert-fresh!)
    • Bump dependencies to latest
    • Update docs
  • 0.2.1
    • Update docs (module code remains unchanged)
  • 0.2.0
    • API redesign
    • Remove setDefaultXYZ() and added init()
  • 0.1.1
    • Allow increment to be called with a default value of 1
  • 0.1.0
    • The first proper release
    • Rename counter to increment
  • 0.0.0
    • Work in progress

Meta

This module is heavily inspired by the Python dogapi module.

Daniel Bader – @dbader_org[email protected]

Distributed under the MIT license. See LICENSE for more information.

https://github.com/dbader/node-datadog-metrics

About

Buffered metrics reporting via the DataDog HTTP API

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • JavaScript 100.0%