This is @lumigo/tracer
, Lumigo's Node.js agent for distributed tracing and performance monitoring.
Supported NodeJS runtimes: 8.10, 10.x, 12.x, 14.x, 16.x
The @lumigo/tracer
package allows you to pursue automated metric gathering through Lambda Layers, automated metric gathering and instrumentation through the Serverless framework, or manual metric creation and implementation.
- When configuring your Lambda functions, include the appropriate Lambda Layer ARN from these tables
Note - Lambda Layers are an optional feature. If you decide to use this capability, the list of Lambda layers available is available here.
- To configure the Serverless Framework to work with Lumigo, simply install our plugin: serverless-lumigo-plugin
To manually configure Lumigo in your Lambda functions:
- First, install the
@lumigo/tracer
package using your preferred package manager:
$ npm i @lumigo/tracer
# or
$ yarn add @lumigo/tracer
- Next, wrap your
handler
in Lumigo'strace
function (note: replaceYOUR-TOKEN-HERE
with your Lumigo API token):
// javascript
const lumigo = require('@lumigo/tracer')({ token: 'YOUR-TOKEN-HERE' })
const myHandler = async (event, context, callback) => { ... }
exports.handler = lumigo.trace(myHandler)
// typescript
import lumigo from '@lumigo/tracer';
const tracer = lumigo({ token: 'YOUR-TOKEN-HERE' });
export const handler = tracer.trace(async (event, context) => {
...
});
For Typescript users, you must add the following to your tsconfig.json
file:
{
...,
"esModuleInterop": true,
}
You can read more about it here
- Your function is now fully instrumented
@lumigo/tracer
offers several different configuration options. Pass these to the Lambda function as environment variables:
LUMIGO_DEBUG=TRUE
- Enables debug loggingLUMIGO_SECRET_MASKING_REGEX='["regex1", "regex2"]'
- Prevents Lumigo from sending keys that match the supplied regular expressions. All regular expressions are case-insensitive. By default, Lumigo applies the following regular expressions:[".*pass.*", ".*key.*", ".*secret.*", ".*credential.*", ".*passphrase.*"]
.- We support more granular masking using the following parameters. If not given, the above configuration is the fallback:
LUMIGO_SECRET_MASKING_REGEX_HTTP_REQUEST_BODIES
,LUMIGO_SECRET_MASKING_REGEX_HTTP_REQUEST_HEADERS
,LUMIGO_SECRET_MASKING_REGEX_HTTP_RESPONSE_BODIES
,LUMIGO_SECRET_MASKING_REGEX_HTTP_RESPONSE_HEADERS
,LUMIGO_SECRET_MASKING_REGEX_HTTP_QUERY_PARAMS
.
- We support more granular masking using the following parameters. If not given, the above configuration is the fallback:
LUMIGO_DOMAINS_SCRUBBER='[".*secret.*"]'
- Prevents Lumigo from collecting both request and response details from a list of domains. This accepts a comma-separated list of regular expressions that is JSON-formatted. By default, the tracer uses["secretsmanager\..*\.amazonaws\.com", "ssm\..*\.amazonaws\.com", "kms\..*\.amazonaws\.com"]
. Note - These defaults are overridden when you define a different list of regular expressions.LUMIGO_PROPAGATE_W3C=TRUE
- Add W3C TraceContext headers to outgoing HTTP requests. This enables uninterrupted transactions with applications traced with OpenTelemetry.LUMIGO_SWITCH_OFF=TRUE
- In the event a critical issue arises, this turns off all actions that Lumigo takes in response to your code. This happens without a deployment, and is picked up on the next function run once the environment variable is present.
If your function is part of a set of step functions, you can add the flag step_function: true
to the Lumigo tracer import. Alternatively, you can configure the step function using an environment variable LUMIGO_STEP_FUNCTION=True
. When this is active, Lumigo tracks all states in the step function in a single transaction, easing debugging and observability.
const lumigo = require('@lumigo/tracer')({ token: 'DEADBEEF', step_function: true })
Note: the tracer adds the key "_lumigo"
to the return value of the function.
If you override the "Parameters"
configuration, add "_lumigo.$": "$._lumigo"
to ensure this value is still present.
Below is an example configuration for a Lambda function that is part of a step function that has overridden its parameters:
"States": {
"state1": {
"Type": "Task",
"Resource": "arn:aws:lambda:us-west-2:ACCOUNT:function:FUNCTION_NAME",
"Parameters": {
"Changed": "parameters",
"_lumigo.$": "$._lumigo"
},
"Next": "state2"
},
"state2": {
"Type": "pass",
"End": true
}
}
With the tracer configured, simply call
console.log("[LUMIGO_LOG] <YOUR_MESSAGE>");
to create custom errors that are visible throughout the platform. This can be used anywhere in your Lambda code, and is included with the @lumigo/tracer
package.
You can add execution tags to a function with dynamic values using the parameter addExecutionTag
.
These tags will be searchable from within the Lumigo platform.
To add a tag to a manual trace statement:
-
Add the following to your code:
const lumigo = require('@lumigo/tracer')({ token: 'YOUR-TOKEN-HERE' })
-
Add execution tags by using
lumigo.addExecutionTag('<key>', '<value>');
To add a tag to an automatically-traced function:
-
Add the following to the top of your handler's .js file:
const lumigo = require('@lumigo/tracer')
-
Use
lumigo.addExecutionTag('<key>', '<value>');
anywhere in your lambda code.
Execution tags are subject to the following limitations:
- The maximum number of tags is 50.
- Key length must be between 1 and 50.
- Value length must be between 1 and 70.
Secrets scrubbing are subject to the following limitations:
- Only JSON data secrets scrubbing is supported