Buffered metrics reporting via the Datadog HTTP API.
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.
Datadog-metrics is compatible with Node.js v12 and later. You can install it with NPM:
npm install datadog-metrics --save
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
There's also a longer tutorial that walks you through setting up a monitoring dashboard on Datadog using datadog-metrics.
Make sure the DATADOG_API_KEY
or DD_API_KEY
environment variable is set to your Datadog API key (you can also set it via the apiKey
option in code). You can find the API key under Integrations > APIs. Please note the API key is different from an application key. For more details, see Datadog’s “API and Application Keys” docs.
There are three ways to use this module to instrument an application. They differ in the level of control that they provide.
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);
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);
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({
site: 'datadoghq.eu',
apiKey: 'TESTKEY',
host: 'myhost',
prefix: 'myapp.',
flushIntervalSeconds: 15,
defaultTags: ['env:staging', 'region:us-east-1'],
onError (error) {
console.error('There was an error auto-flushing metrics:', error);
}
});
metricsLogger.gauge('mygauge', 42);
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.
- This defaults to 15 seconds. Set it to 0 to disable auto-flushing which
means you must call
-
site
: Sets the Datadog "site", or server where metrics are sent. (optional)- Defaults to
datadoghq.com
. - See more details on setting your site at: https://docs.datadoghq.com/getting_started/site/#access-the-datadog-site
- You can also set this via the
DATADOG_SITE
orDD_SITE
environment variable. - Ignored if you set the
reporter
option.
- Defaults to
-
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 the
DATADOG_API_KEY
orDD_API_KEY
environment variable by default. - You must either set this option or the environment variable. An API key is required to send metrics.
- Make sure not to confuse this with your application key! For more details, see: https://docs.datadoghq.com/account_management/api-app-keys/
- Ignored if you set the
reporter
option.
- It's usually best to keep this in an environment variable.
Datadog-metrics looks for the API key in the
-
appKey
:⚠️ Deprecated. This does nothing and will be removed in an upcoming release.Sets the Datadog application key. This is not actually needed for sending metrics or distributions, and you probably shouldn’t set it. Do not confuse this with your API key! For more, see: https://docs.datadoghq.com/account_management/api-app-keys/
-
defaultTags
: Default tags used for all metric reporting. (optional)- Set tags that are common to all metrics.
-
onError
: A function to call when there are asynchronous errors seding buffered metrics to Datadog. It takes one argument (the error). (optional)- If this option is not set, the error will be logged to stderr.
-
histogram
: An object with default options for all histograms. This has the same properties as the options object on thehistogram()
method. Options specified when calling the method are layered on top of this object. (optional) -
retries
: How many times to retry failed metric submissions to Datadog’s API.- Defaults to
2
. - Ignored if you set the
reporter
option.
- Defaults to
-
retryBackoff
: How long to wait before retrying a failed Datadog API call. Subsequent retries multiply this delay by 2^(retry count). For example, if this is set to1
, retries will happen after 1, then 2, then 4 seconds.- Defaults to
1
. - Ignored if you set the
reporter
option.
- Defaults to
-
reporter
: An object that actually sends the buffered metrics. (optional)- There are two built-in reporters you can use:
reporters.DatadogReporter
sends metrics to Datadog’s API, and is the default.reporters.NullReporter
throws the metrics away. It’s useful for tests or temporarily disabling your metrics.
- There are two built-in reporters you can use:
Example:
metrics.init({ host: 'myhost', prefix: 'myapp.' });
Disabling metrics using NullReporter
:
metrics.init({ host: 'myhost', reporter: metrics.NullReporter() });
Send metrics to a totally different service instead of Datadog:
metrics.init({
reporter: {
async report(series) {
// `series` is an array of metrics objects, formatted basically how the
// Datadog v1 metrics API and v1 distributions API want them.
const response = await fetch('https://my-datadog-like-api.com/series', {
method: 'POST',
body: JSON.stringify({ series })
});
return await response.json();
}
}
});
metrics.gauge(key, value[, tags[, timestamp]])
Record the current value of a metric. The 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);
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);
metrics.histogram(key, value[, tags[, timestamp[, options]]])
Sample a histogram value. Histograms will produce metrics that
describe the distribution of the recorded values, namely the minimum,
maximum, average, median, 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);
You can also specify an options object to adjust which aggregations and percentiles should be calculated. For example, to only calculate an average, count, and 99th percentile:
metrics.histogram('test.service_time', 0.248, ['tag:value'], Date.now(), {
// Aggregates can include 'max', 'min', 'sum', 'avg', 'median', or 'count'.
aggregates: ['avg', 'count'],
// Percentiles can include any decimal between 0 and 1.
percentiles: [0.99]
});
metrics.distribution(key, value[, tags[, timestamp]])
Send a distribution value. Distributions are similar to histograms (they create several metrics for count, average, percentiles, etc.), but they are calculated server-side on Datadog’s systems. This is much higher-overhead than histograms, and the individual calculations made from it have to be configured on the Datadog website instead of in the options for this package.
You should use this in environments where you have many instances of your
application running in parallel, or instances constantly starting and stopping
with different hostnames or identifiers and tagging each one separately is not
feasible. AWS Lambda or serverless functions are a great example of this. In
such environments, you also might want to use a distribution instead of
increment
or gauge
(if you have two instances of your app sending those
metrics at the same second, and they are not tagged differently or have
different host
names, one will overwrite the other — distributions will not).
Example:
metrics.distribution('test.service_time', 0.248);
metrics.flush()
Calling flush
sends any buffered metrics to Datadog and returns a promise.
This function will be called automatically unless you set flushIntervalSeconds
to 0
.
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.
// Deprecated:
metrics.flush(
() => console.log('Flush suceeded!'),
(error) => console.log('Flush error:', error)
);
// Current, using `await`:
try {
await metrics.flush();
console.log('Flush suceeded!');
} catch (error) {
console.log('Flush error:', error);
}
// Or, using Promise callbacks:
metrics.flush()
.then(() => console.log('Flush succeeded'))
.catch((error) => console.log('Flush error:', error)) ;
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
Contributions are always welcome! For more info on how to contribute or develop locally, please see CONTRIBUTING.md
.
Breaking Changes:
TBD
New Features:
TBD
Deprecations:
TBD
Bug Fixes:
TBD
Maintenance:
TBD
Datadog-metrics now automatically retries failed metric submissions and uses promises for asynchronous actions! There are a handful of other deprecations and small improvements.
Breaking Changes:
- The
DatadogReporter
constructor now takes an options object instead of positional arguments. Using this constructor directly is pretty rare, so this won’t affect most users. (#138)
New Features:
-
Promises: asynchronous actions now use promises instead of callbacks. Callbacks are deprecated, but still work — they’ll be fully removed in v0.13.0. This affects:
- The
flush()
method now returns a promise. - The
report(series)
method on any custom reporters should now return a promise. For now, datadog-metrics will use the old callback-based behavior if the method signature has callbacks listed afterseries
argument.
(See #125)
- The
-
Retries: flushes to Datadog’s API are now retried automatically. This can help you work around intermittent network issues or rate limits. To adjust retries, use the
retries
andretryBackoff
options.metrics.init({ // How many times to retry. To disable retries, set this to 0. retries: 2, // How long (in seconds) to wait between retries. Subsequent retries // wait exponentially longer. retryBackoff: 1 });
(See #138)
-
Environment variables: you can now use either
DATADOG_
orDD_
prefixes for environment variables (previously, onlyDATADOG_
worked). For example, you can set your API key viaDATADOG_API_KEY
orDD_API_KEY
. (#137)
Deprecations:
-
The
appKey
option is no longer supported. Application keys (as opposed to API keys) are not actually needed for sending metrics or distributions to the Datadog API. Including it in your configuration adds no benefits, but risks exposing a sensitive credential. (#127) -
The
DATADOG_API_HOST
environment variable is now deprecated. Please useDATADOG_SITE
orDD_SITE
instead (theapiHost
option was renamed tosite
in v0.11.0, but theDATADOG_API_HOST
environment variable was accidentally left as-is). (#134)
This release updates the TypeScript types for this project, and doesn’t include any changes to functionality. There are also no changes since v0.11.4-a.1.
Bug Fixes:
-
BufferedMetricsLogger
is now an actual class & type when you import it in TypeScript. That is, you can now do:import { BufferedMetricsLogger } from 'datadog-metrics'; function useLogger(logger: BufferedMetricsLogger) { // ... }
Previously, you would have had to declare the type for
logger
astypeof BufferedMetricsLogger.prototype
. (#120)
This pre-release is meant for testing a fix for #119.
Bug Fixes:
- Typings: Ensure
BufferedMetricsLogger
is seen as an actual class & type when importing in TypeScript. (#120)
⛔️ Do not use this release.
Fixes & Maintenance:
-
Fix types and documentation for the
aggregates
option for histograms and thehistogram.aggregates
option for the library as a whole. It was previously listed asaggregations
, which was incorrect. (Thanks to @Calyhre in #117.) -
Improve documentation and add a more detailed error message about API keys vs. application keys. (#118)
Fixes & Maintenance:
- Resolve a deprecation warning from the underlying datadog-api-client library. This also updates the minimum required version of that library. (Thanks to @acatalucci-synth & @fcsonline in #112.)
New Features:
-
Built-in TypeScript definitions. If you use TypeScript, you no longer need to install separate type definitions from
@types/datadog-metrics
— they’re now built-in. Please make sure to remove@types/datadog-metrics
from your dev dependencies.Even if you’re writing regular JavaScript, you should now see better autocomplete suggestions and documentation in editors that support TypeScript definitions (e.g. VisualStudio Code, WebStorm).
Breaking Changes:
- datadog-metrics now uses modern
class
syntax internally. In most cases, you shouldn’t need to change anything. However, if you are callingBufferedMetricsLogger.apply(...)
orBufferedMetricsLogger.call(...)
, you’ll need to change your code to usenew BufferedMetricsLogger(...)
instead.
Deprecated Features:
-
The
apiHost
option has been renamed tosite
so that it matches up with Datadog docs and official packages. The oldapiHost
name still works for now, but will be removed in the future. -
The
reporters.DataDogReporter
class has been renamed toreporters.DatadogReporter
(lower-case D in "dog") so that it correctly matches Datadog’s actual name. The old name still works, but will be removed in the future.
This release includes several new features and bugfixes!
New Features:
-
Support for distribution metrics. You can now send distributions to Datadog by doing:
const metrics = require('datadog-metrics'); metrics.distribution('my.metric.name', 3.8, ['tags:here']);
Distributions are similar to histograms (they create several metrics for count, average, percentiles, etc.), but they are calculated server-side on Datadog’s systems. For more details and guidance on when to use them, see:
- The documentation in this project’s README
- Datadog’s documentation at https://docs.datadoghq.com/metrics/distributions/
(Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
-
Add an
onError
option for handling asynchronous errors while flushing buffered metrics. You can use this to get details on an error or to send error info to a tracking service like Sentry.io:const metrics = require('datadog-metrics'); metrics.init({ onError (error) { console.error('There was an error sending to Datadog:', error); } });
-
The built-in reporter classes are now available for you to use. If you need to disable the metrics library for some reason, you can now do so with:
const metrics = require('datadog-metrics'); metrics.init({ reporter: new metrics.reporters.NullReporter(), });
(Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
-
Add an option for setting histogram defaults. In v0.10.0, the
histogram()
function gained the ability to set what aggregations and percentiles it generates with a finaloptions
argument. You can now specify ahistogram
option forinit()
orBufferedMetricsLogger
in order to set default options for all calls tohistogram()
. Any options you set in the actualhistogram()
call will layer on top of the defaults:const metrics = require('datadog-metrics'); metrics.init({ histogram: { aggregates: ['sum', 'avg'], percentiles: [0.99] } }); // Acts as if the options had been set to: // { aggregates: ['sum', 'avg'], percentiles: [0.99] } metrics.histogram('my.metric.name', 3.8); // Acts as if the options had been set to: // { aggregates: ['sum', 'avg'], percentiles: [0.5, 0.95] } metrics.histogram('my.metric.name', 3.8, [], Date.now(), { percentiles: [0.5, 0.95] });
(Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
-
Add a
.median
aggregation for histograms. When you log a histogram metric, it ultimately creates several metrics that track the minimum value, average value, maximum value, etc. There is now one that tracks the median value. StatsD creates the same metric from histograms, so you may find this useful if transitioning from StatsD. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.) -
This package no longer locks specific versions of its dependencies (instead, your package manager can choose any version that is compatible). This may help when deduplicating packages for faster installs or smaller bundles. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
Bug Fixes:
- Don’t use
unref()
on timers in non-Node.js environments. This is a step towards browser compatibility, although we are not testing browser-based usage yet. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.) - The
apiHost
option was broken in v0.10.0 and now works again. (Thanks to @Mr0grog and @npeters.) - Creating a second instance of
BufferedMetricsLogger
will not longer change the credentials used by previously createdBufferedMetricsLogger
instances. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
Internal Updates:
- Renamed the default branch in this repo to
main
. (Thanks to @dbader.) - Use GitHub actions for continuous integration. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
- Code style cleanup. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
- When flushing, send each metric with its own list of tags. This helps mitigate subtle errors where a change to one metric’s tags may affect others. (Thanks to @Mr0grog.)
- FIX: bug in 0.10.0 where
@datadog/datadog-api-client
was not used correctly. (Thanks to @gquinteros93)
-
Breaking change: we now use Datadog’s official
@datadog/datadog-api-client
package to send metrics to Datadog. This makesdatadog-metrics
usable with Webpack, but removes theagent
option. If you were using this option and the new library does not provide a way to meet your needs, please let us know by filing an issue! (Thanks to @thatguychrisw) -
You can now customize what metrics are generated by a histogram. When logging a histogram metric, the 5th argument is an optional object with information about which aggregations and percentiles to create metrics for:
const metrics = require('datadog-metrics'); metrics.histogram('my.metric.name', 3.8, [], Date.now(), { // Aggregates can include 'max', 'min', 'sum', 'avg', or 'count'. aggregates: ['max', 'min', 'sum', 'avg', 'count'], // Percentiles can include any decimal between 0 and 1. percentiles: [0.75, 0.85, 0.95, 0.99] });
(Thanks to @gquinteros93.)
-
INTERNAL: Clean up continuous integration on TravisCI. (Thanks to @ErikBoesen.)
- INTERNAL: Update
dogapi
andjshint
to their latest versions. (Thanks to @ErikBoesen.)
-
Expose new
apiHost
option oninit()
andBufferedMetricsLogger
constructor. This makes it possible to actually configure the Datadog site to submit metrics to. For example, you can now submit metrics to Datadog’s Europe servers with:const metrics = require('datadog-metrics'); metrics.init({ apiHost: 'datadoghq.eu' });
(Thanks to @ErikBoesen.)
- FIX: Add default Datadog site. (Thanks to @ErikBoesen.)
- Clean up continuous integration tooling on TravisCI. (Thanks to @rpelliard.)
- Correct “Datadog” throughout the documentation. It turns out there’s not supposed to be a captial D in the middle. (Thanks to @dbenamy.)
- INTERNAL: Add internal support for submitting metrics to different Datadog sites (e.g.
datadoghq.eu
for Europe). (Thanks to @fermelone.)
- Added @ErikBoesen as a maintainer!
- INTERNAL: Update
dogapi
version. - INTERNAL: Validate the
onSuccess
callback inNullReporter
. (Thanks to @dkMorlok.)
- FIX: don't increment count when value is 0 (Thanks to @haspriyank)
- allow passing in custom https agent (Thanks to @flovilmart)
- update metric type
counter
tocount
ascounter
is deprecated by Datadog (Thanks to @dustingibbs)
- FIX: bump debug to 3.1.0 to fix NSP Advisory #534 (Thanks to @kirkstrobeck)
- FIX: call onSuccess on flush even if buffer is empty (Thanks to @mousavian)
- ADD: ability to set custom timestamps (Thanks to @ronny)
- FIX: 0 as valid option for flushIntervalSeconds (thanks to @dkMorlok)
- ADD: Initialize with a default set of tags (thanks to @spence)
- 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
- Update docs (module code remains unchanged)
- API redesign
- Remove
setDefaultXYZ()
and addedinit()
- Allow
increment
to be called with a default value of 1
- The first proper release
- Rename
counter
toincrement
- Work in progress
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.
Your contributions are always welcome! See CONTRIBUTING.md
for more.