// Type definitions for newrelic 6.13 // Project: http://github.com/newrelic/node-newrelic // Definitions by: Matt R. Wilson // Brooks Patton // Michael Bond // Kyle Scully // Kenneth Aasan // Jon Flaishans // Dylan Smith // BlueJeans by Verizon // Definitions: https://github.com/DefinitelyTyped/DefinitelyTyped // https://docs.newrelic.com/docs/agents/nodejs-agent/api-guides/nodejs-agent-api /** * Give the current transaction a custom name. * * Overrides any New Relic naming rules set in configuration or from New Relic's servers. * * IMPORTANT: this function must be called when a transaction is active. New * Relic transactions are tied to web requests, so this method may be called * from within HTTP or HTTPS listener functions, Express routes, or other * contexts where a web request or response object are in scope. * * The `name` will be prefixed with 'Custom/' when sent. */ export function setTransactionName(name: string): void; /** * Returns a handle on the currently executing transaction. * * This handle can then be used to end or ignore a given transaction safely from any context. * It is best used with newrelic.startWebTransaction() and newrelic.startBackgroundTransaction(). */ export function getTransaction(): TransactionHandle; /** * Specify the `Dispatcher` and `Dispatcher Version` environment values. * * A dispatcher is typically the service responsible for brokering * the request with the process responsible for responding to the * request. For example Node's `http` module would be the dispatcher * for incoming HTTP requests. */ export function setDispatcher(name: string, version?: string): void; /** * Give the current transaction a name based on your own idea of what * constitutes a controller in your Node application. Also allows you to * optionally specify the action being invoked on the controller. If the action * is omitted, then the API will default to using the HTTP method used in the * request (e.g. GET, POST, DELETE). Overrides any New Relic naming rules set * in configuration or from New Relic's servers. * * IMPORTANT: this function must be called when a transaction is active. New * Relic transactions are tied to web requests, so this method may be called * from within HTTP or HTTPS listener functions, Express routes, or other * contexts where a web request or response object are in scope. * * The `name` will be prefixed with 'Controller/' when sent. * The `action` defaults to the HTTP method used for the request. */ export function setControllerName(name: string, action: string): void; /** * Add a custom attribute to the current transaction. * * Some attributes are reserved (see CUSTOM_BLACKLIST in the docs for the current, very short list), and * as with most API methods, this must be called in the context of an * active transaction. * * Most recently set value wins. */ export function addCustomAttribute(key: string, value: string | number | boolean): void; /** * Adds all custom attributes in an object to the current transaction. * * See documentation for `addCustomAttribute` for more information on setting custom attributes. */ export function addCustomAttributes(atts: { [key: string]: string | number | boolean }): void; /** * Tell the tracer whether to ignore the current transaction. * * The most common use for this will be to mark a transaction as ignored (maybe it's handling * a websocket polling channel, or maybe it's an external call you don't care * is slow), but it's also useful when you want a transaction that would * otherwise be ignored due to URL or transaction name normalization rules * to *not* be ignored. */ export function setIgnoreTransaction(ignored: boolean): void; /** * Send errors to New Relic that you've already handled yourself. * * NOTE: Errors that are recorded using this method do _not_ obey the `ignore_status_codes` configuration. * * Optional. Any custom attributes to be displayed in the New Relic UI. */ export function noticeError(error: Error, customAttributes?: { [key: string]: string | number | boolean }): void; /** * If the URL for a transaction matches the provided pattern, name the * transaction with the provided name. * * If there are capture groups in the pattern (which is a standard JavaScript regular expression, * and can be passed as either a RegExp or a string), then the substring matches ($1, $2, * etc.) are replaced in the name string. BE CAREFUL WHEN USING SUBSTITUTION. * If the replacement substrings are highly variable (i.e. are identifiers, * GUIDs, or timestamps), the rule will generate too many metrics and * potentially get your application blacklisted by New Relic. * * An example of a good rule with replacements: * * newrelic.addNamingRule('^/storefront/(v[1-5])/(item|category|tag)', 'CommerceAPI/$1/$2') * * An example of a bad rule with replacements: * * newrelic.addNamingRule('^/item/([0-9a-f]+)', 'Item/$1') * * Keep in mind that the original URL and any query parameters will be sent * along with the request, so slow transactions will still be identifiable. * * Naming rules can not be removed once added. They can also be added via the * agent's configuration. See configuration documentation for details. */ export function addNamingRule(pattern: RegExp | string, name: string): void; /** * If the URL for a transaction matches the provided pattern, ignore the transaction attached to that URL. * * Useful for filtering socket.io connections and other long-polling requests out of your agents to keep * them from distorting an app's apdex or mean response time. * * Example: * * newrelic.addIgnoringRule('^/socket\\.io/') */ export function addIgnoringRule(pattern: RegExp | string): void; /** * Get the header necessary for Browser Monitoring. * * This script must be manually injected into your templates, as high as possible * in the header, but _after_ any X-UA-COMPATIBLE HTTP-EQUIV meta tags. * Otherwise you may hurt IE! * * This method must be called _during_ a transaction, and must be called every * time you want to generate the headers. * * Do *not* reuse the headers between users, or even between requests. */ export function getBrowserTimingHeader(): string; /** * Instrument a particular method to improve visibility into a transaction, * or optionally turn it into a metric. * * The name defines a name for the segment. This name will be visible in transaction traces and * as a new metric in the New Relic UI. * The record flag defines whether the segment should be recorded as a metric. * The handler is the function you want to track as a segment. * The optional callback is a function passed to the handler to fire after its work is done. * * The agent begins timing the segment when startSegment is called. * The segment is ended when either the handler finishes executing, or callback is fired, if it is provided. * If a promise is returned from the handler, the segment's ending will be tied to that promise resolving or rejecting. */ export function startSegment>(name: string, record: boolean, handler: T): T; export function startSegment any>( name: string, record: boolean, handler: (cb?: C) => T, callback?: C, ): T; /** * Instrument a particular callback to improve visibility into a transaction. * * Use this API call to improve instrumentation of a particular method, or to track work across asynchronous * boundaries by calling createTracer() in both the target function and its parent asynchronous function. * * The name will be visible in transaction traces and as a new metric in the New Relic UI. * * The agent begins timing the segment when createTracer is called, and ends the segment when the callback * defined by the callback argument finishes executing. * * This method has been deprecated in favor of newrelic.startSegment() */ export function createTracer any>(name: string, handle: T): T; /** * Creates and starts a web transaction to record work done in the handle supplied. * * This transaction will run until the handle * synchronously returns UNLESS: * 1. The handle function returns a promise, where the end of the * transaction will be tied to the end of the promise returned. * 2. `getTransaction` is called in the handle, flagging the * transaction as externally handled. In this case the transaction * will be ended when `TransactionHandle#end` is called in the user's code. * * Example: * var newrelic = require('newrelic') * newrelic.startWebTransaction('/some/url/path', function() { * var transaction = newrelic.getTransaction() * setTimeout(function() { * // do some work * transaction.end() * }, 100) * }) * * The `url` is used to name and group related transactions in APM, * so it should be a generic name and not include any variable parameters. */ export function startWebTransaction(url: string, handle: Promise): Promise; export function startWebTransaction(url: string, handle: (...args: any[]) => T): T; /** * Creates and starts a background transaction to record work done in the handle supplied. * * This transaction will run until the handle * synchronously returns UNLESS: * 1. The handle function returns a promise, where the end of the * transaction will be tied to the end of the promise returned. * 2. `API#getTransaction` is called in the handle, flagging the * transaction as externally handled. In this case the transaction * will be ended when `TransactionHandle#end` is called in the user's code. * * Example: * var newrelic = require('newrelic') * newrelic.startBackgroundTransaction('Red October', 'Subs', function() { * var transaction = newrelic.getTransaction() * setTimeout(function() { * // do some work * transaction.end() * }, 100) * }) * * The `url` is used to name and group related transactions in APM, * so it should be a generic name and not include any variable parameters. * * The optional `group can be used for grouping background transactions in APM. * For more information see: * https://docs.newrelic.com/docs/apm/applications-menu/monitoring/transactions-page#txn-type-dropdown */ export function startBackgroundTransaction(name: string, handle: Promise): Promise; export function startBackgroundTransaction(name: string, handle: (...args: any[]) => T): T; export function startBackgroundTransaction(name: string, group: string, handle: Promise): Promise; export function startBackgroundTransaction(name: string, group: string, handle: (...args: any[]) => T): T; /** * End the current web or background custom transaction. * * This method requires being in the correct transaction context when called. */ export function endTransaction(): void; /** * Record an event-based metric, usually associated with a particular duration. * * The `name` must be a string following standard metric naming rules. The `value` will * usually be a number, but it can also be an object. * * When `value` is a numeric value, it should represent the magnitude of a measurement * associated with an event; for example, the duration for a particular method call. * * When `value` is an object, it must contain count, total, min, max, and sumOfSquares * keys, all with number values. This form is useful to aggregate metrics on your own * and report them periodically; for example, from a setInterval. These values will * be aggregated with any previously collected values for the same metric. The names * of these keys match the names of the keys used by the platform API. */ export function recordMetric(name: string, value: number | Metric): void; /** * Update a metric that acts as a simple counter. * * The count of the selected metric will be incremented by the specified amount, defaulting to 1. */ export function incrementMetric(name: string, value?: number): void; /** * Record an event-based metric, usually associated with a particular duration. * * `eventType` must be an alphanumeric string less than 255 characters. * The keys of `attributes` must be shorter than 255 characters. */ export function recordCustomEvent(eventType: string, attributes: { [keys: string]: boolean | number | string }): void; /** * Registers an instrumentation function. * * The provided onRequire callback will be fired when the given module is loaded with require. * The moduleName parameter should be the string that will be passed to require; * for example, 'express' or 'amqplib/callback_api'. * * The optional onError callback is called if the onRequire parameters throws an error. * This is useful for debugging your instrumentation. * * Use this method to: * - Add instrumentation for modules not currently instrumented by New Relic. * - Instrument your own code. * - Replace the Node.js agent's built-in instrumentation with your own. */ export const instrument: Instrument; /** * Sets an instrumentation callback for a datastore module. * * This method is just like `instrument`, except it provides a datastore-service-specialized shim. */ export const instrumentDatastore: Instrument; /** * The instrumentLoadedModule method allows you to add stock instrumentation to specific modules * in situations where it's impossible to have require('newrelic'); as the first line of your app's main module. */ export function instrumentLoadedModule(moduleName: string, moduleInstance: any): boolean; /** * Sets an instrumentation callback for a web framework module. * * This method is just like `instrument`, except it provides a web-framework-specialized shim. */ export const instrumentWebframework: Instrument; /** * Sets an instrumentation callback for a message service client module. * * This method is just like `instrument`, except it provides a message-service-specialized shim. */ export const instrumentMessages: Instrument; /** * Gracefully shuts down the agent. * * If `collectPendingData` is true, the agent will send any pending data to the collector * before shutting down. Defaults to `false`. */ export function shutdown(cb?: (error?: Error) => void): void; export function shutdown( options?: { collectPendingData?: boolean; timeout?: number; waitForIdle?: boolean }, cb?: (error?: Error) => void, ): void; /** * Returns key/value pairs which can be used to link traces or entities. * It will only contain items with meaningful values. For instance, if distributed tracing is disabled, * trace.id will not be included. */ export function getLinkingMetadata(omitSupportability?: boolean): LinkingMetadata; /** * Returns and object containing the current trace ID and span ID. * This API requires distributed tracing to be enabled or an empty object will be returned. */ export function getTraceMetadata(): TraceMetadata; /** * Wraps an AWS Lambda function with NewRelic instrumentation and returns the wrapped function. * * The handler should be an AWS Lambda handler function. * Returns a function with identical signature to the provided handler function. */ export function setLambdaHandler any>(handler: T): T; export interface Instrument { (opts: { moduleName: string; onRequire: () => void; onError?: (err: Error) => void }): void; (moduleName: string, onRequire: () => void, onError?: (err: Error) => void): void; } export interface Metric { count: number; total: number; min: number; max: number; sumOfSquares: number; } export interface DistributedTracePayload { /** * The base64 encoded JSON representation of the distributed trace payload. */ text(): string; /** * The base64 encoded JSON representation of the distributed trace payload. */ httpSafe(): string; } export type DistributedTraceHeaders = Record; export interface TransactionHandle { /** * End the transaction. */ end(callback?: () => any): void; /** * Mark the transaction to be ignored. */ ignore(): void; /** * Modifies the headers map that is passed in by adding W3C Trace Context headers * and New Relic Distributed Trace headers. */ insertDistributedTraceHeaders(headers: DistributedTraceHeaders): void; /** * Used to instrument the called service for inclusion in a distributed trace. * * Links the spans in a trace by accepting a payload generated by `insertDistributedTraceHeaders` * or generated by some other W3C Trace Context compliant tracer. This method accepts the headers * of an incoming request, looks for W3C Trace Context headers, and if not found, falls back to * New Relic distributed trace headers. * * Check the docs for valid transport types. If an invalid type is provided, it will fall back to "Unknown". */ acceptDistributedTraceHeaders(transportType: string, headers: DistributedTraceHeaders): void; /** * Creates a distributed trace payload. * @deprecated - use insertDistributedTraceHeaders instead */ createDistributedTracePayload(): DistributedTracePayload; /** * Parses incoming distributed trace header payload. * @deprecated - use acceptDistributedTraceHeaders instead */ acceptDistributedTracePayload(payload: DistributedTracePayload): void; /** * Return whether this Transaction is being sampled */ isSampled(): boolean; } export interface LinkingMetadata { /** * The current trace ID */ 'trace.id'?: string; /** * The current span ID */ 'span.id'?: string; /** * The application name specified in the connect request as * app_name. If multiple application names are specified this will only be * the first name */ 'entity.name': string; /** * The string "SERVICE" */ 'entity.type': string; /** * The entity ID returned in the connect reply as entity_guid */ 'entity.guid'?: string; /** * The hostname as specified in the connect request as * utilization.full_hostname. If utilization.full_hostname is null or empty, * this will be the hostname specified in the connect request as host. */ hostname: string; } export interface TraceMetadata { /** * The current trace ID */ traceId?: string; /** * The current span ID */ spanId?: string; }