react-code-dataset
/
next.js
/docs
/01-app
/03-api-reference
/03-file-conventions
/instrumentation.mdx
| --- | |
| title: instrumentation.js | |
| description: API reference for the instrumentation.js file. | |
| related: | |
| title: Learn more about Instrumentation | |
| links: | |
| - app/guides/instrumentation | |
| --- | |
| The `instrumentation.js|ts` file is used to integrate observability tools into your application, allowing you to track the performance and behavior, and to debug issues in production. | |
| To use it, place the file in the **root** of your application or inside a [`src` folder](/docs/app/api-reference/file-conventions/src-folder) if using one. | |
| ## Exports | |
| ### `register` (optional) | |
| The file exports a `register` function that is called **once** when a new Next.js server instance is initiated. `register` can be an async function. | |
| ```ts filename="instrumentation.ts" switcher | |
| import { registerOTel } from '@vercel/otel' | |
| export function register() { | |
| registerOTel('next-app') | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| ```js filename="instrumentation.js" switcher | |
| import { registerOTel } from '@vercel/otel' | |
| export function register() { | |
| registerOTel('next-app') | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| ### `onRequestError` (optional) | |
| You can optionally export an `onRequestError` function to track **server** errors to any custom observability provider. | |
| - If you're running any async tasks in `onRequestError`, make sure they're awaited. `onRequestError` will be triggered when the Next.js server captures the error. | |
| - The `error` instance might not be the original error instance thrown, as it may be processed by React if encountered during Server Components rendering. If this happens, you can use `digest` property on an error to identify the actual error type. | |
| ```ts filename="instrumentation.ts" switcher | |
| import { type Instrumentation } from 'next' | |
| export const onRequestError: Instrumentation.onRequestError = async ( | |
| err, | |
| request, | |
| context | |
| ) => { | |
| await fetch('https://.../report-error', { | |
| method: 'POST', | |
| body: JSON.stringify({ | |
| message: err.message, | |
| request, | |
| context, | |
| }), | |
| headers: { | |
| 'Content-Type': 'application/json', | |
| }, | |
| }) | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| ```js filename="instrumentation.js" switcher | |
| export async function onRequestError(err, request, context) { | |
| await fetch('https://.../report-error', { | |
| method: 'POST', | |
| body: JSON.stringify({ | |
| message: err.message, | |
| request, | |
| context, | |
| }), | |
| headers: { | |
| 'Content-Type': 'application/json', | |
| }, | |
| }) | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| #### Parameters | |
| The function accepts three parameters: `error`, `request`, and `context`. | |
| ```ts filename="Types" | |
| export function onRequestError( | |
| error: { digest: string } & Error, | |
| request: { | |
| path: string // resource path, e.g. /blog?name=foo | |
| method: string // request method. e.g. GET, POST, etc | |
| headers: { [key: string]: string } | |
| }, | |
| context: { | |
| routerKind: 'Pages Router' | 'App Router' // the router type | |
| routePath: string // the route file path, e.g. /app/blog/[dynamic] | |
| routeType: 'render' | 'route' | 'action' | 'middleware' // the context in which the error occurred | |
| renderSource: | |
| | 'react-server-components' | |
| | 'react-server-components-payload' | |
| | 'server-rendering' | |
| revalidateReason: 'on-demand' | 'stale' | undefined // undefined is a normal request without revalidation | |
| renderType: 'dynamic' | 'dynamic-resume' // 'dynamic-resume' for PPR | |
| } | |
| ): void | Promise<void> | |
| ``` | |
| - `error`: The caught error itself (type is always `Error`), and a `digest` property which is the unique ID of the error. | |
| - `request`: Read-only request information associated with the error. | |
| - `context`: The context in which the error occurred. This can be the type of router (App or Pages Router), and/or (Server Components (`'render'`), Route Handlers (`'route'`), Server Actions (`'action'`), or Middleware (`'middleware'`)). | |
| ### Specifying the runtime | |
| The `instrumentation.js` file works in both the Node.js and Edge runtime, however, you can use `process.env.NEXT_RUNTIME` to target a specific runtime. | |
| ```js filename="instrumentation.js" | |
| export function register() { | |
| if (process.env.NEXT_RUNTIME === 'edge') { | |
| return require('./register.edge') | |
| } else { | |
| return require('./register.node') | |
| } | |
| } | |
| export function onRequestError() { | |
| if (process.env.NEXT_RUNTIME === 'edge') { | |
| return require('./on-request-error.edge') | |
| } else { | |
| return require('./on-request-error.node') | |
| } | |
| } | |
| ``` | |
| ## Version History | |
| | Version | Changes | | |
| | --------- | ------------------------------------------------------- | | |
| | `v15.0.0` | `onRequestError` introduced, `instrumentation` stable | | |
| | `v14.0.4` | Turbopack support for `instrumentation` | | |
| | `v13.2.0` | `instrumentation` introduced as an experimental feature | | |