This plugin adds hooks for tracing and logging resolver invocations. It also comes with a few additional packages for integrating with various tracing providers including opentelemetry, New Relic and Sentry.
yarn add @pothos/plugin-tracing
import TracingPlugin, { wrapResolver, isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
const builder = new SchemaBuilder({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
// Enable tracing for rootFields by default, other fields need to opt in
default: (config) => isRootField(config),
// Log resolver execution duration
wrap: (resolver, options, config) =>
wrapResolver(resolver, (error, duration) => {
console.log(`Executed resolver ${config.parentType}.${config.name} in ${duration}ms`);
}),
},
});
The Tracing plugin is designed to have very limited overhead, and uses a modular approach to cover a wide variety of use cases.
The tracing plugin comes with a number of utility functions for implementing common patterns, and a couple of provider specific modules that can be installed separately (described in more detail below).
The primary interface to the tracing plugin consists of 3 parts:
tracing
option is added to each field, for enabling or configuring tracing for that fieldtracing.default
which is used as a fallback for any field that does not explicitly set its
tracing
options.tracing.wrap
function, which takes a resolver, the tracing option for a field, and a field
configuration object, and should return a wrapped/traced version of the resolver.Enabling tracing on a field is as simple as setting the tracing option to true
builder.queryType({
fields: (t) => ({
hello: t.string({
args: { name: t.arg.string() },
// enable tracing
tracing: true,
resolve: (parent, { name }) => `hello, ${name || 'World'}`,
}),
}),
});
For more advanced tracing setups, you may want to allow fields to provide additional tracing
options. You can do this by customizing the Tracing
generic in the builder.
import TracingPlugin, { wrapResolver, isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
// the `tracing` option can now be a boolean, or an object with a formatMessage function
Tracing: boolean | { formatMessage: (duration: number) => string };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
// Using custom options in your tracer will be described below
...
},
});
builder.queryType({
fields: (t) => ({
hello: t.string({
args: { name: t.arg.string() },
// We can now use custom options when configuring tracing
tracing: { formatMessage: (duration) => `It took ${duration}ms to say hello` },
resolve: (parent, { name }) => `hello, ${name || 'World'}`,
}),
}),
});
In most applications you won't want to configure tracing for each field. Instead you can use the
tracing.default
to enable tracing for specific types of fields.
import TracingPlugin, { wrapResolver, isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: boolean | { formatMessage: (duration: number) => string };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
// Here we enable tracing for root fields
default: (config) => isRootField(config)
wrap: (resolve) => resolve, // actual tracing wrappers will be described below
},
});
There are a number of utility functions for detecting certain types of fields. For most applications tracing every resolver will add significant overhead with very little benefit. The following utilities exported by the tracing plugin can be used to determine which fields should have tracing enabled by default.
isRootField
: Returns true for fields of the Query
, Mutation
, and Subscription
typesisScalarField
: Returns true for fields that return Scalars, or lists of scalarsisEnumField
: Returns true for fields that return an Enum or list of EnumsisExposedField
: Returns true for fields defined with the t.expose*
field builder methods, or
fields that use the defaultFieldResolver
.Tracers work by wrapping the execution of resolver calls. The tracing.wrap
function keeps this
process as minimal as possible by simply providing the resolver for a field, and expecting a wrapped
version of the resolver to be returned. Resolvers can throw errors or return promises, and correctly
handling these edge cases can be a little complicated so the tracing plugin also comes with some
helpers utilities to simplify this process.
tracing.wrap
takes 3 arguments:
resolver
: the resolver for a fieldoptions
: the tracing options for the field (set either on the field, or returned by
tracing.default
).fieldConfig
: A config object that describes the field being wrappedexport const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: boolean | { formatMessage: (duration: number) => string };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config),
wrap: (resolver, options, config) =>
wrapResolver(resolver, (error, duration) => {
const message =
typeof options === 'object'
? options.formatMessage(duration)
: `Executed resolver ${config.parentType}.${config.name} in ${duration}ms`;
console.log(message);
}),
},
});
The wrapResolver
utility takes a resolver, and a onEnd
callback, and returns a wrapped version
of the resolver that will call the callback with an error (or null) and the duration the resolver
took to complete.
The runFunction
helper is similar, but rather than wrapping a resolver, will immediately execute a
function with no arguments. This can be useful for more complex use cases where you need access to
other resolver arguments, or want to add your own logic before the resolver begins executing.
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: boolean | { formatMessage: (duration: number) => string };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config) || (!isScalarField(config) && !isEnumField(config)),
wrap: (resolver, options) => (source, args, ctx, info) => {
doSomethingFirst(args);
return runFunction(
() => resolver(source, args, ctx, info),
(error, duration) => {
console.log(
`Executed resolver for ${info.parentType}.${info.fieldName} in ${duration}ms`,
);
},
);
},
},
});
When defining tracing options for a field, you may want to pass some resolver args to your tracing logic.
The follow example shows how arguments might be passed to a tracer to be attached to a span:
// Create a simple tracer that creates spans, and adds custom attributes if they are provided
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: false | { attributes?: Record<string, unknown> };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => {
if (isRootField(config)) {
return {};
}
return false;
},
// The `tracing` options are passed as the second argument for wrap
wrap: (resolver, options, fieldConfig) => (source, args, ctx, info) => {
const span = tracer.createSpan();
if (options.attributes) {
span.setAttributes();
}
return runFunction(
() => resolver(source, args, ctx, info),
() => {
span.end();
},
);
},
},
});
builder.queryType({
fields: (t) => ({
hello: t.string({
args: { name: t.arg.string() },
// Pass this fields args as a custom attribute
tracing: (root, args) => ({ attributes: { args } }),
resolve: (root, { name }) => `hello, ${name || 'World'}`,
}),
}),
});
The default
option can also return a function to access resolver arguments:
// Create a simple tracer that creates spans, and adds custom attributes if they are provided
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: false | { attributes?: Record<string, unknown> };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => {
if (isRootField(config)) {
// For all root fields, add arguments as a custom attribute
return (root, args) => ({ attributes: { args }});
}
// disable tracing for exposed fields
if (isExposedField(config)) {
return false
}
// Enable tracing, but don't add any attributes
return {}
},
wrap: ...,
});
It is important to know that if a field uses a function to return its tracing option (either
directly on the field definition, or as a default) the behavior of the wrap
function changes
slightly.
By default wrap
is called for each field when the schema is built. For fields that return their
tracing option via a function, wrap will be called whenever the field is executed because the
tracing options are dependent on the resolver arguments.
For many uses cases this does not add a lot of overhead, but as a rule of thumb, it is always more efficient to use tracing options that don't depend on the resolver value.
The above example could be re-designed slightly to improve tracing performance:
// Create a simple tracer that creates spans, and adds custom attributes if they are provided
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: false | { includeArgs?: boolean };
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => {
if (isRootField(config)) {
// For all root fields, add arguments as a custom attribute
return { includeArgs: true }
}
return false
},
// Wrap is now only called once for each field at build time
// since we don't depend on args to generate the tracing options
wrap: (resolver, options, fieldConfig) => (source, args, ctx, info) => {
const span = tracer.createSpan();
if (options.includeArgs) {
span.setAttributes({ args });
}
return runFunction(
() => resolver(source, args, ctx, info),
() => {
span.end();
},
);
},,
});
yarn add @pothos/tracing-opentelemetry @opentelemetry/semantic-conventions @opentelemetry/api
import SchemaBuilder from '@pothos/core';
import TracingPlugin, { isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
import { createOpenTelemetryWrapper } from '@pothos/tracing-opentelemetry';
import { tracer } from './tracer';
const createSpan = createOpenTelemetryWrapper(tracer, {
includeSource: true,
});
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config),
wrap: (resolver, options) => createSpan(resolver, options),
},
});
includeArgs
: default: false
includeSource
: default: false
ignoreError
: default: false
onSpan
: (span, tracingOptions, parent, args, context, info) => void
import { AttributeValue } from '@opentelemetry/api';
import SchemaBuilder from '@pothos/core';
import TracingPlugin, { isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
import { createOpenTelemetryWrapper } from '@pothos/tracing-opentelemetry';
import { tracer } from './tracer';
type TracingOptions = boolean | { attributes?: Record<string, AttributeValue> };
const createSpan = createOpenTelemetryWrapper<TracingOptions>(tracer, {
includeSource: true,
onSpan: (span, options) => {
if (typeof options === 'object' && options.attributes) {
span.setAttributes(options.attributes);
}
},
});
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder<{
Tracing: TracingOptions;
}>({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config),
wrap: (resolver, options) => createSpan(resolver, options),
},
});
builder.queryType({
fields: (t) => ({
hello: t.string({
args: { name: t.arg.string() },
tracing: (parent, { name }) => ({ attributes: { name } }),
resolve: (parent, { name }) => `hello, ${name || 'World'}`,
}),
}),
});
The tracing plugin for Pothos only adds spans for resolvers. You may also want to capture additional information about other parts of the graphql execution process.
This example uses GraphQL Yoga, by providing a custom envelop plugin that wraps the execution phase. Many graphql server implementations have ways to wrap or replace the execution call, but will look slightly different.
// eslint-disable-next-line simple-import-sort/imports
import { tracer } from './tracer'; // Tracer should be imported first if it handles additional instrumentation
import { print } from 'graphql';
import { createYoga, Plugin } from 'graphql-yoga';
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { AttributeNames, SpanNames } from '@pothos/tracing-opentelemetry';
import { schema } from './schema';
const tracingPlugin: Plugin = {
onExecute: ({ setExecuteFn, executeFn }) => {
setExecuteFn((options) =>
tracer.startActiveSpan(
SpanNames.EXECUTE,
{
attributes: {
[AttributeNames.OPERATION_NAME]: options.operationName ?? undefined,
[AttributeNames.SOURCE]: print(options.document),
},
},
async (span) => {
try {
const result = await executeFn(options);
return result;
} catch (error) {
span.recordException(error as Error);
throw error;
} finally {
span.end();
}
},
),
);
},
};
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [tracingPlugin],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);
Envelop also provides its own opentelemetry plugin which can be used instead of a custom plugin like
the one shown above. The biggest drawback to this is the current version of @envelop/opentelemetry
does not track the parent/child relations of spans it creates.
import { provider } from './tracer'; // Tracer should be imported first if it handles additional instrumentation
import { useOpenTelemetry } from '@envelop/opentelemetry';
import { createYoga } from 'graphql-yoga';
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { schema } from './schema';
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [
useOpenTelemetry(
{
// Disabling envelops resolver tracing is important to avoid duplicate spans
resolvers: false,
variables: false,
result: false,
},
provider,
),
],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);
The following setup creates a very simple opentelemetry tracer that will log spans to the console. Real applications will need to define exporters that match the opentelemetry backend you are using.
import { diag, DiagConsoleLogger, DiagLogLevel, trace } from '@opentelemetry/api';
import { registerInstrumentations } from '@opentelemetry/instrumentation';
import { HttpInstrumentation } from '@opentelemetry/instrumentation-http';
import { ConsoleSpanExporter, SimpleSpanProcessor } from '@opentelemetry/sdk-trace-base';
import { NodeTracerProvider } from '@opentelemetry/sdk-trace-node';
export const provider = new NodeTracerProvider({});
provider.addSpanProcessor(new SimpleSpanProcessor(new ConsoleSpanExporter()));
provider.register();
registerInstrumentations({
// Automatically create spans for http requests
instrumentations: [new HttpInstrumentation({})],
});
diag.setLogger(new DiagConsoleLogger(), DiagLogLevel.INFO);
export const tracer = trace.getTracer('graphql');
Datadog supports opentelemetry. To report traces to datadog, you will need to instrument your application with an opentelemetry tracer, and configure your datadog agent to collect open telemetry traces.
import { trace } from '@opentelemetry/api';
import { OTLPTraceExporter } from '@opentelemetry/exporter-trace-otlp-http';
import { registerInstrumentations } from '@opentelemetry/instrumentation';
import { HttpInstrumentation } from '@opentelemetry/instrumentation-http';
import { Resource } from '@opentelemetry/resources';
import { SimpleSpanProcessor } from '@opentelemetry/sdk-trace-base';
import { NodeTracerProvider } from '@opentelemetry/sdk-trace-node';
import { SemanticResourceAttributes } from '@opentelemetry/semantic-conventions';
export const provider = new NodeTracerProvider({
resource: new Resource({
[SemanticResourceAttributes.SERVICE_NAME]: 'Pothos-OTEL-example',
}),
});
provider.addSpanProcessor(
new SimpleSpanProcessor(
new OTLPTraceExporter({
// optionally set the opentelemetry collector endpoint if you are not using the default port
// url: 'http://host:port',
}),
),
);
provider.register();
registerInstrumentations({
instrumentations: [new HttpInstrumentation({})],
});
export const tracer = trace.getTracer('graphql');
Add the following to your datadog agent configuration
otlp_config:
receiver:
protocols:
http:
endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4318
yarn add @pothos/tracing-newrelic newrelic @types/newrelic
import SchemaBuilder from '@pothos/core';
import TracingPlugin, { isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
import { createNewrelicWrapper } from '@pothos/tracing-newrelic';
const wrapResolver = createNewrelicWrapper({
includeArgs: true,
includeSource: true,
});
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config),
wrap: (resolver) => wrapResolver(resolver),
},
});
includeArgs
: default: false
includeSource
: default: false
The tracing plugin for Pothos only adds spans for resolvers. You may also want to capture additional information about other parts of the graphql execution process.
This example uses GraphQL Yoga, by providing a custom envelop plugin that wraps the execution phase. Many graphql server implementations have ways to wrap or replace the execution call, but will look slightly different.
// eslint-disable-next-line simple-import-sort/imports
import newrelic from 'newrelic'; // newrelic must be imported first
import { print } from 'graphql';
import { createYoga, Plugin } from 'graphql-yoga'
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { AttributeNames } from '@pothos/tracing-newrelic';
import { schema } from './schema';
const tracingPlugin: Plugin = {
onExecute: ({ args }) => {
newrelic.addCustomAttributes({
[AttributeNames.OPERATION_NAME]: args.operationName ?? '<unnamed operation>',
[AttributeNames.SOURCE]: print(args.document),
});
},
};
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [tracingPlugin],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);
Envelop has it's own plugin for newrelic that can be combined with the tracing plugin:
import { useNewRelic } from '@envelop/newrelic';
import { createYoga } from 'graphql-yoga'
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { schema } from './schema';
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [
useNewRelic({
// Disable resolver tracking since this is covered by the pothos tracing plugin
// If all resolvers are being traced, you could use the New Relic envelop plug instead of the pothos tracing plugin
trackResolvers: false,
}),
],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);
yarn add @pothos/tracing-sentry @sentry/node @sentry/tracing
import SchemaBuilder from '@pothos/core';
import TracingPlugin, { isRootField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
import { createSentryWrapper } from '@pothos/tracing-sentry';
const traceResolver = createSentryWrapper({
includeArgs: true,
includeSource: true,
});
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config),
wrap: (resolver, options) => traceResolver(resolver, options),
},
});
includeArgs
: default: false
includeSource
: default: false
ignoreError
: default: false
The tracing plugin for Pothos only adds spans for resolvers. You may also want to capture additional information about other parts of the graphql execution process.
This example uses GraphQL Yoga, by providing a custom envelop plugin that wraps the execution phase. Many graphql server implementations have ways to wrap or replace the execution call, but will look slightly different.
import '@sentry/tracing';
import { print } from 'graphql';
import { createYoga, Plugin } from 'graphql-yoga'
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { AttributeNames } from '@pothos/tracing-sentry';
import * as Sentry from '@sentry/node';
import { schema } from './schema';
Sentry.init({
dsn: process.env.SENTRY_DSN,
tracesSampleRate: 1,
});
const tracingPlugin: Plugin = {
onExecute: ({ setExecuteFn, executeFn }) => {
setExecuteFn(async (options) => {
const transaction = Sentry.startTransaction({
op: 'graphql.execute',
name: options.operationName ?? '<unnamed operation>',
tags: {
[AttributeNames.OPERATION_NAME]: options.operationName ?? undefined,
[AttributeNames.SOURCE]: print(options.document),
},
data: {
[AttributeNames.SOURCE]: print(options.document),
},
});
Sentry.getCurrentHub().configureScope((scope) => scope.setSpan(transaction));
try {
const result = await executeFn(options);
return result;
} finally {
transaction.finish();
}
});
},
};
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [tracingPlugin],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);
Envelop has it's own plugin for Sentry that can be combined with the tracing plugin:
import { useSentry } from '@envelop/sentry';
import { createYoga } from 'graphql-yoga'
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { schema } from './schema';
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [
useSentry({
// Disable resolver tracking since this is covered by the pothos tracing plugin
// If all resolvers are being traced, you could use the Sentry envelop plug instead of the pothos tracing plugin
trackResolvers: false,
}),
],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);
yarn add @pothos/tracing-xray aws-xray-sdk-core
import SchemaBuilder from '@pothos/core';
import TracingPlugin, { isEnumField, isRootField, isScalarField } from '@pothos/plugin-tracing';
import { createXRayWrapper } from '@pothos/tracing-xray';
const traceResolver = createXRayWrapper({
includeArgs: true,
includeSource: true,
});
export const builder = new SchemaBuilder({
plugins: [TracingPlugin],
tracing: {
default: (config) => isRootField(config) || (!isScalarField(config) && !isEnumField(config)),
wrap: (resolver, options) => traceResolver(resolver, options),
},
});
includeArgs
: default: false
includeSource
: default: false
The tracing plugin for Pothos only adds spans for resolvers. You may also want to capture additional information about other parts of the graphql execution process.
This example uses GraphQL Yoga, by providing a custom envelop plugin that wraps the execution phase. Many graphql server implementations have ways to wrap or replace the execution call, but will look slightly different.
import AWSXRay from 'aws-xray-sdk-core';
import { print } from 'graphql';
import { createYoga, Plugin } from 'graphql-yoga';
import { createServer } from 'node:http';
import { AttributeNames, SpanNames } from '@pothos/tracing-xray';
import { schema } from './schema';
const tracingPlugin: Plugin = {
onExecute: ({ setExecuteFn, executeFn }) => {
setExecuteFn(async (options) => {
const parent = new AWSXRay.Segment('parent');
return AWSXRay.getNamespace().runAndReturn(() => {
AWSXRay.setSegment(parent);
return AWSXRay.captureAsyncFunc(
SpanNames.EXECUTE,
(segment) => {
if (segment) {
segment.addAttribute(
AttributeNames.OPERATION_NAME,
options.operationName ?? '<unnamed operation>',
);
segment.addAttribute(AttributeNames.SOURCE, print(options.document));
}
return executeFn(options);
},
parent,
);
});
});
},
};
const yoga = createYoga({
schema,
plugins: [tracingPlugin],
});
const server = createServer(yoga);