CommonJS (CJS)

Learn about running Sentry in an CJS application.

Most node applications today are either written in CommonJS (CJS), or compiled to CJS before running them. CommonJS uses require() to load modules. Our recommended installation method when using CommonJS is to require the instrument.js file at the top of your application.

You need to create a file named instrument.js that imports and initializes Sentry:

instrument.js
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const Sentry = require("@sentry/nestjs");
const { nodeProfilingIntegration } = require("@sentry/profiling-node");

// Ensure to call this before requiring any other modules!
Sentry.init({
  dsn: "https://examplePublicKey@o0.ingest.sentry.io/0",
  integrations: [
    // Add our Profiling integration
    nodeProfilingIntegration(),
  ],

  // Add Tracing by setting tracesSampleRate
  // We recommend adjusting this value in production
  tracesSampleRate: 1.0,

  // Set sampling rate for profiling
  // This is relative to tracesSampleRate
  profilesSampleRate: 1.0,
});

You need to require or import the instrument.js file before requiring any other modules in your application. This is necessary to ensure that Sentry can automatically instrument all modules in your application:

main.ts
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// Import this first!
import "./instrument";

// Now import other modules
import { NestFactory } from "@nestjs/core";
import { AppModule } from "./app.module";

async function bootstrap() {
  const app = await NestFactory.create(AppModule);
  await app.listen(3000);
}

bootstrap();

Then you can add the SentryModule as a root module:

The SentryModule needs to be registered before any other module that should be instrumented by Sentry.
app.module.ts
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import { Module } from "@nestjs/common";
import { SentryModule } from "@sentry/nestjs/setup";
import { AppController } from "./app.controller";
import { AppService } from "./app.service";

@Module({
  imports: [
    SentryModule.forRoot(),
    // ...other modules
  ],
  controllers: [AppController],
  providers: [AppService],
})
export class AppModule {}

By default, exceptions with status code 4xx are not sent to Sentry. If you still want to capture these exceptions, you can do so manually with Sentry.captureException():

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import { ArgumentsHost, BadRequestException, Catch } from '@nestjs/common';
import { BaseExceptionFilter } from '@nestjs/core';
import { ExampleException } from './example.exception';
import * as Sentry from '@sentry/nestjs';

@Catch(ExampleException)
export class ExampleExceptionFilter extends BaseExceptionFilter {
  catch(exception: unknown, host: ArgumentsHost) {
    Sentry.captureException(exception);
    return super.catch(new BadRequestException(exception.message), host)
  }
}
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