stack-trace
Get v8 stack traces as an array of CallSite objects.
Install
npm install stack-trace
Usage
The stack-trace module makes it easy for you to capture the current stack:
var stackTrace = require('stack-trace');
var trace = stackTrace.get();
require('assert').strictEqual(trace[0].getFileName(), __filename);
However, sometimes you have already popped the stack you are interested in, and all you have left is an Error
object. This module can help:
var stackTrace = require('stack-trace');
var err = new Error('something went wrong');
var trace = stackTrace.parse(err);
require('assert').strictEqual(trace[0].getFileName(), __filename);
Please note that parsing the Error#stack
property is not perfect, only certain properties can be retrieved with it as noted in the API docs below.
Long stack traces
stack-trace works great with long-stack-traces, when parsing an err.stack
that has crossed the event loop boundary, a CallSite
object returning '----------------------------------------'
for getFileName()
is created. All other methods of the event loop boundary call site return null
.
API
stackTrace.get([belowFn])
Returns an array of CallSite
objects, where element 0
is the current call site.
When passing a function on the current stack as the belowFn
parameter, the returned array will only include CallSite
objects below this function.
stackTrace.parse(err)
Parses the err.stack
property of an Error
object into an array compatible with those returned by stackTrace.get()
. However, only the following methods are implemented on the returned CallSite
objects.
- getTypeName
- getFunctionName
- getMethodName
- getFileName
- getLineNumber
- getColumnNumber
- isNative
Note: Except getFunctionName()
, all of the above methods return exactly the same values as you would get from stackTrace.get()
. getFunctionName()
is sometimes a little different, but still useful.
CallSite
The official v8 CallSite object API can be found [here][https://github.com/v8/v8/wiki/Stack-Trace-API#customizing-stack-traces]. A quick excerpt:
A CallSite object defines the following methods:
- getThis: returns the value of this
- getTypeName: returns the type of this as a string. This is the name of the function stored in the constructor field of this, if available, otherwise the object's [[Class]] internal property.
- getFunction: returns the current function
- getFunctionName: returns the name of the current function, typically its name property. If a name property is not available an attempt will be made to try to infer a name from the function's context.
- getMethodName: returns the name of the property of this or one of its prototypes that holds the current function
- getFileName: if this function was defined in a script returns the name of the script
- getLineNumber: if this function was defined in a script returns the current line number
- getColumnNumber: if this function was defined in a script returns the current column number
- getEvalOrigin: if this function was created using a call to eval returns a CallSite object representing the location where eval was called
- isToplevel: is this a toplevel invocation, that is, is this the global object?
- isEval: does this call take place in code defined by a call to eval?
- isNative: is this call in native V8 code?
- isConstructor: is this a constructor call?
License
stack-trace is licensed under the MIT license.