Long stacktraces for V8 implemented in user-land JavaScript. Supports Chrome/Chromium and Node.js.
A common problem when debugging event-driven JavaScript is stack traces are limited to a single "event", so it's difficult to trace the code path that caused an error.
A contrived example (taken from the PDF referenced below):
function f() {
throw new Error('foo');
}
setTimeout(f, Math.random()*1000);
setTimeout(f, Math.random()*1000);
Which one throws the first error?
Node.js intended to fix this problem with a solution called "Long Stacktraces": http://nodejs.org/illuminati0.pdf
But what if we wanted something like this in the browser? It turns out V8 already has everything needed to implement this in user-land JavaScript (although in a slightly hacky way).
V8 has a stack trace API that allows custom formatting of textual stack trace representations. By wrapping any function that registers an asynchronous event callback (e.x. setTimeout
and addEventListener
in the browser) we can store the stack trace at the time of callback registration, and later append it to stack traces. This also works for multiple levels of events (a timeout or event registered within a timeout or event, etc).
For Node.js install using npm install long-stack-traces
.
Simply include the "long-stack-traces.js" via a script tag or other method before any event listener or timeout registrations. In Node.js call require("long-stack-traces")
.
Stack traces from example above:
Uncaught Error: foo
at f (index.html:24:23)
----------------------------------------
at setTimeout
at onload (index.html:28:40)
Uncaught Error: foo
at f (index.html:24:23)
----------------------------------------
at setTimeout
at onload (index.html:27:40)
Note one was from the timeout on line 27, the other on line 28. Events' stack traces are divided by a line of dashes.
See examples.html for more examples, and run node examples.js
for a Node.js example.
Currently supports the following APIs:
setTimeout
setInterval
addEventListener
XMLHttpRequest.onreadystatechange
(stack actually recorded uponsend()
)
setTimeout
setInterval
EventEmitter.addListener
EventEmitter.on
- All APIs that use
EventEmitter
- Gracefully degrade in non-V8 environments.
- Figure out what's up with these stack frames when throwing an exception from an input's event handler: <error: TypeError: Accessing selectionEnd on an input element that cannot have a selection.>