Skip to content

Instrumentation

Instrumentation is the process of using code to integrate monitoring and logging tools into your application. This allows you to track the performance and behavior of your application, and to debug issues in production.

Convention

To set up instrumentation, create instrumentation.ts|js file in the root directory of your project (or inside the src folder if using one).

Then, export a register function in the file. This function will be called once when a new Next.js server instance is initiated.

For example, to use Next.js with OpenTelemetry and @vercel/otel:

instrumentation.ts
import { registerOTel } from '@vercel/otel'
 
export function register() {
  registerOTel('next-app')
}

See the Next.js with OpenTelemetry example for a complete implementation.

Good to know

  • This feature is experimental. To use it, you must explicitly opt in by defining experimental.instrumentationHook = true; in your next.config.js.
  • The instrumentation file should be in the root of your project and not inside the app or pages directory. If you're using the src folder, then place the file inside src alongside pages and app.
  • If you use the pageExtensions config option to add a suffix, you will also need to update the instrumentation filename to match.

Examples

Importing files with side effects

Sometimes, it may be useful to import a file in your code because of the side effects it will cause. For example, you might import a file that defines a set of global variables, but never explicitly use the imported file in your code. You would still have access to the global variables the package has declared.

We recommend importing files using JavaScript import syntax within your register function. The following example demonstrates a basic usage of import in a register function:

instrumentation.ts
export async function register() {
  await import('package-with-side-effect')
}

Good to know:

We recommend importing the file from within the register function, rather than at the top of the file. By doing this, you can colocate all of your side effects in one place in your code, and avoid any unintended consequences from importing globally at the top of the file.

Importing runtime-specific code

Next.js calls register in all environments, so it's important to conditionally import any code that doesn't support specific runtimes (e.g. Edge or Node.js). You can use the NEXT_RUNTIME environment variable to get the current environment:

instrumentation.ts
export async function register() {
  if (process.env.NEXT_RUNTIME === 'nodejs') {
    await import('./instrumentation-node')
  }
 
  if (process.env.NEXT_RUNTIME === 'edge') {
    await import('./instrumentation-edge')
  }
}