An interceptor for vue-resource that instruments outgoing HTTP requests with Zipkin.
Sometimes tracing of your backend components is not enough, so you need to do some tracing on frontend side (part of End User Monitoring). This package helps to solve that problem for VueJS with Zipkin.
npm install --save zipkin-instrumentation-vue-resource
What you need to do is to initialise Zipkin Tracer, because the interceptor does not provide any default for that at the moment.
main.js
may contain initialisation logic and may look like this:
// these imports are zipkin-specific
import {
Tracer,
BatchRecorder,
ExplicitContext,
jsonEncoder
} from 'zipkin'
import {HttpLogger} from 'zipkin-transport-http'
// and here the interceptor is imported
import {zipkinInterceptor} from 'zipkin-instrumentation-vue-resource'
const serviceName = 'myfancywebsite'
// this Tracer communicates to Zipkin through HTTP protocol
const tracer = new Tracer({
ctxImpl: new ExplicitContext(),
recorder: new BatchRecorder({
logger: new HttpLogger({
// take a look
endpoint: window.location.protocol + '//' + window.location.host + '/zipkin',
jsonEncoder: jsonEncoder.JSON_V2
})
}),
localServiceName: serviceName
})
// and here is how the interceptor is created and added to vue-resource's chain
const interceptor = zipkinInterceptor({tracer, serviceName})
Vue.http.interceptors.push(interceptor)
Your application can communicate to Zipkin through HTTP, you can do that using Webpack's proxy table. proxyTable
in config/index.js
may look like this:
proxyTable: {
'/zipkin': {
target: process.env.ZIPKIN_ADDRESS || 'http://127.0.0.1:9411/api/v2/spans',
pathRewrite: {
'^/zipkin': ''
},
secure: false
},
},
The piece of configuration above redirects all requests to /zipkin
path (exactly what the interceptor uses in example above) to your actual Zipkin server running on 127.0.0.1:9411
.