Simple wrapper around "inspector" module. Basically it adds :
- promises & async/await syntax
 - S3 exporter
 
| Version | Supported | Tested | 
|---|---|---|
| 20.x | yes | yes | 
| 18.x | yes | yes | 
| 16.x | yes | yes | 
In order to have all features we recommend to use at least Node.js version 10 or higher.
$ npm install inspector-api --saveconst Inspector = require('inspector-api')
const inspector = new Inspector()
await inspector.profiler.enable()
await inspector.profiler.start()
// Invoke business logic under measurement here...
// some time later...
await inspector.profiler.stop()const Inspector = require('inspector-api')
const inspector = new Inspector()
await inspector.heap.enable()
await inspector.heap.startSampling()
// Invoke business logic under measurement here...
// some time later...
await inspector.heap.stopSampling()const Inspector = require('inspector-api')
const inspector = new Inspector()
await inspector.heap.takeSnapshot()const Inspector = require('inspector-api')
const inspector = new Inspector()
await inspector.profiler.enable()
await inspector.profiler.startPreciseCoverage({ callCount: true, detailed: true })
const data = await inspector.profiler.takePreciseCoverage()
await inspector.profiler.stopPreciseCoverage()const Inspector = require('inspector-api')
const inspector = new Inspector({
    storage: {
        type: 's3',
        bucket: 'testBucket',
        dir: 'inspector'
    }
})
await inspector.profiler.enable()
await inspector.profiler.start()
// Invoke business logic under measurement here...
// some time later...
await inspector.profiler.stop()Warning: it seems that the new AWS SDK leads to unexpected error if you use the takeSnapshot method (you should use memory sampling)
new inspector([config])| Option | description | Default value | 
|---|---|---|
type | 
Storage type (raw, s3 or fs) | raw | 
bucket | 
S3 bucket's name | none | 
dir | 
Directory where to store the file | none | 
If you use fs, the generated data will be store on the disk in your default tmp directory.
You can display it in Node.js with the command require('os').tmpdir()
$ npm testCoverage report can be found in coverage/.