BugSplat-js is a JavaScript error-reporting system for web applications. Before continuing with the tutorial, please make sure you have completed the following checklist:
Install bugsplat
via npm. This package currently requires Node.js 18 or later.
npm i bugsplat --save
If you need to use a version of Node.js older than 18, you can install [email protected].
Depending on your project's module system, you can either import
or require
BugSplat:
import { BugSplat } from 'bugsplat';
const { BugSplat } = require('bugsplat');
import { BugSplat } from 'https://esm.sh/[email protected]';
Create a new instance of the BugSplat class with the name of your BugSplat database, the name of your application and the version of your application:
const bugsplat = new BugSplat(database, application, version);
Listen for window.onerror
events and post them to BugSplat:
window.onerror = async (event, source, lineno, colno, error) => {
await bugsplat.post(error);
}
Also listen for window.unhandledpromiserejection
events and post them to BugSplat:
window.onunhandledrejection = async (rejection) => {
await bugsplat.post(rejection.reason)
}
Throw an exception after the event handler has been added.
throw new Error('BugSplat!');
You can use bugsplat-js to capture errors that originate inside of try-catch blocks:
try {
throw new Error('BugSplat');
} catch(error) {
await bugsplat.post(error);
}
You can also use bugsplat-js to post errors from promise rejections:
Promise.reject(new Error('BugSplat!')).catch(error => bugsplat.post(error, {}));
After posting an error with bugsplat-js, navigate to the Crashes page. You should see a new crash report for the application you just configured. Click the link in the ID column to see details about your crash on the Crash page:
That’s it! Your application is now configured to post crash reports to BugSplat.
In addition to the configuration demonstrated above, there are a few public methods that can be used to customize your BugSplat integration:
bugsplat.setDefaultAppKey(appKey); // Additional metadata that can be queried via BugSplat's web application
bugsplat.setDefaultUser(user); // The name or id of your user
bugsplat.setDefaultEmail(email); // The email of your user
bugsplat.setDefaultDescription(description); // Additional info about your crash that gets reset after every post
async bugsplat.post(error, options); // Posts an arbitrary Error object to BugSplat
// If the values options.appKey, options.user, options.email, options.description are set the corresponding default values will be overwritten
// Returns a promise that resolves with properties: error (if there was an error posting to BugSplat), response (the response from the BugSplat crash post API), and original (the error passed by bugsplat.post)
If you are developing a Node.js application and were using bugsplat-js <= 5.0.0 please upgrade to bugsplat-node. BugSplat-node has the same consumer APIs as bugsplat-js <= 5.0.0. Additionally, support for file attachments and exiting the Node process in the error handler have been moved to bugsplat-node so that bugsplat-js can be run in browsers as well as Node.js environments.
BugSplat loves open source software! Please check out our project on GitHub and send us a pull request.
If you have any additional questions, please email or support team, join us on Discord, or reach out via the chat in our web application.