Book Image

Node Cookbook - Fourth Edition

By : Bethany Griggs
4 (1)
Book Image

Node Cookbook - Fourth Edition

4 (1)
By: Bethany Griggs

Overview of this book

A key technology for building web applications and tooling, Node.js brings JavaScript to the server enabling full-stack development in a common language. This fourth edition of the Node Cookbook is updated with the latest Node.js features and the evolution of the Node.js framework ecosystems. This practical guide will help you to get started with creating, debugging, and deploying your Node.js applications and cover solutions to common problems, along with tips to avoid pitfalls. You'll become familiar with the Node.js development model by learning how to handle files and build simple web applications and then explore established and emerging Node.js web frameworks such as Express.js and Fastify. As you advance, you'll discover techniques for detecting problems in your applications, handling security concerns, and deploying your applications to the cloud. This recipe-based guide will help you to easily navigate through various core topics of server-side web application development with Node.js. By the end of this Node book, you'll be well-versed with core Node.js concepts and have gained the knowledge to start building performant and scalable Node.js applications.
Table of Contents (14 chapters)

Enabling Node.js core debug logs

When debugging some problems in your applications, it can be useful to have insight into the internals of Node.js and how it handles the execution of your program. Node.js provides debug logs that we can enable to help us understand what is happening internally in Node.js.

These core debug logs can be enabled via an environment variable named NODE_DEBUG. In the recipe, we're going to set the NODE_DEBUG environment variable to allow us to log internal Node.js behaviors.

Getting ready

We'll need to create an application that we can enable Node.js core debug logs on. We'll create a simple Express.js-based server with one route:

$ mkdir core-debug-logs
$ cd core-debug-logs
$ npm init --yes
$ npm install express
$ touch server.js

Add the following to server.js:

const express = require("express");
const app = express();
app.get("/", (req, res) => {
  res.send("Hello World!");
}...