630

Does anyone know how to print a stack trace in Node.js?

12 Answers 12

734

Any Error object has a stack member that traps the point at which it was constructed.

var stack = new Error().stack
console.log( stack )

or more simply:

console.trace("Here I am!")
5
  • 2
    or just sys.puts(new Error().stack) (after adding the system module)
    – sirhc
    Aug 9, 2010 at 4:48
  • 6
    As of now, sys is depricated. It is replaced by 'util'.
    – Pindatjuh
    Apr 14, 2011 at 18:15
  • 13
    +1 for also showing new Error().stack, which works in cases where you don't want to involve the console. Jul 31, 2012 at 4:19
  • 1
    One advantage of trace is it shows the current line/context as well which stack does not. The info is in the error object if you want to manually create that line I guess.
    – studgeek
    Aug 30, 2012 at 16:54
  • 165
    console.log(err.stack) and console.trace() do not give you same results. Whereas err.stack gives you the stack trace for the err object itself (functioning the way we all normally think of exceptions), console.trace() will print out the call stack at the point where console.trace() is being called. So if you catch some error being thrown by some deeper layer of code, console.trace() will not contain that deeper layer code in the stack trace since that code is no longer on the stack. However, console.log(err.stack) will contain the deeper layers as long as it threw an Error object.
    – d512
    Feb 21, 2013 at 18:10
242

Now there's a dedicated function on console for that:

console.trace()
4
  • 14
    Just make sure to heed the above comment about console.trace(). Sep 13, 2014 at 23:09
  • 12
    By default this will only show 10 frames, you can use the command-line argument to increase this, e.g. --stack_trace_limit=200
    – Michael
    May 15, 2016 at 7:15
  • 2
    What if you want to output to a log file?
    – Ya.
    Dec 2, 2019 at 15:45
  • 2
    That doesn't seem to work with promises and async/await, does it?
    – bluenote10
    Apr 5, 2020 at 8:45
140
+50

As already answered, you can simply use the trace command:

console.trace("I am here");

However, if you came to this question searching about how to log the stack trace of an exception, you can simply log the Exception object.

try {  
  // if something unexpected
  throw new Error("Something unexpected has occurred.");     

} catch (e) {
  console.error(e);
}

It will log:

Error: Something unexpected has occurred.
    at main (c:\Users\Me\Documents\MyApp\app.js:9:15)
    at Object. (c:\Users\Me\Documents\MyApp\app.js:17:1)
    at Module._compile (module.js:460:26)
    at Object.Module._extensions..js (module.js:478:10)
    at Module.load (module.js:355:32)
    at Function.Module._load (module.js:310:12)
    at Function.Module.runMain (module.js:501:10)
    at startup (node.js:129:16)
    at node.js:814:3


If your Node.js version is < than 6.0.0, logging the Exception object will not be enough. In this case, it will print only:

[Error: Something unexpected has occurred.]

For Node version < 6, use console.error(e.stack) instead of console.error(e) to print the error message plus the full stack, like the current Node version does.


Note: if the exception is created as a string like throw "myException", it's not possible to retrieve the stack trace and logging e.stack yields undefined.

To be safe, you can use

console.error(e.stack || e);

and it will work for old and new Node.js versions.

6
  • Won't console.error(e) print everything in the e object, including e.stack?
    – drmrbrewer
    Mar 1, 2017 at 9:02
  • 1
    @drmrbrewer, thank you for pointing this out. It seems that behavior has changed between Node versions 4.x and 7.x (probably a V8 change). I've updated my answer.
    – Zanon
    Mar 1, 2017 at 16:57
  • 1
    @drmrbrewer confirmed that this behavior changed on version 6.0.0
    – Zanon
    Mar 1, 2017 at 17:25
  • do you have a reference for this apparent change in behaviour? I'm still seeing (with node 6.9.4) that console.error(e) only prints the brief message. And I suspect that it's because it prints a toString representation of e, and toString for e only returns the message and nothing else: developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Reference/…
    – drmrbrewer
    Mar 2, 2017 at 14:40
  • 4
    sorry I just discovered something crucial. See my comment against the related post: stackoverflow.com/questions/42528677/…. It seems that logging the error on its own does indeed show the whole content of the error, but trying to concatenate it (like a string) with other text will cause only the brief message part to be used. It all makes a lot more sense with that realisation.
    – drmrbrewer
    Mar 2, 2017 at 19:52
41

To print stacktrace of Error in console in more readable way:

console.log(ex, ex.stack.split("\n"));

Example result:

[Error] [ 'Error',
  '    at repl:1:7',
  '    at REPLServer.self.eval (repl.js:110:21)',
  '    at Interface.<anonymous> (repl.js:239:12)',
  '    at Interface.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:95:17)',
  '    at Interface._onLine (readline.js:202:10)',
  '    at Interface._line (readline.js:531:8)',
  '    at Interface._ttyWrite (readline.js:760:14)',
  '    at ReadStream.onkeypress (readline.js:99:10)',
  '    at ReadStream.EventEmitter.emit (events.js:98:17)',
  '    at emitKey (readline.js:1095:12)' ]
10

@isaacs answer is correct, but if you need more specific or cleaner error stack, you can use this function:

function getCleanerStack() {
   var err = new Error();
   Error.captureStackTrace(err, getCleanerStack);
    
   return err.stack;
}

This function is inspired directly from the console.trace function in NodeJS.

Source code: Recent version or Old version.

3
  • 4
    it doesn't work, only show stack from current line (not the line this error occured) . err.stack is more correct answer. Aug 19, 2019 at 8:45
  • 13
    getStack is not defined
    – Druska
    Feb 4, 2021 at 19:49
  • Should be getCleanerStack instead of getStack on line 3
    – kikon
    Jun 27, 2022 at 8:40
8

In v15.12.0, there are various methods for doing this,

1. console.trace(anything)
2. Error.captureStackTrace(Object)
3. console.log(new Error().stack)
4. Try Catch - Use console.log(e), where `e` is catched by catch block

OR even better use stacktracejs in any Javascript code

5

Try Error.captureStackTrace(targetObject[, constructorOpt]).

const myObj = {};
function c() {
  // pass
}

function b() {
    Error.captureStackTrace(myObj)
    c()
} 

function a() {
    b()
}

a()

console.log(myObj.stack)

The function a and b are captured in error stack and stored in myObj.

2
  • 3
    If you want an error to have a stack property, you'll need to call this if Node >= 6: Error.captureStackTrace(error).
    – cjbarth
    Aug 27, 2018 at 16:17
  • Note that if you don't want the frame who called Error.captureStackTrace to show up in the stack trace, you can omit it by passing it as the constructorOpt arg.
    – Ullauri
    Jan 5, 2019 at 19:51
3

For what I know printing the complete stack trace in nodejs is not possible, you can just print a "partial" stack trace, you can not see from where you came from in the code, just where the Exception occur. That's what Ryan Dahl explains in this youtube video. http://youtu.be/jo_B4LTHi3I at min 56:30 for being precise. Hope this helps

1
  • 2
    true, but the module in @Timboudreau's answer "fixes" that
    – Bogdan D
    Dec 19, 2014 at 15:14
3

In case someone is still looking for this like I was, then there is a module we can use called "stack-trace". It is really popular. NPM Link

Then walk through the trace.

  var stackTrace = require('stack-trace');
  .
  .
  .
  var trace = stackTrace.get();
  trace.map(function (item){ 
    console.log(new Date().toUTCString() + ' : ' +  item.toString() );  
  });

Or just simply print the trace:

var stackTrace = require('stack-trace');
.
.
.
var trace = stackTrace.get();
trace.toString();
3

Get function caller details:

/**
 * @typedef {Object} TCallerInfo
 * @property {() => string} toString
 * @property {string} str Caller error stack line.
 * @property {string} file Caller file path.
 * @property {number} line Caller line.
 * @property {number} col Caller column.
 * @property {Error} error Caller error stack instance.
 */

/**
 * @returns {TCallerInfo | null}
 */
function getCallerLine() {
  const err = new Error();
  const stack = err.stack || '';
  const callerLine = stack.split(/\n\s*at\s+/g);

  if (callerLine.length >= 2) {
    const str = callerLine[3];
    const [file, line, col] = str
      .replace(/^\s*at\s+/, '')
      .replace(/^(.*):(\d+):(\d+)$/, '$1|$2|$3')
      .split(/\|/g);

    const o = {
      toString: () => str,

      get str() {
        return str;
      },

      get file() {
        return file;
      },

      get line() {
        return parseInt(line);
      },

      get col() {
        return parseInt(col);
      },

      get error() {
        return err;
      },
    };

    return o;
  } else {
    return null;
  }
}

Usage:

function foo() {
  console.info(getCallerLine());
}

foo(); // Prints this line as Caller Line details.
2

If you want to only log the stack trace of the error (and not the error message) Node 6 and above automatically includes the error name and message inside the stack trace, which is a bit annoying if you want to do some custom error handling:

console.log(error.stack.replace(error.message, ''))

This workaround will log only the error name and stack trace (so you can, for example, format the error message and display it how you want somewhere else in your code).

The above example would print only the error name follow by the stack trace, for example:

Error: 
    at /Users/cfisher/Git/squashed/execProcess.js:6:17
    at ChildProcess.exithandler (child_process.js:213:5)
    at emitTwo (events.js:106:13)
    at ChildProcess.emit (events.js:191:7)
    at maybeClose (internal/child_process.js:877:16)
    at Socket.<anonymous> (internal/child_process.js:334:11)
    at emitOne (events.js:96:13)
    at Socket.emit (events.js:188:7)
    at Pipe._handle.close [as _onclose] (net.js:498:12)

Instead of:

Error: Error: Command failed: sh ./commands/getBranchCommitCount.sh HEAD
git: 'rev-lists' is not a git command. See 'git --help'.

Did you mean this?
        rev-list

    at /Users/cfisher/Git/squashed/execProcess.js:6:17
    at ChildProcess.exithandler (child_process.js:213:5)
    at emitTwo (events.js:106:13)
    at ChildProcess.emit (events.js:191:7)
    at maybeClose (internal/child_process.js:877:16)
    at Socket.<anonymous> (internal/child_process.js:334:11)
    at emitOne (events.js:96:13)
    at Socket.emit (events.js:188:7)
    at Pipe._handle.close [as _onclose] (net.js:498:12)
1

you can use node-stack-trace module which is a power full module to track call stacks.

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