The demo app in this repo is available in repo's GitHub pages.
rxjs-debugger
is an alternative and easy way to debug RxJS Observables and its subscriptions.
Disclaimer: don't use this tool in production. This is a very experimental exercise.
The usual approach to debug RxJS-based code involves sprinkling do
or custom operators. Then, logging is made available to notice an observable is subscribed and unsubscribed.
While debugging Angular applications with hundreds of observables, I found these methods very time-consuming, since we have to pipe every single observable we want to track. Badly-managed RxJS Subscriptions can affect application's performance widely and sail aimlessly can be very painfull.
You can find more info about this package in this Medium Post (https://medium.com/@filipemendes_73527/rxjs-debugger-an-alternative-way-to-debug-rxjs-observables-eb6d4b7fef6c)
I'm sure you also thinks the same, and this is a package you might need.
Install the package using NPM:
npm install --save-dev rxjs-debugger
And add only the following code to main.ts
,
import { Observable } from "rxjs";
import { RxJSDebugger } from "rxjs-debugger";
RxJSDebugger.init(Observable);
Or require
the module to use with CommonJS bundler:
const { RxJSDebugger } = require("rxjs-debugger");
const { Observable } = require("rxjs");
RxJSDebugger.init(Observable);
rxjs-debugger
adds logic to Observable's prototype subscribe
method that allow us to monitorize the subscription and unsubscription calls of RxJS Observables and its extended classes (EventEmitter, Subject, BehaviorSubject...).
The exported RxJSDebugger
object exposes the following API:
export declare type SubscriptionsMap = { [key: string]: string[] };
export declare type ClassName = string;
export declare type ObservableDef = typeof Observable;
export const RxJSDebugger: {
valueChanges: Subject<SubscriptionsMap>;
obSubscribed$: Subject<ClassName>,
obUnsubscribed$: Subject<ClassName>,
addOnSubscribeLogic: (fn: Function) => void,
addOnUnsubscribeLogic: (fn: Function) => void,
clearOnSubscribeLogic: () => void,
clearOnUnsubscribeLogic: () => void,
setTargettedClasses: (targettedClasses: ClassName[]) => void,
subscriptionsMap: () => SubscriptionsMap,
openedSubscriptionsCount: () => number,
clearSubscriptionsMap: () => void,
init: (
observableDef: ObservableDef,
targettedClasses?: ClassName[],
onSubscribeFn?: () => void,
onUnsubscribeFn?: () => void
) => void
}
Unlike other RxJS debugging libraries, this one doesn't force you to change every observable you want to monitorize. Calling .init()
method is enough to trigger the debugging mode. After that, when an observable is subscribed, a new uuid is pushed to subscriber's class entry in subscriptionsMap
. It allows us to know in realtime how many subscriptions exist in each class.
More than that, developer can access the tracked data via browser's console, using window.subscriptionsMap
.