Welcome to the TraceView Ruby Gem
The traceview gem provides AppNeta TraceView performance instrumentation for Ruby.
It has the ability to report performance metrics on an array of libraries, databases and frameworks such as Rails, Mongo, Memcache, ActiveRecord, Cassandra, Rack, Resque and more
It requires a TraceView account to view metrics. Get yours, it's free.
Note: The repository name has been changed to ruby-traceview. Please update your github remotes with git remote set-url origin git@github.com:appneta/ruby-traceview.git
.
Installation
Before installing the gem below, make sure that you have the base packages installed on your host first.
The traceview gem is available on Rubygems and can be installed with:
gem install traceview
or added to the end of your bundle Gemfile and running bundle install
:
gem 'traceview'
Running
Rails
No special steps are needed to instrument Ruby on Rails. Once part of the bundle, the traceview gem will automatically detect Rails and instrument on stack initialization.
Note: You will still need to decide on your tracing_mode
depending on whether you are running with an instrumented Apache or nginx in front of your Rails stack. See below for more details.
The Install Generator
The traceview gem provides a Rails generator used to seed an initializer where you can configure and control tracing_mode
and other options
To run the install generator run:
bundle exec rails generate traceview:install
After the prompts, this will create an initializer: config/initializers/traceview.rb
.
Sinatra
You can instrument your Sinatra application by adding the following code to your config.ru
Rackup file:
# If you're not using Bundler.require. Make sure this is done
# after the Sinatra require directive.
require 'traceview'
# When traces should be initiated for incoming requests. Valid options are
# "always", "through" (when the request is initiated with a tracing header
# from upstream) and "never". You must set this directive to "always" in
# order to initiate tracing.
TraceView::Config[:tracing_mode] = 'through'
# You may want to replace the TraceView.logger with whichever logger you are using
# TraceView.logger = Sinatra.logger
Make sure that the traceview gem is loaded after Sinatra either by listing gem 'traceview'
after Sinatra in your Gemfile or calling the require 'traceview'
directive after Sinatra is loaded.
With this, the traceview gem will automatically detect Sinatra on boot and instrument key components.
Padrino
As long as the traceview gem is in your Gemfile
(inserted after the gem 'padrino'
directive) and you are calling Bundler.require
, the traceview gem will automatically instrument Padrino applications.
If you need to set TraceView::Config
values on stack boot, you can do so by adding the following
to your config/boot.rb
file:
Padrino.before_load do
# When traces should be initiated for incoming requests. Valid options are
# "always", "through" (when the request is initiated with a tracing header
# from upstream) and "never". You must set this directive to "always" in
# order to initiate tracing.
TraceView::Config[:tracing_mode] = 'always'
end
Grape
You can instrument your Grape application by adding the following code to your config.ru
Rackup file:
# If you're not using Bundler.require. Make sure this is done
# after the Grape require directive.
require 'traceview'
# When traces should be initiated for incoming requests. Valid options are
# "always", "through" (when the request is initiated with a tracing header
# from upstream) and "never". You must set this directive to "always" in
# order to initiate tracing.
TraceView::Config[:tracing_mode] = 'through'
...
class App < Grape::API
use TraceView::Rack
end
Make sure that the traceview gem is loaded after Grape either by listing gem 'traceview'
after Grape in your Gemfile or calling the require 'traceview'
directive after Grape is loaded.
You must explicitly tell your Grape application to use TraceView::Rack for tracing to occur.
Custom Ruby Scripts & Applications
The traceview gem has the ability to instrument any arbitrary Ruby application or script. Only the tracing_mode
needs to be set to tell the traceview gem to initiate performance metric collection.
require 'rubygems'
require 'bundler'
Bundler.require
require 'traceview'
# Tracing mode can be 'never', 'through' (to follow upstream) or 'always'
TraceView::Config[:tracing_mode] = 'always'
From here, you can use the Tracing API to instrument areas of code using TraceView::API.start_trace
(see below). If you prefer to instead dive directly into code, take a look at this example of an instrumented Ruby script.
Once inside of the TraceView::API.start_trace
block, performance metrics will be automatically collected for all supported libraries and gems (Redis, Mongo, ActiveRecord etc..).
Other
You can send deploy notifications to TraceView and have the events show up on your dashboard. See: Capistrano Deploy Notifications with tlog
Custom Tracing
You can add even more visibility into any part of your application or scripts by adding custom instrumentation. If you want to see the performance of an existing method see Method Profiling. To trace blocks of code see the Tracing API.
The Tracing API
You can instrument any arbitrary block of code using TraceView::API.trace
. The code and any supported calls for libraries that we support, will automatically get traced and reported to your dashboard.
# layer_name will show up in the TraceView app dashboard
layer_name = 'subsystemX'
# report_kvs are a set of information Key/Value pairs that are sent to
# TraceView dashboard along with the performance metrics. These KV
# pairs are used to report request, environment and/or client specific
# information.
report_kvs = {}
report_kvs[:mykey] = @client.id
TraceView::API.trace(layer_name, report_kvs) do
# the block of code to be traced
end
TraceView::API.trace
is used within the context of a request. It will follow the upstream state of the request being traced. i.e. the block of code will only be traced when the parent request is being traced.
This tracing state of a request can also be queried by using TraceView.tracing?
.
If you need to instrument code outside the context of a request (such as a cron job, background job or an arbitrary ruby script), use TraceView::API.start_trace
instead which will initiate new traces based on configuration and probability (based on the sample rate).
Find more details in the RubyDoc page or in this example on how to use the Tracing API in an independent Ruby script.
Tracing Methods
With TraceView, you can profile any method in your application or even in the Ruby language using TraceView::API.profile_method
.
If, for example, you wanted to see the performance for the Array::sort
, you could simply call the following in your startup code:
TraceView::API.profile_method(Array, :sort)
For full documentation, options and reporting custom KVs, see our documentation on method profiling.
Support
If you find a bug or would like to request an enhancement, feel free to file an issue. For all other support requests, see our support portal or on IRC @ #appneta on Freenode.
Contributing
You are obviously a person of great sense and intelligence. We happily appreciate all contributions to the traceview gem whether it is documentation, a bug fix, new instrumentation for a library or framework or anything else we haven't thought of.
We welcome you to send us PRs. We also humbly request that any new instrumentation submissions have corresponding tests that accompany them. This way we don't break any of your additions when we (and others) make changes after the fact.
Developer Resources
We at AppNeta have made a large effort to expose as much technical information as possible to assist developers wishing to contribute to the traceview gem. Below are the three major sources for information and help for developers:
The TraceView blog has a constant stream of great technical articles. (See A Gentle X-Trace Introduction for details on the basic methodology that TraceView uses to gather structured performance data across hosts and stacks.)
The TraceView Documentation Portal has a large collection of technical articles or, if needed, you can submit a support request directly to the team.
You can also reach the TraceView team on our IRC channel #appneta on freenode.
If you have any questions or ideas, don't hesitate to contact us anytime.
Layout of the Gem
The traceview gem uses a standard gem layout. Here are the notable directories.
lib/traceview/inst # Auto load directory for various instrumented libraries
lib/traceview/frameworks # Framework instrumentation directory
lib/traceview/frameworks/rails # Files specific to Rails instrumentation
lib/rails # A Rails required directory for the Rails install generator
lib/api # The TraceView Tracing API: layers, logging, profiling and tracing
ext/oboe_metal # The Ruby c extension that links against the system liboboe library
Building the Gem
The traceview gem is built with the standard gem build
command passing in the gemspec:
gem build traceview.gemspec
Writing Custom Instrumentation
Custom instrumentation for a library, database or other service can be authored fairly easily. Generally, instrumentation of a library is done by wrapping select operations of that library and timing their execution using the TraceView Tracing API which then reports the metrics to the users' TraceView dashboard.
Here, I'll use a stripped down version of the Dalli instrumentation (lib/traceview/inst/dalli.rb
) as a quick example of how to instrument a client library (the dalli gem).
The Dalli gem nicely routes all memcache operations through a single perform
operation. Wrapping this method allows us to capture all Dalli operations called by an application.
First, we define a module (TraceView::Inst::Dalli) and our own custom perform_with_traceview
method that we will use as a wrapper around Dalli's perform
method. We also declare an included
method which automatically gets called when this module is included by another. See 'included' Ruby reference documentation.
module TraceView
module Inst
module Dalli
include TraceView::API::Memcache
def self.included(cls)
cls.class_eval do
if ::Dalli::Client.private_method_defined? :perform
alias perform_without_traceview perform
alias perform perform_with_traceview
end
end
end
def perform_with_traceview(*all_args, &blk)
op, key, *args = *all_args
if TraceView.tracing?
opts = {}
opts[:KVOp] = op
opts[:KVKey] = key
TraceView::API.trace('memcache', opts || {}) do
result = perform_without_traceview(*all_args, &blk)
if op == :get and key.class == String
TraceView::API.log('memcache', 'info', { :KVHit => memcache_hit?(result) })
end
result
end
else
perform_without_traceview(*all_args, &blk)
end
end
end
end
end
Second, we tail onto the end of the instrumentation file a simple ::Dalli::Client.module_eval
call to tell the Dalli module to include our newly defined instrumentation module. Doing this will invoke our previously defined included
method.
if defined?(Dalli) and TraceView::Config[:dalli][:enabled]
::Dalli::Client.module_eval do
include TraceView::Inst::Dalli
end
end
Third, in our wrapper method, we capture the arguments passed in, collect the operation and key information into a local hash and then invoke the TraceView::API.trace
method to time the execution of the original operation.
The TraceView::API.trace
method calls Dalli's native operation and reports the timing metrics and your custom report_kvs
up to TraceView servers to be shown on the user's dashboard.
That is a very quick example of a simple instrumentation implementation. If you have any questions, visit us on IRC in #appneta on Freenode.
Some other tips and guidelines:
You can point your Gemfile directly at your cloned traceview gem source by using
gem 'traceview', :path => '/path/to/ruby-traceview'
If instrumenting a library, database or service, place your new instrumentation file into the
lib/traceview/inst/
directory. From there, the traceview gem will detect it and automatically load the instrumentation file.If instrumenting a new framework, place your instrumentation file in
lib/traceview/frameworks
. Refer to the Rails instrumentation for on ideas on how to load the traceview gem correctly in your framework.Review other existing instrumentation similar to the one you wish to author.
lib/traceview/inst/
is a great place to start.Depending on the configured
:sample_rate
, not all requests will be traced. UseTraceView.tracing?
to determine of this is a request that is being traced.Performance is paramount. Make sure that your wrapped methods don't slow down users applications.
Include tests with your instrumentation. See
test/instrumentation/
for some examples of existing instrumentation tests.
Compiling the C extension
The traceview gem utilizes a C extension to interface with the system liboboe.so
library. This system library is installed with the TraceView host packages (tracelyzer, liboboe0, liboboe-dev) and is used to report host and performance metrics from multiple sources (Ruby, Apache, Python etc.) back to TraceView servers.
C extensions are usually built on gem install
but when working out of a local git repository, it's required that you manually build this C extension for the gem to function.
To make this simpler, we've included a few rake tasks to automate this process:
rake compile # Build the gem's c extension
rake distclean # Remove all built files and extensions
rake recompile # Rebuild the gem's c extension
Note: Make sure you have the development package liboboe0-dev
installed before attempting to compile the C extension.
>>$ dpkg -l | grep liboboe
ii liboboe-dev 1.2.1-trusty1 AppNeta TraceView common library -- development files
ii liboboe0 1.2.1-trusty1 AppNeta Traceview common library
See Installing Base Packages on Debian and Ubuntu in the Knowledge Base for details. Our hacker extraordinaire Rob Salmond from the support team has even gotten these packages to run on Gentoo!
To see the code related to the C extension, take a look at ext/oboe_metal/extconf.rb
for details.
You can read more about Ruby gems with C extensions in the Rubygems Guides.
Running the Tests
The tests bundled with the gem are implemented using Minitest. The tests are currently used to validate the sanity of the traces generated and basic gem functionality.
After a bundle install, the tests can be run as:
bundle exec rake test
This will run a full end-to-end test suite that covers all supported libraries and databases. Note that this requires all of the supported software (Cassandra, Memcache, Mongo etc.) to be installed, configured and available.
Since this is overly burdensome for casual users, you can run just the tests that you're interested in.
To run just the tests for the dalli gem trace validation:
bundle exec rake test TEST=test/instrumentation/dalli_test.rb
We humbly request that any submitted instrumentation is delivered with corresponding test coverage.
License
Copyright (c) 2014 Appneta
Released under the AppNeta Open License, Version 1.0