Skip to content

stephenc-pace/nameko-tracer

 
 

Repository files navigation

https://travis-ci.org/nameko/nameko-tracer.svg?branch=master

Nameko Entrypoint Tracer

Usage

Install from PyPI:

pip install nameko-tracer

Add nameko_tracer.Tracer dependency provider to your service plus add a simple RPC entrypoint so we have an endpoint to trace:

# traced.py

from nameko.rpc import rpc
from nameko_tracer import Tracer


class Service:

    name = 'traced'

    tracer = Tracer()

    @rpc
    def hello(self, name):
        return 'Hello, {}!'.format(name)

Now, if you start your service in a shell:

$ nameko run traced

And invoke the test entrypoint in another:

$ nameko shell
In [1]: n.rpc.traced.hello(name='ナメコ')
Out[2]: 'Hello, ナメコ!'

You should see two log records printed out in the first shell:

$ nameko run traced
starting services: traced
Connected to amqp://guest:***@127.0.0.1:5672//
[traced.hello.8eb11de2-0b28-495d-af91-98bd6a051bca] entrypoint call trace
[traced.hello.8eb11de2-0b28-495d-af91-98bd6a051bca] entrypoint result trace

The output does not tell much, given the default logging formatter prints just the message. But there's much more on the log records, to get it out let's configure service logging and customize the formatter to include the trace details (the tracer adds safely serialisable details to nameko_trace attribute of the log record):

# config.yaml

AMQP_URI: 'pyamqp://guest:guest@localhost'
LOGGING:
    version: 1
    formatters:
        tracer:
            format: "[%(name)-12s] %(nameko_trace)s"
    handlers:
        tracer:
            class: logging.StreamHandler
            formatter: tracer
    loggers:
        nameko_tracer:
            level: INFO
            handlers: [tracer]

Stop the service and start it again pointing to the new config file:

$ nameko run traced --config config.yaml

And invoke the test entrypoint again in the second shell:

$ nameko shell
In [1]: n.rpc.traced.hello(name='ナメコ')
Out[1]: 'Hello, ナメコ!'
In [2]: n.rpc.traced.hello(name='ナメコ')
Out[2]: 'Hello, ナメコ!'

In the first shell where the service runs you'll find the string representation of the gathered trace information printed out:

$ nameko run traced --config config.yaml
[nameko_tracer] {'call_args_redacted': False, 'context_data': {}, 'entrypoint':
 'traced.hello', 'call_id': 'traced.hello.f51733a0-1851-47e6-9d47-29bef5eaf581'
, 'provider': 'Rpc', 'timestamp': datetime.datetime(2017, 8, 10, 18, 7, 12, 106
972), 'service': 'traced', 'call_stack': ['standalone_rpc_proxy.call.14caabf9-8
92f-4ab2-b04b-e0fb90167fe5', 'traced.hello.f51733a0-1851-47e6-9d47-29bef5eaf581
'], 'call_args': {'name': 'ナメコ'}, 'lifecycle_stage': 'request', 'provider_na
me': 'hello'}
[nameko_tracer] {'call_args_redacted': False, 'context_data': {}, 'call_id': 't
raced.hello.f51733a0-1851-47e6-9d47-29bef5eaf581', 'provider': 'Rpc', 'return_a
rgs': 'Hello, ナメコ!', 'response_time': 0.023348, 'call_stack': ['standalone_r
pc_proxy.call.14caabf9-892f-4ab2-b04b-e0fb90167fe5', 'traced.hello.f51733a0-185
1-47e6-9d47-29bef5eaf581'], 'entrypoint': 'traced.hello', 'timestamp': datetime
.datetime(2017, 8, 10, 18, 7, 12, 130320), 'status': 'success', 'service': 'tra
ced', 'call_args': {'name': 'ナメコ'}, 'lifecycle_stage': 'response', 'provider
_name': 'hello'}

The traces include comprehensive information about the entrypoint fired and it would be more practical to have the details serialised in a format which is readable by both humans and machines. The tracer comes with a simple JSON formatter of the trace log record attribute. Now reconfigure the logging to use nameko_tracer.formatters.JSONFormatter:

# config.yaml

AMQP_URI: 'pyamqp://guest:guest@localhost'
LOGGING:
    version: 1
    formatters:
        tracer:
            (): nameko_tracer.formatters.JSONFormatter
    handlers:
        tracer:
            class: logging.StreamHandler
            formatter: tracer
    loggers:
        nameko_tracer:
            level: INFO
            handlers: [tracer]

After restarting the service with the updated config and after invoking the testing call you will find the traces logged as JSON:

$ nameko run traced --config config.yaml
{"call_id": "traced.hello.19522441-9581-484b-bad5-8d14b8b5c291", "call_args_red
acted": false, "service": "traced", "entrypoint": "traced.hello", "provider": "
Rpc", "lifecycle_stage": "request", "context_data": {}, "call_stack": ["standal
...

Find more about what's included in the trace in the Trace Data section.

Trace data

TODO more words here ...

The request stage trace includes the following details:

  • A timestamp.
  • Entrypoint metadata consisting of:
    • service name
    • entrypoint method name
    • entrypoint type (e.g. Rpc),
    • worker context data
  • Tracking data with call ID and call ID stack holding a chain of call IDs of all consecutive calls leading to this one.
  • Entrypoint call arguments. The tracer honours sensitive_variables of each entrypoint and redacts values of sensitive arguments before placing them on the trace (there is also a flag saying whether the call arguments were redacted).

The response stage trace includes same details as the request stage trace plus the following additional response specific fields:

  • Response status which is either success or error in case the entrypoint execution failed.
  • Result returned by the entrypoint (the package includes a logging filter for truncating the response if needed).
  • Exception details if the entrypoint execution failed.
  • Response time saying how long it took to process the entrypoint.

Each trace also includes a stage key saying what stage the trace is for.

See constants module for the exact key names.

JSON Trace Formatter

The package includes nameko_tracer.formatters.JSONFormatter - a simple, but handy formatter which takes nameko_trace attribute of the log record and formats it as JSON string.

Truncation Filters

The package also includes two filters for truncating bulky parts of trace data. This is useful for reducing the amount of data ending up in your logs.

  • nameko_tracer.filters.TruncateCallArgsFilter
  • nameko_tracer.filters.TruncateResponseFilter

The truncating filter (TruncateCallArgsFilter) takes the following arguments:

  • entrypoints - a list of regex strings identifying entrypoints whose call arguments data should be truncated when logging. Defaults to an empty list - you have to provide an input in order to make this filter to take any effect.
  • max_len - an integer representing the number of characters to keep. Defaults to 100.

The response truncating filter (TruncateResponseFilter) takes the following arguments:

  • entrypoints - a list of regex strings identifying entrypoints whose response data should be truncated when logging. Defaults to "^get_|^list_|^query_".
  • max_len - an integer representing the number of characters to keep. Defaults to 100.

Both filters add an additional flag to the trace saying whether the trimming was applied.

Note that the filters first serialise the input to a string before applying the truncation. If the length of string representation of the input is within the max_len limit, the input is kept untouched.

An example of configuring logging to use the truncation filters:

# config.yaml

AMQP_URI: 'pyamqp://guest:guest@localhost'
LOGGING:
    version: 1
    filters:
        truncate_request_trace:
            (): nameko_tracer.filters.TruncateCallArgsFilter
            entrypoints:
                - insert_big_data
            max_len: 200
        truncate_response_trace:
            (): nameko_tracer.filters.TruncateResponseFilter
    formatters:
        tracer:
            (): nameko_tracer.formatters.JSONFormatter
    handlers:
        tracer:
            class: logging.StreamHandler
            formatter: tracer
    loggers:
        nameko_tracer:
            level: INFO
            handlers: [tracer]
            filters:
                - truncate_request_trace
                - truncate_response_trace

Custom Adapters

TODO describe ...

About

No description, website, or topics provided.

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Releases

No releases published

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Python 99.6%
  • Makefile 0.4%