Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
528 lines (367 loc) · 17.5 KB

README.md

File metadata and controls

528 lines (367 loc) · 17.5 KB

Laravel Tracing

Introduction

Distributed tracing is the process of tracking the activity resulting from a request to an application. With this feature, you can:

  • Trace the path of a request as it travels across a complex system
  • Discover the latency of the components (services) along that path
  • Know which component in the path is creating a bottleneck
  • Inspect payloads that are being sent between components
  • Build execution graph for each separate component and more

Simply put, distributed tracing is a knowledge tool. One of the most important perks of having it in your project is that deveopers can learn the system by simply following the traces it makes.

See how Uber is using distributed tracing to make sense of large number of microservices and interactions within their product:

A distributed trace is composed of multiple spans, which represent time spent in services or resources of those services.

Each Span has the following:

  • Operation name
  • Start timestamp
  • Finish timestamp
  • Set of zero or more key:value tags to enable lookup and record additional information
  • Set of zero or more logs paired with a timestamp
  • References to related Spans (e.g. a parent)

Spans are typically displayed for your view as a time axis where each span can be unfolded to inpect additional details:

image

The Tracer interface (available via Trace facade) creates Spans and understands how to Inject (serialize) and Extract (deserialize) them across process boundaries.

See OpenTracing spec for more details on semantics behind distributed tracing.

Requirements

This package requires PHP >= 7.1 and Laravel 5.5 or later. We also offer limited Lumen support (basic tracing and http middleware).

Installation

First, install the package via Composer:

composer require vinelab/tracing-laravel

After installation, you can publish the package configuration using the vendor:publish command. This command will publish the tracing.php configuration file to your config directory:

php artisan vendor:publish --provider="Vinelab\Tracing\TracingServiceProvider"

You may configure the driver and service name in your .env file:

TRACING_DRIVER=zipkin
TRACING_SERVICE_NAME=orders

You should also add credentials for your respective driver as described in the section below.

For Lumen, see dedicated section with installation instructions.

Driver Prerequisites

Zipkin

Use the following environment variables to configure Zipkin:

ZIPKIN_HOST=localhost
ZIPKIN_PORT=9411

If the collector is unreachable via a given hostname, you might see debug messages about that printed with each request. If you want to ignore these in production, simply edit your logging configuration to omit debug level messages.

Jaeger

Jaeger is not "officially" supported because of the lack of stable instrumentation for PHP.

However, you can still post spans to Jaeger collector with Zipkin driver using Zipkin compatible HTTP endpoint. In fact, that's the recommended way to use this library since Jaeger's UI is just that much more convenient than Zipkin's.

There are some downsides, however:

  • you won't be able to avail of some Jaeger specific features like contextualized logging since Zipkin only supports tags and time annotations
  • HTTP is your only choice of transport (no UDP option)

We'll consider improving Jaeger support once its instrumetation matures.

Null

The package also includes null driver that discards created spans.

Usage

You will work with tracing via a Trace facade provided by this package.

Creating Spans

Starting new trace is as simple as calling startSpan method with name for a logical operation the span represents:

$span = Trace::startSpan('Create Order');

Often, you need to continue an existing trace which is why startSpan also accepts additional parameter for span context. SpanContext may be propagated via various channels including HTTP requests, AMQP messages, arrays or even another span:

$spanContext = Trace::extract($request, Formats::ILLUMINATE_HTTP);

$rootSpan = Trace::startSpan('Create Order', $spanContext);

$childSpan = Trace::startSpan('Validate Order', $rootSpan->getContext())

The possibilities are limitless. Refer to Context Propagation section for more details.

Customizing Spans

Override span name:

$span->setName('Create Order');

Add tags, which may be used as lookup keys (to search span on UI) or additional details:

$span->tag('shipping_method', $shipping_method);

Retrieving Spans

You can retrieve the current span, which is also your most recently created span:

$span = Trace::getCurrentSpan()

The first span you create when processing a request in the service is called a root span (not to mix with the global root span of the trace):

After you call flush, the root span is reset.

$span = Trace::getRootSpan()

Controlling Spans

You may finish the span by calling finish on it. Span duration is derived by subtracting the start timestamp from this:

$span->finish()

You can log additional data between span start and finish. For example, annotate creates a time-stamped event to explain latencies:

$span->annotate('Order Validated')

Flushing Spans

Flush refers to the process of sending all pending spans to the transport. It will also reset the state of the tracer including the active spans and UUID:

Trace::flush()

Most of the time though you don't need to explicitly call flush. Since PHP is designed to die after each request, we already handle finishing the root span and calling flush upon application shutdown for you.

It's only when processing requests continuously in a loop (e.g. AMQP channels) that you must resort to calling flush manually.

Logging

Each root span is associated with a unique identifier that can be used to lookup its trace. It is recommended you include it as part of context when reporting errors to bridge the gap between different parts of your monitoring stack:

// Illuminate\Foundation\Exceptions\Handler

/**
  * Get the default context variables for logging.
  *
  * @return array
  */
protected function context()
{
    return array_filter([
        'userId' => Auth::id(),
        'uuid' => Trace::getUUID(),
    ]);
}

Custom drivers may also support logging structured data (not available in Zipkin) which can be used for integrating tracing with a Log facade:

use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Event;

/**
 * Bootstrap any application services.
 *
 * @return void
 */
public function boot()
{
    Event::listen(MessageLogged::class, function (MessageLogged $e) {
        Tracer::getCurrentSpan()->log((array) $e);
    });
}

Middleware

This package includes a \Vinelab\Tracing\Middleware\TraceRequests middleware to take care of continuing the trace from incoming HTTP request.

You should register middleware class in the $middleware property of your app/Http/Kernel.php class.

The middleware adds the following tags on a root span:

  • type (http)
  • request_method
  • request_path
  • request_uri
  • request_headers
  • request_ip
  • request_input
  • response_status
  • response_headers
  • response_content

Request and response body are only included for whitelisted content-types. See logging.content_types option in your config/tracing.php.

You can override the default name of the span (which is VERB /path/for/route) in the controller:

Trace::getRootSpan()->setName('Create Order')

Console Commands

Lumen does not support this feature, but you can still create traces for commands manually using tracer instance.

Let your console commsands be traced by adding Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\ShouldBeTraced interface to your class.

The container span will include the following tags:

  • type (cli)
  • argv

The span will be named after the console command. You can override the default name of the span in the command itself:

Trace::getRootSpan()->setName('Mark Orders Expired')

Queue Jobs

Lumen does not support this feature, but you can still create traces for jobs manually using tracer instance.

Let your queue jobs be traced by adding Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\ShouldBeTraced interface to your job class.

The container span will include the following tags:

  • type (queue)
  • connection_name (i.e. sync, redis etc.)
  • queue_name
  • job_input

As the name implies, job_input allows you to view your job's contructor parameters as JSON. Serialization of objects to this JSON string can be controlled by implementing one of the following interfaces: Arrayable, Jsonable, JsonSerializable, or a __toString method. A fallback behavior is to print all your object's public properties.

Constructor arguments must be saved as a class property with the same name (see ProcessPodcast example below).

The span will be named after the queue job class. You can override the default name of the span in the job itself:

app('tracing.queue.span')->setName('Process Podcast')

Note here that the queue span may not necessarily be the root span of the trace. You would usually want the queue to continue the trace from where it left of when the job was dispatched. You can achieve this by simply giving SpanContext to the job's constructor:

class ProcessPodcast implements ShouldQueue
{
    use Dispatchable, InteractsWithQueue, Queueable, SerializesModels;

    protected $podcast;

    protected $spanContext;

    public function __construct(Podcast $podcast, SpanContext $spanContext)
    {
        $this->podcast = $podcast;
        $this->spanContext = $spanContext;
    }

    public function handle(AudioProcessor $processor)
    {
        // Process uploaded podcast...
    }
}

The job above can be dispatched like so:

ProcessPodcast::dispatch($podcast, Trace::getRootSpan()->getContext());

The rest will be handled automatically. Note that SpanContext will be excluded from logged job_input.

This package doesn't automatically handle tracing of queued closures and queued event listeners. You can still trace them manually by opening and closing spans. Improving support for these features might be considered for future versions of the package.

Context Propagation

As we talked about previously, the tracer understands how to inject and extract trace context across different applications (services).

We have already seen the example of extracting trace from HTTP request:

$spanContext = Trace::extract($request, Formats::ILLUMINATE_HTTP);

Of course, you don't need to do this manually because this package already includes a middleware to handle this for you, but the trace may not necessarily come from HTTP request.

The second parameter is a format descriptor that tells us how to deserialize tracing headers from given carrier. By default, the following formats are supported:

use Vinelab\Tracing\Propagation\Formats;

$spanContext = Trace::extract($carrier, Formats::TEXT_MAP);
$spanContext = Trace::extract($carrier, Formats::PSR_REQUEST);
$spanContext = Trace::extract($carrier, Formats::ILLUMINATE_HTTP);
$spanContext = Trace::extract($carrier, Formats::AMQP);
$spanContext = Trace::extract($carrier, Formats::GOOGLE_PUBSUB);

You may also add your own format using registerExtractionFormat method.

Trace::registerExtractionFormat("pubsub", new PubSubExtractor());

The injection format must implement Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Extractor. Refer to default Zipkin implementation for example.

interface Extractor
{
    public function extract($carrier): ?SpanContext;
}

Naturally, you can also inject existing trace context from the current span into a given carrier so that another service can continue the trace:

$message = Trace::inject($message, Formats::AMQP);

$channel->basic_publish($message, $this->exchangeName, $routingKey);

By default, the following formats are supported:

use Vinelab\Tracing\Propagation\Formats;

$carrier = Trace::inject($carrier, Formats::TEXT_MAP);
$carrier = Trace::inject($carrier, Formats::PSR_REQUEST);
$carrier = Trace::inject($carrier, Formats::ILLUMINATE_HTTP);
$carrier = Trace::inject($carrier, Formats::AMQP);
$carrier = Trace::inject($carrier, Formats::GOOGLE_PUBSUB);
$carrier = Trace::inject($carrier, Formats::VINELAB_HTTP);

You may also add your own format using registerInjectionFormat method.

The injection format must implement Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Injector. Refer to default Zipkin implementation for example.

interface Injector
{
    public function inject(SpanContext $spanContext, &$carrier): void;
}

You can also use injectContext method if you need to pass span context explicitly:

$carrier = Trace::injectContext($carrier, Formats::TEXT_MAP, $span->getContext());

IMPORTANT: You don't need to create a custom propagation format if you need to get something done quickly. You can always avail of the default TEXT_MAP format to inject or extract tracing headers from an associative array.

Custom Drivers

Writing New Driver

New drivers must adhere to Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Tracer contract. Refer to the default ZipkinTracer imlementation for example.

use Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Extractor;
use Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Injector;
use Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Span;
use Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\SpanContext;

public function startSpan(string $name, SpanContext $spanContext = null, ?int $timestamp = null): Span;
public function getRootSpan(): ?Span;
public function getCurrentSpan(): ?Span;
public function getUUID(): ?string;
public function extract($carrier, string $format): ?SpanContext;
public function inject($carrier, string $format);
public function injectContext($carrier, string $format, SpanContext $spanContext);
public function registerExtractionFormat(string $format, Extractor $extractor): array;
public function registerInjectionFormat(string $format, Injector $injector): array;
public function flush(): void;

Registering New Driver

Once you have written your custom driver, you may register it using the extend method of the TracingDriverManager. You should call the extend method from the boot method of your AppServiceProvider or any other service provider used by your application. For example, if you have written a JaegerTracer, you may register it like so:

use Vinelab\Tracing\TracingDriverManager;

/**
 * Bootstrap any application services.
 *
 * @return void
 */
public function boot()
{
    resolve(TracingDriverManager::class)->extend('jaeger', function () {
        return new JaegerTracer;
    });
}

Once your driver has been registered, you may specify it as your tracing driver in your environment variables:

TRACING_DRIVER=jaeger

Usage With Lumen

You need to register service provider manually in bootstrap/app.php file:

$app->register(Vinelab\Tracing\TracingServiceProvider::class);

You should also register middleware in the same file:

$app->middleware([
    Vinelab\Tracing\Middleware\TraceRequests::class,
]);

Add the following lines to the end of public/index.php file:

$tracer = app(Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Tracer::class);

optional($tracer->getRootSpan())->finish();
$tracer->flush();

Finally, you may also want to copy over config/tracing.php from this repo if you need to customize default settings.

If you don't use facades in your Lumen project, you can resolve tracer instance from container like this:

use Vinelab\Tracing\Contracts\Tracer;

app(Tracer::class)->startSpan('Create Order')

Note that Lumen currently doesn't support automatic tracing for console commands and jobs because it doesn't dispatch some events and terminating callbacks. However, you can still create traces manually where you need them.

Integrations

Lucid Architecture

This package includes optional Vinelab\Tracing\Integration\Concerns\TracesLucidArchitecture trait to enable tracing for Lucid projects:

class TracingServiceProvider extends ServiceProvider
{
    use TracesLucidArchitecture;

    /**
     * Bootstrap any application services.
     *
     * @return void
     */
    public function boot()
    {
        $this->traceLucidArchitecture();
    }
}