A function decorator for OpenTelemetry traces.
Add open_telemetry_decorator
to your list of dependencies in mix.exs
. We include the opentelemetry_api
package, but you'll need to add opentelemetry
yourself in order to report spans and traces.
def deps do
[
{:opentelemetry, "~> 1.2"},
{:opentelemetry_exporter, "~> 1.4"},
{:open_telemetry_decorator, "~> 1.4"}
]
end
Then follow the directions for the exporter of your choice to send traces to to zipkin, honeycomb, etc. https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-erlang/tree/main/apps/opentelemetry_zipkin
config/runtime.exs
api_key = Map.fetch!(System.get_env(), "HONEYCOMB_KEY")
config :opentelemetry, :processors,
otel_batch_processor: %{
exporter:
{:opentelemetry_exporter,
%{
protocol: :grpc,
headers: [
{'x-honeycomb-team', api_key},
{'x-honeycomb-dataset', 'YOUR_APP_NAME'}
],
endpoints: [{:https, 'api.honeycomb.io', 443, []}]
}}
}
Add use OpenTelemetryDecorator
to the module, and decorate any methods you want to trace with @decorate trace("span name")
.
The trace
decorator will automatically wrap the decorated function in an opentelemetry span with the provided name.
defmodule MyApp.Worker do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("worker.do_work")
def do_work(arg1, arg2) do
...doing work
end
end
The trace
decorator allows you to specify an include
option which gives you more flexibility with what you can include in the span attributes. Omitting the includes
option with trace
means no attributes will be added to the span by the decorator.
defmodule MyApp.Worker do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("worker.do_work", include: [:arg1, :arg2])
def do_work(arg1, arg2) do
# ...doing work
end
end
The Attributes module includes a helper for setting additional attributes outside of the include
option. Attributes added in either a set
call or in the include
that are not primitive OTLP values will be converted to strings with Kernel.inspect/1
.
defmodule MyApp.Worker do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
alias OpenTelemetryDecorator.Attributes
@decorate trace("worker.do_work")
def do_work(arg1, arg2) do
Attributes.set(arg1: arg1, arg2: arg2)
# ...doing work
Attributes.set(:output, "something")
end
end
The decorator uses a macro to insert code into your function at compile time to wrap the body in a new span and link it to the currently active span. In the example above, the do_work
method would become something like this:
defmodule MyApp.Worker do
require OpenTelemetry.Tracer, as: Tracer
def do_work(arg1, arg2) do
Tracer.with_span "my_app.worker.do_work" do
# ...doing work
Tracer.set_attributes(arg1: arg1, arg2: arg2)
end
end
end
Honeycomb suggests that you namespace custom fields, specifically putting manual instrumentation under app.
In order to do this, you'll configure the attr_prefix
option in config/config.exs
config :open_telemetry_decorator, attr_prefix: "app."
By default, nested attributes are joined with an underscore. However, when you have an object with underscores and a property with underscores, this can be hard to visually parse. For example, my_struct.other_struct.field
, would be exported as my_struct_other_struct_field
.
To override this, you'll configure the attr_joiner
option in config/config.exs
. The default value will likely change from _
to .
in a future version.
config :open_telemetry_decorator, attr_joiner: "."
Thanks to @benregn for the examples and inspiration for these two options!
You can provide span attributes by specifying a list of variable names as atoms.
This list can include...
Any variables (in the top level closure) available when the function exits.
Note that variables declared as part of a with
block are in a separate scope so NOT available for include
attributes
defmodule MyApp.Math do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("my_app.math.add", include: [:a, :b, :sum])
def add(a, b) do
sum = a + b
{:ok, sum}
end
end
The result of the function by including the atom :result
:
defmodule MyApp.Math do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("my_app.math.add", include: [:result])
def add(a, b) do
{:ok, a + b}
end
end
Map/struct properties using nested lists of atoms:
defmodule MyApp.Worker do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("my_app.worker.do_work", include: [[:arg1, :count], [:arg2, :count], :total])
def do_work(arg1, arg2) do
total = some_calculation(arg1.count, arg2.count)
{:ok, total}
end
end
defmodule MyApp.Worker do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("my_app.worker.do_work", include: [[:calc, "sum"], [:calc, "product"]])
def do_work(obj) do
calc = %{"sum" => 10, "product" => 25}
{:ok, calc}
end
end
The map/struct properties of the result of the function:
defmodule MyApp.Math do
use OpenTelemetryDecorator
@decorate trace("my_app.math.add", include: [[:result, :sum]])
def add(a, b) do
%{sum: a + b}
end
end
make check
before you commit! If you'd prefer to do it manually:
mix do deps.get, deps.unlock --unused, deps.clean --unused
if you change dependenciesmix compile --warnings-as-errors
for a stricter compilemix coveralls.html
to check for test coveragemix credo
to suggest more idiomatic style for your codemix dialyzer
to find problems typing might reveal… albeit slowlymix docs
to generate documentation