Ruby Custom Instrumentation using Datadog API
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This page details describes use cases for adding and customizing observability with Datadog APM.
Requirements
Make sure you require the appropriate gem for your Ruby tracer version:
For v2.x, require the datadog
gem:
For v1.x, require the ddtrace
gem:
Add custom span tags to your spans to customize your observability within Datadog. The span tags are applied to your incoming traces, allowing you to correlate observed behavior with code-level information such as merchant tier, checkout amount, or user ID.
Add custom tags to your spans corresponding to any dynamic value within your application code such as customer.id
.
Active spans
Access the current active span from any method within your code.
Note: If the method is called and there is no active span, active_span
is nil
.
# get '/shopping_cart/:customer_id', to: 'shopping_cart#index'
class ShoppingCartController < ApplicationController
# GET /shopping_cart
def index
# Get the active span and set customer_id -> 254889
Datadog::Tracing.active_span&.set_tag('customer.id', params.permit([:customer_id]))
# [...]
end
# POST /shopping_cart
def create
# [...]
end
end
Manually instrumented spans
Add tags directly to Datadog::Span
objects by calling #set_tag
:
# An example of a Sinatra endpoint,
# with Datadog tracing around the request.
get '/posts' do
Datadog::Tracing.trace('web.request') do |span|
span.set_tag('http.url', request.path)
span.set_tag('<TAG_KEY>', '<TAG_VALUE>')
end
end
Add tags to all spans by configuring the tracer with the tags
option:
Datadog.configure do |c|
c.tags = { 'team' => 'qa' }
end
You can also use the DD_TAGS
environment variable to set tags on all spans for an application. For more information on Ruby environment variables, read the setup documentation.
Setting errors on a span
There are two ways to set an error on a span:
- Call
span.set_error
and pass in the Exception Object. This automatically extracts the error type, message, and backtrace.
require 'timeout'
def example_method
span = Datadog::Tracing.trace('example.trace')
puts 'some work'
sleep(1)
raise StandardError, "This is an exception"
rescue StandardError => error
Datadog::Tracing.active_span&.set_error(error)
raise
ensure
span.finish
end
example_method()
- Or, use
tracer.trace
which by default sets the error type, message, and backtrace. To configure this behavior you can use the on_error
option, which is the Handler invoked when a block is provided to trace
, and the block raises an error. The Proc is provided span
and error
as arguments. By default, on_error
sets error on the span.
Default behavior for on_error
:
require 'timeout'
def example_method
puts 'some work'
sleep(1)
raise StandardError, "This is an exception"
end
Datadog::Tracing.trace('example.trace') do |span|
example_method()
end
Custom behavior for on_error
:
require 'timeout'
def example_method
puts 'some work'
sleep(1)
raise StandardError.new "This is a special exception"
end
custom_error_handler = proc do |span, error|
span.set_tag('custom_tag', 'custom_value')
span.set_error(error) unless error.message.include?("a special exception")
end
Datadog::Tracing.trace('example.trace', on_error: custom_error_handler) do |span|
example_method()
end
Adding spans
If you aren’t using supported library instrumentation (see library compatibility), you can manually instrument your code. Add tracing to your code by using the Datadog::Tracing.trace
method, which you can wrap around any Ruby code.
To trace any Ruby code, you can use the Datadog::Tracing.trace
method:
Datadog::Tracing.trace(name, resource: resource, **options) do |span|
# Wrap this block around the code you want to instrument
# Additionally, you can modify the span here.
# for example, change the resource name, or set tags
end
Where name
is a String
that describes the generic kind of operation being done (for example 'web.request'
, or 'request.parse'
).
resource
is a String
with the name of the action being operated on. Traces with the same resource value will be grouped together for the purpose of metrics. Resources are usually domain specific, such as a URL, query, request, etc. (e.g. ‘Article#submit’, http://example.com/articles/list.)
For all the available **options
, see the reference guide.
Manually creating a new span
Programmatically create spans around any block of code. Spans created in this manner integrate with other tracing mechanisms automatically. In other words, if a trace has already started, the manual span will have its caller as its parent span. Similarly, any traced methods called from the wrapped block of code will have the manual span as its parent.
# An example of a Sinatra endpoint,
# with Datadog tracing around the request,
# database query, and rendering steps.
get '/posts' do
Datadog::Tracing.trace('web.request', service: '<SERVICE_NAME>', resource: 'GET /posts') do |span|
# Trace the activerecord call
Datadog::Tracing.trace('posts.fetch') do
@posts = Posts.order(created_at: :desc).limit(10)
end
# Add some APM tags
span.set_tag('http.method', request.request_method)
span.set_tag('posts.count', @posts.length)
# Trace the template rendering
Datadog::Tracing.trace('template.render') do
erb :index
end
end
end
Post-processing traces
Some applications might require that traces be altered or filtered out before they are sent to Datadog. The processing pipeline allows you to create processors to define such behavior.
Filtering
You can use the Datadog::Tracing::Pipeline::SpanFilter
processor to remove spans, when the block evaluates as truthy:
Datadog::Tracing.before_flush(
# Remove spans that match a particular resource
Datadog::Tracing::Pipeline::SpanFilter.new { |span| span.resource =~ /PingController/ },
# Remove spans that are trafficked to localhost
Datadog::Tracing::Pipeline::SpanFilter.new { |span| span.get_tag('host') == 'localhost' }
)
Processing
You can use the Datadog::Tracing::Pipeline::SpanProcessor
processor to modify spans:
Datadog::Tracing.before_flush(
# Strip matching text from the resource field
Datadog::Tracing::Pipeline::SpanProcessor.new { |span| span.resource.gsub!(/password=.*/, '') }
)
Custom processor
Processors can be any object that responds to #call
accepting trace
as an argument (which is an Array
of Datadog::Span
.)
For example, using the short-hand block syntax:
Datadog::Tracing.before_flush do |trace|
# Processing logic...
trace
end
The following example implements a processor to achieve complex post-processing logic:
Datadog::Tracing.before_flush do |trace|
trace.spans.each do |span|
originalPrice = span.get_tag('order.price'))
discount = span.get_tag('order.discount'))
# Set a tag from a calculation from other tags
if (originalPrice != nil && discount != nil)
span.set_tag('order.value', originalPrice - discount)
end
end
trace
end
For a custom processor class:
class MyCustomProcessor
def call(trace)
# Processing logic...
trace
end
end
Datadog::Tracing.before_flush(MyCustomProcessor.new)
In both cases, the processor method must return the trace
object; this return value will be passed to the next processor in the pipeline.
Trace client and Agent configuration
There are additional configurations possible for both the tracing client and Datadog Agent for context propagation with B3 Headers, as well as to exclude specific Resources from sending traces to Datadog in the event these traces are not wanted to count in metrics calculated, such as Health Checks.
Propagating context with headers extraction and injection
You can configure the propagation of context for distributed traces by injecting and extracting headers. Read Trace Context Propagation for information.
Resource filtering
Traces can be excluded based on their resource name, to remove synthetic traffic such as health checks from reporting traces to Datadog. This and other security and fine-tuning configurations can be found on the Security page.
Further Reading
Documentation, liens et articles supplémentaires utiles: