- 필수 기능
- 시작하기
- Glossary
- 표준 속성
- Guides
- Agent
- 통합
- 개방형텔레메트리
- 개발자
- API
- Datadog Mobile App
- CoScreen
- Cloudcraft
- 앱 내
- 서비스 관리
- 인프라스트럭처
- 애플리케이션 성능
- APM
- Continuous Profiler
- 스팬 시각화
- 데이터 스트림 모니터링
- 데이터 작업 모니터링
- 디지털 경험
- 소프트웨어 제공
- 보안
- AI Observability
- 로그 관리
- 관리
If you are using PHP 8, as of v0.84 of the tracer, you can add attributes to your code to instrument it. It is a lighter alternative to custom instrumentation written in code. For example, add the #[DDTrace\Trace]
attribute to methods for Datadog to trace them.
<?php
class Server {
#[DDTrace\Trace(name: "spanName", resource: "resourceName", type: "Custom", service: "myService", tags: ["aTag" => "aValue"])]
static function process($arg) {}
#[DDTrace\Trace]
function get() {
Foo::simple(1);
}
}
You can provide the following arguments:
$name
: The operation name to be assigned to the span. Defaults to the function name.$resource
: The resource to be assigned to the span.$type
: The type to be assigned to the span.$service
: The service to be assigned to the span. Defaults to default or inherited service name.$tags
: The tags to be assigned to the span.$recurse
: Whether recursive calls shall be traced.$run_if_limited
: Whether the function shall be traced in limited mode. (For example, when span limit exceeded)#[\DDTrace\Trace]
. Alternatively, you can import the namespace with use DDTrace\Trace;
and use #[Trace]
.If you do need to write your own custom instrumentation, consider the following sample application and walk through the coding examples.
Assume the following directory structure:
.
|-- composer.json
|-- docker-compose.yml
|-- index.php
`-- src
|-- Exceptions
| `-- NotFound.php
|-- Services
| `-- SampleRegistry.php
`-- utils
`-- functions.php
Within this, two files contain the functions and methods that are interesting to instrument. The most relevant files are src/utils/functions.php
:
src/utils/functions.php
namespace App;
function some_utility_function($someArg)
{
return 'result';
}
And src/Services/SampleRegistry.php
:
src/Services/SampleRegistry.php
namespace App\Services;
use App\Exceptions\NotFound;
use Exception;
class SampleRegistry
{
public function put($key, $value)
{
\App\some_utility_function('some argument');
// Return the id of the item inserted
return 456;
}
public function faultyMethod()
{
throw new Exception('Generated at runtime');
}
public function get($key)
{
// The service uses an exception to report a key not found.
throw new NotFound('The key was not found');
}
public function compact()
{
// This function executes some operations on the registry and
// returns nothing. In the middle of the function, we have an
// interesting value that is not returned but can be related
// to the slowness of the function
$numberOfItemsProcessed = 123;
// ...
}
}
To avoid mixing application or service business logic with instrumentation code, write the required code in a separate file.
Create a file datadog/instrumentation.php
and add it to the composer autoloader.
composer.json
{
...
"autoload": {
...
"files": [
...
"datadog/instrumentation.php"
]
},
...
}
Dump the autoloader, for example by running composer dump
.
composer.json
's autoload.files
array ensures that the file is always executed when the composer autoloader is required.In the datadog/instrumentation.php
file, check if the extension is loaded. If the extension is not loaded then all the functions used in this file do not exist.
datadog/instrumentation.php
if (!extension_loaded('ddtrace')) {
return;
}
Instrument a function, \App\some_utility_function
. If you are not interested in any specific aspect of the function other than the execution time, then this is all that is required:
datadog/instrumentation.php
\DDTrace\trace_function('App\some_utility_function', function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, $args, $ret, $exception) {});
Suppose for the SampleRegistry::put
method, you not only want to generate a span, you also want to add a tag with the value of the returned item identifier, and a tag for the key. Because put
is a method, use \DDTrace\trace_method
instead of \DDTrace\trace_function
:
datadog/instrumentation.php
...
\DDTrace\trace_method(
'App\Services\SampleRegistry',
'put',
function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, $args, $ret, $exception) {
$span->meta['app.cache.key'] = $args[0]; // The first argument is the 'key'
$span->meta['app.cache.item_id'] = $ret; // The returned value
}
);
$span->meta['mytag'] = 'value'
. Do not write $span->meta = ['mytag' => 'value']
.In the sample code, SampleRegistry::faultyMethod
generates an exception. There is nothing you have to do with regards to custom instrumentation. If the method is instrumented, the default exception reporting mechanism takes care of attaching the exception message and the stack trace.
datadog/instrumentation.php
...
\DDTrace\trace_method(
'App\Services\SampleRegistry',
'faultyMethod',
function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, $args, $ret, $exception) {
}
);
The SampleRegistry::get
method uses a NotFound
exception to notify that an item was not found. This exception is an expected part of the business logic and you do not want to mark the span as an error. You just want to change the resource name to add it to a pool of not_found
operations. To achieve that, you unset
the exception for the span:
datadog/instrumentation.php
...
\DDTrace\trace_method(
'App\Services\SampleRegistry',
'get',
function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, $args, $ret, $exception) {
if ($exception instanceof \App\Exceptions\NotFound) {
unset($span->exception);
$span->resource = 'cache.get.not_found';
}
}
);
The SampleRegistry::compact
method demonstrates an interesting use case. You are interested in adding a tag with a value that is neither an argument nor the value returned by the function. To do this, edit both datadog/instrumentation.php
and the class file src/Services/SampleRegistry.php
:
datadog/instrumentation.php
...
\DDTrace\trace_method(
'App\Services\SampleRegistry',
'compact',
function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, $args, $ret, $exception) {
}
);
In src/Services/SampleRegistry.php
edit the body of the method:
src/Services/SampleRegistry.php
...
public function compact()
{
// This function execute some operations on the registry and
// returns nothing. In the middle of the function, we have an
// interesting value that is not returned but can be related
// to the slowness of the function
$numberOfItemsProcessed = 123;
// Add instrumenting code within your business logic.
if (\function_exists('\DDTrace\active_span') && $span = \DDTrace\active_span()) {
$span->meta['registry.compact.items_processed'] = $numberOfItemsProcessed;
}
// ...
}
trace_function
and trace_method
The DDTrace\trace_function
and DDTrace\trace_method
functions instrument (trace) specific function and method calls. These functions automatically handle the following tasks:
Additional tags are set on the span from the closure (called a tracing closure).
For example, the following snippet traces the CustomDriver::doWork
method and adds custom tags. Exceptions are automatically tracked on the span.
<?php
\DDTrace\trace_method(
'CustomDriver',
'doWork',
function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, array $args, $retval, $exception) {
// This closure runs after the instrumented call
// Span was automatically created before the instrumented call
// SpanData::$name defaults to 'ClassName.methodName' if not set
$span->name = 'CustomDriver.doWork';
// SpanData::$resource defaults to SpanData::$name if not set
$span->resource = 'CustomDriver.doWork';
$span->service = 'php';
// If an exception was thrown from the instrumented call, return value is null
$span->meta['doWork.size'] = $exception ? 0 : count($retval),
// Access object members via $this
$span->meta['doWork.thing'] = $this->workToDo;
// The span will automatically close
}
);
// For functions
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'doCustomDriverWork',
function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, array $args, $retval, $exception) {
// Same as DDTrace\trace_method tracing closure
}
);
?>
The built-in instrumentation and your own custom instrumentation creates spans around meaningful operations. You can access the active span in order to include meaningful data.
The following method returns a DDTrace\SpanData
object. When tracing is disabled, `null is returned.
<?php
$span = \DDTrace\active_span();
if ($span) {
$span->meta['customer.id'] = get_customer_id();
}
?>
The following method returns a DDTrace\SpanData
object. When tracing is disabled, null
is returned. This is useful in contexts where the metadata to be added to the root span does not exist in early script execution.
<?php
$span = \DDTrace\root_span();
if ($span) {
$span->meta['customer.id'] = get_customer_id();
}
?>
$span->meta['mytag'] = 'value'
. Do not write $span->meta = ['mytag' => 'value']
.Add tags to a span by using the DDTrace\SpanData::$meta
array.
<?php
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'myRandFunc',
function(\DDTrace\SpanData $span, array $args, $retval) {
// ...
$span->meta['rand.range'] = $args[0] . ' - ' . $args[1];
$span->meta['rand.value'] = $retval;
}
);
Set the DD_TAGS
environment variable (version 0.47.0+) to automatically apply tags to every span that is created. This was previously DD_TRACE_GLOBAL_TAGS
. For more information about configuring the older version, see environment variable configuration.
DD_TAGS=key1:value1,<TAG_KEY>:<TAG_VALUE>
Thrown exceptions are automatically attached to the active span, unless the exception is thrown at a deeper level in the call stack and it is caught before it reaches any function that is traced.
<?php
function doRiskyThing() {
throw new Exception('Oops!');
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'doRiskyThing',
function() {
// Span will be flagged as erroneous and have
// the stack trace and exception message attached as tags
}
);
Set the error.message
tag to manually flag a span as erroneous.
<?php
function doRiskyThing() {
return SOME_ERROR_CODE;
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'doRiskyThing',
function(\DDTrace\SpanData $span, $args, $retval) {
if ($retval === SOME_ERROR_CODE) {
$span->meta['error.message'] = 'Foo error';
// Optional:
$span->meta['error.type'] = 'CustomError';
$span->meta['error.stack'] = (new \Exception)->getTraceAsString();
}
}
);
Span links associate one or more spans together that don’t have a typical parent-child relationship. They may associate spans within the same trace or spans across different traces.
Span links help trace operations in distributed systems, where workflows often deviate from linear execution patterns. Additionally, span links are useful to trace the flow of operations in systems that execute requests in batches or process events asynchronously.
To add a span link from an existing span:
$spanA = \DDTrace\start_trace_span();
$spanA->name = 'spanA';
\DDTrace\close_span();
$spanB = \DDTrace\start_trace_span();
$spanB->name = 'spanB';
// Link spanB to spanA
$spanB->links[] = $spanA->getLink();
\DDTrace\close_span();
To link a span using distributed tracing headers:
$spanA = \DDTrace\start_trace_span();
$spanA->name = 'spanA';
$distributedTracingHeaders = \DDTrace\generate_distributed_tracing_headers();
\DDTrace\close_span();
$spanB = \DDTrace\start_trace_span();
$spanB->name = 'spanB';
// Link spanB to spanA using distributed tracing headers
$spanB->links[] = \DDTrace\SpanLink::fromHeaders($distributedTracingHeaders);
\DDTrace\close_span();
You can view span links from the Trace View in APM.
You can configure the propagation of context for distributed traces by injecting and extracting headers. Read Trace Context Propagation for information.
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.
The tracing closure provided to DDTrace\trace_method()
and DDTrace\trace_function()
has four parameters:
function(
DDTrace\SpanData $span,
array $args,
mixed $retval,
Exception|null $exception
);
DDTrace\SpanData
to write to the span propertiesarray
of arguments from the instrumented callnull
if no exception was thrownDDTrace\SpanData $span
The DDTrace\SpanData
instance contains the same span information that the Agent expects. A few exceptions are trace_id
, span_id
, parent_id
, start
, and duration
which are set at the C level and not exposed to userland via DDTrace\SpanData
. Exceptions from the instrumented call are automatically attached to the span.
Property | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
SpanData::$name | string | The span name (Optional as of ddtrace v0.47.0; defaults to ‘ClassName.methodName’ if not set) |
SpanData::$resource | string | The resource you are tracing (Optional as of ddtrace v0.47.0; defaults to SpanData::$name if not set) |
SpanData::$service | string | The service you are tracing |
SpanData::$type | string | The type of request which can be set to: web, db, cache, or custom (Optional) |
SpanData::$meta | string[] | An array of key-value span metadata; keys and values must be strings (Optional) |
SpanData::$metrics | float[] | An array of key-value span metrics; keys must be strings and values must be floats (Optional) |
SpanData::$exception | \Throwable | An exception generated during the execution of the original function, if any. |
<?php
use DDTrace\SpanData;
function myRandFunc($min, $max) {
return mt_rand($min, $max);
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'myRandFunc',
function(SpanData $span, $args, $retval) {
// SpanData::$name defaults to 'functionName' if not set (>= v0.47.0)
$span->name = 'myRandFunc';
// SpanData::$resource defaults to SpanData::$name if not set (>= v0.47.0)
$span->resource = 'myRandFunc';
$span->service = 'php';
// The following are optional
$span->type = 'web';
$span->meta['rand.range'] = $args[0] . ' - ' . $args[1];
$span->meta['rand.value'] = $retval;
$span->metrics['some_metric'] = 0.9;
}
);
array $args
The second parameter to the tracing closure is an array of arguments from the instrumented call. It functions similarly to func_get_args()
.
By default the tracing closure is executed after the instrumented call which means any arguments passed by reference could be a different value when they reach the tracing closure.
<?php
use DDTrace\SpanData;
function argsByRef(&$a) {
return ++$a;
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'argsByRef',
function(SpanData $span, $args) {
var_dump($args);
}
);
$foo = 10;
var_dump(argsByRef($foo));
// array(1) {
// [0]=>
// int(11)
// }
// int(11)
On PHP 7, the tracing closure has access to the same arguments passed to the instrumented call. If the instrumented call mutates an argument, including arguments passed by value, the posthook
tracing closure receives the mutated argument.
This is the expected behavior of arguments in PHP 7 as illustrated in the following example:
<?php
function foo($a) {
var_dump(func_get_args());
$a = 'Dogs';
var_dump(func_get_args());
}
foo('Cats');
/*
array(1) {
[0]=>
string(4) "Cats"
}
array(1) {
[0]=>
string(4) "Dogs"
}
*/
The following example demonstrates this effect on posthook
tracing closures.
<?php
function foo($a) {
$a = 'Dogs';
}
\DDTrace\trace_function('foo', function ($span, array $args) {
var_dump($args[0]);
});
foo('Cats');
// string(4) "Dogs"
If an argument needs to be accessed before mutation, the tracing closure can be marked as prehook
to access the arguments before the instrumented call.
mixed $retval
The third parameter of the tracing closure is the return value of the instrumented call. Functions or methods that declare a void
return type or ones that do not return a value have a value of null
.
<?php
use DDTrace\SpanData;
function message(): void {
echo "Hello!\n";
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'message',
function(SpanData $span, $args, $retval) {
echo "Traced\n";
var_dump($retval);
}
);
var_dump(message());
// Hello!
// Traced
// NULL
// NULL
Exception|null $exception
The final parameter of the tracing closure is an instance of the exception that was thrown in the instrumented call or null
if no exception was thrown.
<?php
use DDTrace\SpanData;
function mightThrowException() {
throw new Exception('Oops!');
return 'Hello';
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'mightThrowException',
function(SpanData $span, $args, $retval, $ex) {
if ($ex) {
echo 'Exception from instrumented call: ';
echo $ex->getMessage() . PHP_EOL;
}
}
);
mightThrowException();
/*
Exception from instrumented call: Oops!
NULL
PHP Fatal error: Uncaught Exception: Oops! ...
*/
As exceptions are attached to spans automatically, there is no need to manually set SpanData::$meta['error.*']
metadata. But having access to the exception instance enables you to check for a thrown exception before accessing the return value.
<?php
use DDTrace\SpanData;
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'mightThrowException',
function(SpanData $span, $args, $retval, $ex) {
if (null === $ex) {
// Do something with $retval
}
}
);
To manually remove an exception from a span, use unset
, for example: unset($span->exception)
.
As of version 0.76.0, all internal functions can unconditionally be traced.
On older versions, tracing internal functions and methods requires setting the DD_TRACE_TRACED_INTERNAL_FUNCTIONS
environment variable, which takes a CSV of functions or methods that is to be instrumented. For example, DD_TRACE_TRACED_INTERNAL_FUNCTIONS=array_sum,mt_rand,DateTime::add
. Once a function or method has been added to the list, it can be instrumented using DDTrace\trace_function()
and DDTrace\trace_method()
respectively. The DD_TRACE_TRACED_INTERNAL_FUNCTIONS
environment variable is obsolete as of version 0.76.0.
By default, tracing closures are treated as posthook
closures meaning they are executed after the instrumented call. Some cases require running the tracing closure before the instrumented call. In that case, tracing closures are marked as prehook
using an associative configuration array.
\DDTrace\trace_function('foo', [
'prehook' => function (\DDTrace\SpanData $span, array $args) {
// This tracing closure will run before the instrumented call
}
]);
Tracing closures are “sandboxed” in that exceptions thrown and errors raised inside of them do no impact the instrumented call.
<?php
function my_func() {
echo 'Hello!' . PHP_EOL;
}
\DDTrace\trace_function(
'my_func',
function() {
throw new \Exception('Oops!');
}
);
my_func();
echo 'Done.' . PHP_EOL;
/*
Hello!
Done.
*/
To debug, set the environment variable DD_TRACE_DEBUG=1
to expose any exceptions or errors that may have occurred in a tracing closure.
/*
Hello!
Exception thrown in tracing closure for my_func: Oops!
Done.
*/
Zend framework 1 is automatically instrumented by default, so you are not required to modify your ZF1 project. However, if automatic instrumentation is disabled, enable the tracer manually.
First, download the latest source code from the releases page. Extract the zip file and copy the src/DDTrace
folder to your application’s /library
folder. Then add the following to your application/configs/application.ini
file:
autoloaderNamespaces[] = "DDTrace_"
pluginPaths.DDTrace = APPLICATION_PATH "/../library/DDTrace/Integrations/ZendFramework/V1"
resources.ddtrace = true
Prior to PHP 7, some frameworks provided ways to compile PHP classes (for example, through the Laravel’s php artisan optimize
command).
While this has been deprecated if you are using PHP 7.x, you still may use this caching mechanism in your app prior to version 7.x. In this case, Datadog suggests you use the OpenTracing API instead of adding datadog/dd-trace
to your Composer file.