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### Pull Request Checklist <!-- Please read https://matrix-org.github.io/dendrite/development/contributing before submitting your pull request --> I was reading through the Dendrite documentation on https://matrix-org.github.io/dendrite/development/contributing and noticed the installation link leads to a 404 error. This link works fine if it is viewed directly from [docs/CONTRIBUTING.md](https://github.com/matrix-org/dendrite/blob/main/docs/CONTRIBUTING.md) but this might not be very obvious to new contributors who are reading through the [contribution page](https://matrix-org.github.io/dendrite/development/contributing) directly. This PR is mainly a small re-organization of the online documentation mainly in the [Development](https://matrix-org.github.io/dendrite/development) tab along with any links throughout the doc that may be impacted by the change. This does not contain any Go unit tests as this does not actually touch core dendrite functionality. * [ ] I have added Go unit tests or [Complement integration tests](https://github.com/matrix-org/complement) for this PR _or_ I have justified why this PR doesn't need tests * [x] Pull request includes a [sign off below using a legally identifiable name](https://matrix-org.github.io/dendrite/development/contributing#sign-off) _or_ I have already signed off privately Signed-off-by: `Kento Okamoto <kentokamoto@proton.me>`
115 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
115 lines
4.8 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: OpenTracing
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has_children: true
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parent: Development
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permalink: /development/opentracing
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---
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# OpenTracing
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Dendrite extensively uses the [opentracing.io](http://opentracing.io) framework
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to trace work across the different logical components.
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At its most basic opentracing tracks "spans" of work; recording start and end
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times as well as any parent span that caused the piece of work.
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A typical example would be a new span being created on an incoming request that
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finishes when the response is sent. When the code needs to hit out to a
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different component a new span is created with the initial span as its parent.
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This would end up looking roughly like:
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```
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Received request Sent response
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|<───────────────────────────────────────>|
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|<────────────────────>|
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RPC call RPC call returns
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```
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This is useful to see where the time is being spent processing a request on a
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component. However, opentracing allows tracking of spans across components. This
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makes it possible to see exactly what work goes into processing a request:
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```
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Component 1 |<─────────────────── HTTP ────────────────────>|
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|<──────────────── RPC ─────────────────>|
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Component 2 |<─ SQL ─>| |<── RPC ───>|
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Component 3 |<─ SQL ─>|
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```
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This is achieved by serializing span information during all communication
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between components. For HTTP requests, this is achieved by the sender
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serializing the span into a HTTP header, and the receiver deserializing the span
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on receipt. (Generally a new span is then immediately created with the
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deserialized span as the parent).
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A collection of spans that are related is called a trace.
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Spans are passed through the code via contexts, rather than manually. It is
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therefore important that all spans that are created are immediately added to the
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current context. Thankfully the opentracing library gives helper functions for
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doing this:
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```golang
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span, ctx := opentracing.StartSpanFromContext(ctx, spanName)
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defer span.Finish()
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```
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This will create a new span, adding any span already in `ctx` as a parent to the
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new span.
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Adding Information
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------------------
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Opentracing allows adding information to a trace via three mechanisms:
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- "tags" ─ A span can be tagged with a key/value pair. This is typically
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information that relates to the span, e.g. for spans created for incoming HTTP
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requests could include the request path and response codes as tags, spans for
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SQL could include the query being executed.
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- "logs" ─ Key/value pairs can be looged at a particular instance in a trace.
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This can be useful to log e.g. any errors that happen.
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- "baggage" ─ Arbitrary key/value pairs can be added to a span to which all
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child spans have access. Baggage isn't saved and so isn't available when
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inspecting the traces, but can be used to add context to logs or tags in child
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spans.
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See
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[specification.md](https://github.com/opentracing/specification/blob/master/specification.md)
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for some of the common tags and log fields used.
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Span Relationships
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------------------
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Spans can be related to each other. The most common relation is `childOf`, which
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indicates the child span somehow depends on the parent span ─ typically the
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parent span cannot complete until all child spans are completed.
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A second relation type is `followsFrom`, where the parent has no dependence on
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the child span. This usually indicates some sort of fire and forget behaviour,
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e.g. adding a message to a pipeline or inserting into a kafka topic.
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Jaeger
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------
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Opentracing is just a framework. We use
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[jaeger](https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger) as the actual implementation.
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Jaeger is responsible for recording, sending and saving traces, as well as
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giving a UI for viewing and interacting with traces.
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To enable jaeger a `Tracer` object must be instansiated from the config (as well
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as having a jaeger server running somewhere, usually locally). A `Tracer` does
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several things:
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- Decides which traces to save and send to the server. There are multiple
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schemes for doing this, with a simple example being to save a certain fraction
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of traces.
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- Communicating with the jaeger backend. If not explicitly specified uses the
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default port on localhost.
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- Associates a service name to all spans created by the tracer. This service
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name equates to a logical component, e.g. spans created by clientapi will have
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a different service name than ones created by the syncapi. Database access
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will also typically use a different service name.
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This means that there is a tracer per service name/component.
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