A light wrapper around exometer.
Elixometer allows you to define metrics and subscribe them automatically to the default reporter for your environment.
Add the following to your dependencies in mix.exs:
{:elixometer, "~> 1.2"}
Or to track the master development branch:
{:elixometer, github: "pinterest/elixometer"}
Then, add :elixometer
to your applications. That's it!
In one of your config files, set up an exometer reporter, and then register it to elixometer like this:
config(:exometer_core, report: [reporters: [{:exometer_report_tty, []}]])
config(:elixometer,
reporter: :exometer_report_tty,
env: Mix.env,
metric_prefix: "myapp")
Metrics are prepended with the metric_prefix
, the type of metric and the environment name.
The optional update_frequency
key of the :elixometer config controls the interval between reports. By default this is set to 1000
ms in the dev
environment and 20
ms in the test
environment.
You can use an environment variable to set the env
.
config :elixometer, env: {:system, "ELIXOMETER_ENV"}
By default, metrics are formatted using Elixometer.Utils.name_to_exometer/2
.
This function takes care of composing metric names with prefix, environment and
the metric type (e.g. myapp_prefix.dev.timers.request_time
).
This behaviour can be overridden with a custom formatter function, by adding the following configuration entry:
config :elixometer, Elixometer.Updater,
formatter: &MyApp.Metrics.my_custom_formatter/2
Elixometer uses pobox
to prevent overload.
A maximum size of message buffer, defaulting to 1000, can be configured with:
config :elixometer, Elixometer.Updater,
max_messages: 5000
By default, adding a histogram adds for example 11 subscriptions ([:n, :mean, :min, :max, :median, 50, 75, 90, 95, 99, 999]
).
If you would like to restrict which of these you care about, you can exclude some like so:
config :elixometer, excluded_datapoints: [:median, :999]
Defining metrics in elixometer is substantially easier than in exometer. Instead of defining and then updating a metric, just update it. Also, instead of providing a list of terms, a metric is named with a period separated bitstring. Presently, Elixometer supports timers, histograms, gauges, counters, and spirals.
Timings may also be defined by annotating a function with a @timed annotation. This annotation takes a key argument, which tells elixometer what key to use. You can specify :auto
and a key will be generated from the module name and method name.
Updating a metric is similarly easy:
defmodule ParentModule.MetricsTest do
use Elixometer
# Updating a counter
def counter_test(thingie) do
update_counter("metrics_test.\#{thingie}.count", 1)
end
# Updating a spiral
def spiral_test(thingie) do
update_spiral("metrics_test.\#{thingie}.qps", 1)
end
# Timing a block of code in a function
def timer_test do
timed("metrics_test.timer_test.timings") do
OtherModule.slow_method
end
end
# Timing a function. The metric name will be [:timed, :function]
@timed(key: "timed.function") # key will be: prefix.dev.timers.timed.function
def function_that_is_timed do
OtherModule.slow_method
end
# Timing a function with an auto generated key
# The key will be "<prefix>.<env>.timers.parent_module.metrics_test.another_timed_function"
# If the env is prod, the environment is omitted from the key
@timed(key: :auto)
def another_timed_function do
OtherModule.slow_method
end
end
By default, Elixometer only requires the exometer_core
package. However, some reporters (namely OpenTSDB and Statsd) are only available by installing the full exometer
package. If you need the full package, all you need to do is update your mix.exs
to include exometer
as a dependency and start it as an application. For example:
def application do
[
applications: [:exometer,
... other applications go here
],
...
]
end
defp deps do
[{:exometer_core, github: "PSPDFKit-labs/exometer_core"}]
end
In case a reporter allows for extra configuration options on subscribe, you can configure them in your elixometer
config like so:
config(:elixometer,
...
subscribe_options: [{:tag, :value1}])