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author | Jorik Schellekens <joriksch@gmail.com> | 2019-07-22 11:15:21 +0100 |
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committer | GitHub <noreply@github.com> | 2019-07-22 11:15:21 +0100 |
commit | 826e6ec3bdfca92a5815f032c3246fab9a2aef88 (patch) | |
tree | c5221a2b4ccfb6ba864cd82510df2356a217e32c | |
parent | towncrier (diff) | |
download | synapse-826e6ec3bdfca92a5815f032c3246fab9a2aef88.tar.xz |
Opentracing Documentation (#5703)
* Opentracing survival guide * Update decorator names in doc * Doc cleanup These are all alterations as a result of comments in #5703, it includes mostly typos and clarifications. The most interesting changes are: - Split developer and user docs into two sections - Add a high level description of OpenTracing * newsfile * Move contributer specific info to docstring. * Sample config. * Trailing whitespace. * Update 5703.misc * Apply suggestions from code review Mostly just rewording parts of the docs for clarity. Co-Authored-By: Richard van der Hoff <1389908+richvdh@users.noreply.github.com>
Diffstat (limited to '')
-rw-r--r-- | changelog.d/5703.misc | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/opentracing.rst | 100 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | docs/sample_config.yaml | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | synapse/config/tracer.py | 14 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | synapse/logging/opentracing.py | 125 |
5 files changed, 230 insertions, 24 deletions
diff --git a/changelog.d/5703.misc b/changelog.d/5703.misc new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..6e9b2d734e --- /dev/null +++ b/changelog.d/5703.misc @@ -0,0 +1 @@ +Documentation for opentracing. diff --git a/docs/opentracing.rst b/docs/opentracing.rst new file mode 100644 index 0000000000..b91a2208a8 --- /dev/null +++ b/docs/opentracing.rst @@ -0,0 +1,100 @@ +=========== +OpenTracing +=========== + +Background +---------- + +OpenTracing is a semi-standard being adopted by a number of distributed tracing +platforms. It is a common api for facilitating vendor-agnostic tracing +instrumentation. That is, we can use the OpenTracing api and select one of a +number of tracer implementations to do the heavy lifting in the background. +Our current selected implementation is Jaeger. + +OpenTracing is a tool which gives an insight into the causal relationship of +work done in and between servers. The servers each track events and report them +to a centralised server - in Synapse's case: Jaeger. The basic unit used to +represent events is the span. The span roughly represents a single piece of work +that was done and the time at which it occurred. A span can have child spans, +meaning that the work of the child had to be completed for the parent span to +complete, or it can have follow-on spans which represent work that is undertaken +as a result of the parent but is not depended on by the parent to in order to +finish. + +Since this is undertaken in a distributed environment a request to another +server, such as an RPC or a simple GET, can be considered a span (a unit or +work) for the local server. This causal link is what OpenTracing aims to +capture and visualise. In order to do this metadata about the local server's +span, i.e the 'span context', needs to be included with the request to the +remote. + +It is up to the remote server to decide what it does with the spans +it creates. This is called the sampling policy and it can be configured +through Jaeger's settings. + +For OpenTracing concepts see +https://opentracing.io/docs/overview/what-is-tracing/. + +For more information about Jaeger's implementation see +https://www.jaegertracing.io/docs/ + +===================== +Seting up OpenTracing +===================== + +To receive OpenTracing spans, start up a Jaeger server. This can be done +using docker like so: + +.. code-block:: bash + + docker run -d --name jaeger + -p 6831:6831/udp \ + -p 6832:6832/udp \ + -p 5778:5778 \ + -p 16686:16686 \ + -p 14268:14268 \ + jaegertracing/all-in-one:1.13 + +Latest documentation is probably at +https://www.jaegertracing.io/docs/1.13/getting-started/ + + +Enable OpenTracing in Synapse +----------------------------- + +OpenTracing is not enabled by default. It must be enabled in the homeserver +config by uncommenting the config options under ``opentracing`` as shown in +the `sample config <./sample_config.yaml>`_. For example: + +.. code-block:: yaml + + opentracing: + tracer_enabled: true + homeserver_whitelist: + - "mytrustedhomeserver.org" + - "*.myotherhomeservers.com" + +Homeserver whitelisting +----------------------- + +The homeserver whitelist is configured using regular expressions. A list of regular +expressions can be given and their union will be compared when propagating any +spans contexts to another homeserver. + +Though it's mostly safe to send and receive span contexts to and from +untrusted users since span contexts are usually opaque ids it can lead to +two problems, namely: + +- If the span context is marked as sampled by the sending homeserver the receiver will + sample it. Therefore two homeservers with wildly different sampling policies + could incur higher sampling counts than intended. +- Sending servers can attach arbitrary data to spans, known as 'baggage'. For safety this has been disabled in Synapse + but that doesn't prevent another server sending you baggage which will be logged + to OpenTracing's logs. + +================== +Configuring Jaeger +================== + +Sampling strategies can be set as in this document: +https://www.jaegertracing.io/docs/1.13/sampling/ diff --git a/docs/sample_config.yaml b/docs/sample_config.yaml index 5b804d16a4..0a96197ca6 100644 --- a/docs/sample_config.yaml +++ b/docs/sample_config.yaml @@ -1422,18 +1422,8 @@ opentracing: #enabled: true # The list of homeservers we wish to send and receive span contexts and span baggage. - # - # Though it's mostly safe to send and receive span contexts to and from - # untrusted users since span contexts are usually opaque ids it can lead to - # two problems, namely: - # - If the span context is marked as sampled by the sending homeserver the receiver will - # sample it. Therefore two homeservers with wildly disparaging sampling policies - # could incur higher sampling counts than intended. - # - Span baggage can be arbitrary data. For safety this has been disabled in synapse - # but that doesn't prevent another server sending you baggage which will be logged - # to opentracing logs. - # - # This a list of regexes which are matched against the server_name of the + # See docs/opentracing.rst + # This is a list of regexes which are matched against the server_name of the # homeserver. # # By defult, it is empty, so no servers are matched. diff --git a/synapse/config/tracer.py b/synapse/config/tracer.py index a2ce9ab3f6..4479454415 100644 --- a/synapse/config/tracer.py +++ b/synapse/config/tracer.py @@ -48,18 +48,8 @@ class TracerConfig(Config): #enabled: true # The list of homeservers we wish to send and receive span contexts and span baggage. - # - # Though it's mostly safe to send and receive span contexts to and from - # untrusted users since span contexts are usually opaque ids it can lead to - # two problems, namely: - # - If the span context is marked as sampled by the sending homeserver the receiver will - # sample it. Therefore two homeservers with wildly disparaging sampling policies - # could incur higher sampling counts than intended. - # - Span baggage can be arbitrary data. For safety this has been disabled in synapse - # but that doesn't prevent another server sending you baggage which will be logged - # to opentracing logs. - # - # This a list of regexes which are matched against the server_name of the + # See docs/opentracing.rst + # This is a list of regexes which are matched against the server_name of the # homeserver. # # By defult, it is empty, so no servers are matched. diff --git a/synapse/logging/opentracing.py b/synapse/logging/opentracing.py index 415040f5ee..3da33d7826 100644 --- a/synapse/logging/opentracing.py +++ b/synapse/logging/opentracing.py @@ -24,6 +24,131 @@ # this move the methods have work very similarly to opentracing's and it should only # be a matter of few regexes to move over to opentracing's access patterns proper. +""" +============================ +Using OpenTracing in Synapse +============================ + +Python-specific tracing concepts are at https://opentracing.io/guides/python/. +Note that Synapse wraps OpenTracing in a small module (this one) in order to make the +OpenTracing dependency optional. That means that the access patterns are +different to those demonstrated in the OpenTracing guides. However, it is +still useful to know, especially if OpenTracing is included as a full dependency +in the future or if you are modifying this module. + + +OpenTracing is encapsulated so that +no span objects from OpenTracing are exposed in Synapse's code. This allows +OpenTracing to be easily disabled in Synapse and thereby have OpenTracing as +an optional dependency. This does however limit the number of modifiable spans +at any point in the code to one. From here out references to `opentracing` +in the code snippets refer to the Synapses module. + +Tracing +------- + +In Synapse it is not possible to start a non-active span. Spans can be started +using the ``start_active_span`` method. This returns a scope (see +OpenTracing docs) which is a context manager that needs to be entered and +exited. This is usually done by using ``with``. + +.. code-block:: python + + from synapse.logging.opentracing import start_active_span + + with start_active_span("operation name"): + # Do something we want to tracer + +Forgetting to enter or exit a scope will result in some mysterious and grievous log +context errors. + +At anytime where there is an active span ``opentracing.set_tag`` can be used to +set a tag on the current active span. + +Tracing functions +----------------- + +Functions can be easily traced using decorators. There is a decorator for +'normal' function and for functions which are actually deferreds. The name of +the function becomes the operation name for the span. + +.. code-block:: python + + from synapse.logging.opentracing import trace, trace_deferred + + # Start a span using 'normal_function' as the operation name + @trace + def normal_function(*args, **kwargs): + # Does all kinds of cool and expected things + return something_usual_and_useful + + # Start a span using 'deferred_function' as the operation name + @trace_deferred + @defer.inlineCallbacks + def deferred_function(*args, **kwargs): + # We start + yield we_wait + # we finish + defer.returnValue(something_usual_and_useful) + +Operation names can be explicitly set for functions by using +``trace_using_operation_name`` and +``trace_deferred_using_operation_name`` + +.. code-block:: python + + from synapse.logging.opentracing import ( + trace_using_operation_name, + trace_deferred_using_operation_name + ) + + @trace_using_operation_name("A *much* better operation name") + def normal_function(*args, **kwargs): + # Does all kinds of cool and expected things + return something_usual_and_useful + + @trace_deferred_using_operation_name("Another exciting operation name!") + @defer.inlineCallbacks + def deferred_function(*args, **kwargs): + # We start + yield we_wait + # we finish + defer.returnValue(something_usual_and_useful) + +Contexts and carriers +--------------------- + +There are a selection of wrappers for injecting and extracting contexts from +carriers provided. Unfortunately OpenTracing's three context injection +techniques are not adequate for our inject of OpenTracing span-contexts into +Twisted's http headers, EDU contents and our database tables. Also note that +the binary encoding format mandated by OpenTracing is not actually implemented +by jaeger_client v4.0.0 - it will silently noop. +Please refer to the end of ``logging/opentracing.py`` for the available +injection and extraction methods. + +Homeserver whitelisting +----------------------- + +Most of the whitelist checks are encapsulated in the modules's injection +and extraction method but be aware that using custom carriers or crossing +unchartered waters will require the enforcement of the whitelist. +``logging/opentracing.py`` has a ``whitelisted_homeserver`` method which takes +in a destination and compares it to the whitelist. + +======= +Gotchas +======= + +- Checking whitelists on span propagation +- Inserting pii +- Forgetting to enter or exit a scope +- Span source: make sure that the span you expect to be active across a + function call really will be that one. Does the current function have more + than one caller? Will all of those calling functions have be in a context + with an active span? +""" + import contextlib import logging import re |