lesson02

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Published: Jun 10, 2021 License: MIT Imports: 6 Imported by: 0

README

Lesson 2 - Context and Tracing Functions

Objectives

Learn how to:

  • Trace individual functions
  • Combine multiple spans into a single trace
  • Propagate the in-process context

Walkthrough

First, copy your work or the official solution from Lesson 1 to lesson02/exercise/hello.go.

Tracing individual functions

In Lesson 1 we wrote a program that creates a trace that consists of a single span. That single span combined two operations performed by the program, formatting the output string and printing it. Let's move those operations into standalone functions first:

span := tracer.StartSpan("say-hello")
span.SetTag("hello-to", helloTo)
defer span.Finish()

helloStr := formatString(span, helloTo)
printHello(span, helloStr)

and the functions:

func formatString(span opentracing.Span, helloTo string) string {
    helloStr := fmt.Sprintf("Hello, %s!", helloTo)
    span.LogFields(
        log.String("event", "string-format"),
        log.String("value", helloStr),
    )

    return helloStr
}

func printHello(span opentracing.Span, helloStr string) {
    println(helloStr)
    span.LogKV("event", "println")
}

Of course, this does not change the outcome. What we really want to do is to wrap each function into its own span.

func formatString(rootSpan opentracing.Span, helloTo string) string {
    span := rootSpan.Tracer().StartSpan("formatString")
    defer span.Finish()

    helloStr := fmt.Sprintf("Hello, %s!", helloTo)
    span.LogFields(
        log.String("event", "string-format"),
        log.String("value", helloStr),
    )

    return helloStr
}

func printHello(rootSpan opentracing.Span, helloStr string) {
    span := rootSpan.Tracer().StartSpan("printHello")
    defer span.Finish()

    println(helloStr)
    span.LogKV("event", "println")
}

Let's run it:

$ go run ./lesson02/exercise/hello.go Bryan
2017/09/24 14:56:04 Initializing logging reporter
2017/09/24 14:56:04 Reporting span 292bd18774533232:292bd18774533232:0:1
Hello, Bryan!
2017/09/24 14:56:04 Reporting span 2004e24c3362725f:2004e24c3362725f:0:1
2017/09/24 14:56:04 Reporting span 273d83da9cdc6413:273d83da9cdc6413:0:1

We got three spans, but there is a problem here. The first hexadecimal segment of the output represents Jaeger trace ID, yet they are all different. If we search for those IDs in the UI each one will represent a standalone trace with a single span. That's not what we wanted!

What we really wanted was to establish causal relationship between the two new spans to the root span started in main(). We can do that by passing an additional option to the StartSpan function:

    span := rootSpan.Tracer().StartSpan(
        "formatString",
        opentracing.ChildOf(rootSpan.Context()),
    )

If we think of the trace as a directed acyclic graph where nodes are the spans and edges are the causal relationships between them, then the ChildOf option is used to create one such edge between span and rootSpan. In the API the edges are represented by SpanReference type that consists of a SpanContext and a label. The SpanContext represents an immutable, thread-safe portion of the span that can be used to establish references or to propagate it over the wire. The label, or ReferenceType, describes the nature of the relationship. ChildOf relationship means that the rootSpan has a logical dependency on the child span before rootSpan can complete its operation. Another standard reference type in OpenTracing is FollowsFrom, which means the rootSpan is the ancestor in the DAG, but it does not depend on the completion of the child span, for example if the child represents a best-effort, fire-and-forget cache write.

If we modify the printHello function accordingly and run the app, we'll see that all reported spans now belong to the same trace:

$ go run ./lesson02/exercise/hello.go Bryan
2017/09/24 15:10:34 Initializing logging reporter
2017/09/24 15:10:34 Reporting span 479fefe9525eddb:2a66575ec4945eef:479fefe9525eddb:1
Hello, Bryan!
2017/09/24 15:10:34 Reporting span 479fefe9525eddb:5adb976bfc1f95c1:479fefe9525eddb:1
2017/09/24 15:10:34 Reporting span 479fefe9525eddb:479fefe9525eddb:0:1

We can also see that instead of 0 in the 3rd position the first two reported spans display 479fefe9525eddb, which is the ID of the root span. The root span is reported last because it is the last one to finish.

If we find this trace in the UI, it will show a proper parent-child relationship between the spans.

Propagate the in-process context

You may have noticed one unpleasant side effect of our recent changes - we had to pass the Span object as the first argument to each function. Go language does not support the notion of thread-local variables, so in order to link the individual spans together we do need to pass something. We just don't want that to be the span object, since it pollutes the application with tracing code. The Go standard library has a type specifically designed for propagating request context throughout the application, called context.Context. In addition to handling things like deadlines and cancellations, the Context allows storing arbitrary key-value pairs, so we can use it to store the currently active span. The OpenTracing API integrates with context.Context and provides convenient helper functions.

First we need to create the context in the main() function and store the span in it:

ctx := context.Background()
ctx = opentracing.ContextWithSpan(ctx, span)

Then we pass the ctx object instead of the rootSpan:

helloStr := formatString(ctx, helloTo)
printHello(ctx, helloStr)

And we modify the functions to use StartSpanFromContext helper function:

func formatString(ctx context.Context, helloTo string) string {
    span, _ := opentracing.StartSpanFromContext(ctx, "formatString")
    defer span.Finish()
    ...

func printHello(ctx context.Context, helloStr string) {
    span, _ := opentracing.StartSpanFromContext(ctx, "printHello")
    defer span.Finish()
    ...

Note that we ignore the second value returned by the function, which is another instance of the Context with the new span stored in it. If our functions were calling more functions, we could keep that Context instance and pass it down, rather than passing the top-level context.

And one last thing. The StartSpanFromContext function uses opentracing.GlobalTracer() to start the new spans, so we need to initialize that global variable to our instance of Jaeger tracer:

tracer, closer := tracing.Init("hello-world")
defer closer.Close()
opentracing.SetGlobalTracer(tracer)

Conclusion

The complete program can be found in the solution package.

Next lesson: Tracing RPC Requests.

Documentation

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