Event-Driven Architecture
Digging Deep with ActiveSupport::Notifications

Summarized using AI

Digging Deep with ActiveSupport::Notifications

Matt Sanders • April 23, 2012 • Austin, TX

In the video titled "Digging Deep with ActiveSupport::Notifications", Matt Sanders discusses the powerful instrumentation system introduced in Rails 3 known as ActiveSupport::Notifications. This system allows developers to track performance and event information efficiently both in development and production environments. The session covers the following key points:

  • Introduction to ActiveSupport::Notifications: Matt emphasizes how ActiveSupport provides modular functionalities, enabling developers to tap into Rails features even in non-Rails applications.

  • Core Concepts:

    • Subscribers: Components that listen for specific events. They are set up to react to messages with defined names that trigger notifications.
    • Instrument Calls: These trigger the events to be processed and allow for data to be passed along with notifications.
  • Importance of Event Tracking: ActiveSupport::Notifications aids developers in gaining visibility into their applications’ performance metrics, enabling timely diagnosis of issues during production rather than solely in development.

  • Conditional Monitoring: The ability to toggle data collection based on the system or customer context can hasten troubleshooting without affecting performance.

  • Data Tracking and Metrics: The session outlines how to capture key performance data such as response times and database access, which are crucial for optimizing application performance.

  • Real-World Examples: Matt uses case studies such as tracking slow requests, understanding the performance across different servers, and the database query timing to illustrate the practical application of ActiveSupport::Notifications.

  • Advanced Use Cases: The discussion also delves into the integration of this system with external monitoring tools like New Relic, as well as custom logging solutions. Sanders encourages the audience to utilize various logging techniques to enhance visibility.

  • Usage Beyond Rails: ActiveSupport::Notifications can be implemented in non-Rails applications, promoting its versatility across different Ruby frameworks.

  • Conclusion and Best Practices: Matt concludes by stressing the need to think strategically about what metrics are essential for business success, urging developers to leverage this system to improve the user experience.

The main takeaway from this presentation is the significant enhancement in application monitoring and debugging capabilities provided by ActiveSupport::Notifications, which, when properly implemented, can lead to improved performance insights and user satisfaction.

Digging Deep with ActiveSupport::Notifications
Matt Sanders • April 23, 2012 • Austin, TX

Rails 3 and above includes a powerful instrumentation system, ActiveSupport::Notifications, which can be used to track performance and event information for all aspects of your application. Notifications are light-weight, easy to setup, and can be consumed by multiple subscribers (logs, audit trails, consolidated metrics, other parts of your application).

In this session we'll start with the basics of ActiveSupport::Notifications and work our way to powerful advanced use cases. Topics we'll explore include:

How to set up and use notifications Logging what you want from any tier of your system How to capture and aggregate performance/business data for the metrics you care about most Conditional monitoring in production: flag on and off data by system or customer to get to the root of problems more quickly Using ActiveSupport::Notifications in non-Rails applications and your own libraries

RailsConf 2012

00:00:24.800 Alright, so I'm going to get rolling here. How's everybody doing? I'm Matt Sanders.
00:00:30.689 I work for Librato on a product called Metric, which some of you may have seen. Today, I'm excited to talk to you about ActiveSupport::Notifications.
00:00:36.450 Is there a way I can turn this down just a little bit? How do I sound to you guys, am I too loud?
00:00:43.470 Alright, awesome! We'll carry on. I'm excited to talk to you today about ActiveSupport::Notifications.
00:00:49.980 As probably most of you know, ActiveSupport is one of the libraries that makes up Rails. One of the changes that came in Rails 3 was that a lot of its components became more modular.
00:00:57.060 We can use it inside Rails and outside of Rails. ActiveSupport::Notifications is one of those things that came in Rails 3 and is a subsection of ActiveSupport.
00:01:03.360 The reason I'm excited about it is that I think it offers you the capability to track what's going on in your applications, both during development and especially in production.
00:01:09.270 A lot of the information you probably already want to know about your apps is being instrumented for you already. Rails uses this extensively internally.
00:01:14.999 So, let's cut to the chase and look at the basics. There are basically two things you need to know about how ActiveSupport::Notifications works: subscribers and instrument calls.
00:01:20.670 When you set up a subscriber, you're essentially saying, 'For any message with this name, when instrumentation with that name gets called, let me know.'
00:01:26.039 You want to do something with that; send me the information associated with that event.
00:01:31.139 So, subscribers are setting up that callback to receive the event and do something with it. Instrument calls are actually triggering that the event is firing.
00:01:37.499 The method name, which is the message name, is how they communicate with each other.
00:01:42.509 Now, why is this important? Why do we even care in the first place? As I said before, there's a lot of valuable data that Rails already provides.
00:01:47.639 This gives you an opportunity to move away from the traditional one-to-one approach, which is often limited. You know, when I was interested in finding out what was wrong with a part of my application, I would throw debug statements in the logs.
00:01:55.049 Now, you can say there's a bunch of things I want to do when this thing fires. There are many ways I want to track what's going on, and it's super easy to set that up.
00:02:00.179 This is a quote from Peter Drucker, who is considered the father of modern management. I believe it's true: What we measure, what we look at every day, determines what we work on, what we get excited about, and what we take to the next level.
00:02:07.109 As programmers, we tend to focus on the things that are attractive to us, which may not always be the most important aspects of our application.
00:02:13.300 Often, we lack visibility into what's happening in our application and how people are using it. This excites me because it's an opportunity to hone in on what matters and gain insights that can enhance both your application and user experience.
00:02:20.670 Another important point is that your production environment is not the same as your development environment.
00:02:26.039 Even if you're running on the same operating system, different things are happening in the background when you're in production.
00:02:30.730 You're likely running on multiple nodes or different versions of components, making it vital to capture that data in production to inform your decision-making.
00:02:36.400 Let’s say you have a service that appears to be functioning well, with a response time under a hundred milliseconds.
00:02:43.450 Suddenly, there's a significant spike, and the service slows down fourfold. What happened?
00:02:50.200 When this occurs, ideally, you should be tracking all the things you care about to diagnose the problem effectively.
00:02:56.080 This way, you can investigate calmly rather than scrambling through logs to understand the chaos.
00:03:02.790 In our core applications, ActiveSupport::Notifications gives us the capacity to gain sharp insights into these issues.
00:03:09.460 Earlier, I mentioned two core ideas: subscribers and instrumentation events.
00:03:15.760 The message name drives communication between the two. Now, let’s explore how instrumentation works.
00:03:21.070 There’s one required argument: the message name. For something like this, we may only care about whether the event occurred.
00:03:26.140 Any subsequent arguments in the hash will be passed along as a payload.
00:03:32.410 For example, if you're capturing the email address of a new sign-up, passing this along ensures that all subscribers receive that information.
00:03:38.590 Here’s what the actual payload looks like: it includes the message name, start and end times, and a unique message ID.
00:03:43.750 The message ID helps differentiate between messages for the dispatcher.
00:03:49.420 Most use cases can ignore this unique ID and focus on the hash that represents your payload!
00:03:54.520 In the block form of this method, any code you run inside will get automatic timing.
00:03:59.910 This acts like a combination of a benchmark and a logging statement.
00:04:06.850 The payload arguments are the same, but the different start and end times give you clarity on duration.
00:04:13.570 If an exception occurs during this process, an additional argument will indicate the exception name and its message.
00:04:20.000 One common misunderstanding is the expectation that you'll receive the exception object itself; instead, you'll only receive the name of the exception.
00:04:27.220 In subscriber setup, you're going to want to use milliseconds for all timing.
00:04:33.450 You can calculate the duration manually by multiplying the duration in seconds by a thousand, but ActiveSupport::Notifications also provides an event class.
00:04:40.010 This class allows you to include your arguments without worrying about their order.
00:04:46.620 From our talk last night, it's always preferable to call arguments by name rather than by order.
00:04:53.020 You’ll receive an object containing all passed arguments, and the duration will be calculated for you.
00:04:59.499 The event helper class provides a useful trick for linking events. You can determine whether one event happened completely within another by using this parent_of method.
00:05:05.110 For example, if one event is triggered entirely inside another, the parent_of method returns true.
00:05:10.389 Additionally, you can use regular expressions instead of strings to match message names; this minimizes the need for multiple subscriber definitions.
00:05:15.490 Previously, I mentioned that Rails provides a wealth of instrumentation for you; let's get to the good stuff.
00:05:21.830 This is not a complete list, but here are the primary events exposed by Rails by default.
00:05:27.950 You’ll notice events related to ActionController for dispatching requests, caching stuff, ActionMailer for delivering and receiving mail.
00:05:34.000 There are even events in ActionView for rendering, as well as for caching operations in ActiveSupport.
00:05:39.680 ActiveRecord has one notable event that is crucial since it runs any time a query is executed.
00:05:46.890 By tapping into this unique instrumentation and applying conditional monitoring, you can gather fascinating data.
00:05:54.530 It’s important to mention that previous examples show the namespaced dot notation common in the monitoring realm.
00:06:01.680 Some tools, like Graphite, translate these names into folders, allowing for visible separation, which is typically left to right.
00:06:07.190 In Rails, it’s opposite, always right to left, so just keep that in mind.
00:06:13.520 Let's dive into one of these events; specifically, we can analyze the ActionController's process action event.
00:06:19.800 This event provides valuable information about the controller, action, format, status code, and timing data.
00:06:26.080 With this information, we can conduct various analyses.
00:06:33.790 The graph you've seen here illustrates the total request time versus time spent in the view and the database.
00:06:40.120 In such cases, we can quickly ascertain that our database is not the bottleneck, as we're spending more time on view rendering.
00:06:47.590 If we observe peculiar spikes in the request time not accounted for by the database, there might be an issue with external service dependencies.
00:06:54.130 This presents an opportune moment to consider caching solutions.
00:07:00.840 You can also monitor how many requests each of the servers in your cluster handle.
00:07:06.368 Ideally, if the load balancer works efficiently, the load should be evenly distributed. If not, it raises critical questions.
00:07:13.181 Here, we’re considering slow requests. By defining an arbitrary threshold (e.g., 200 milliseconds), we flag slow requests during monitoring.
00:07:19.000 As the total number of requests rises, it becomes essential to analyze whether the slowness is due to high request volumes or inherent application slowdown.
00:07:25.000 We can analyze the slowest request patterns across different servers, helping pinpoint where optimization efforts should occur.
00:07:31.430 This highlights the importance of using the existing instrumentation information effectively.
00:07:37.470 Furthermore, ActiveRecord fires an event each time it executes a query.
00:07:43.600 You collect the duration, retrieve the entire query, and obtain parameter bindings if applicable.
00:07:49.030 You receive a name argument for identifying the model associated with the query, aiding in performance assessments.
00:07:55.530 You can leverage this information to create customized integrations.
00:08:01.900 Consider models that are fetched frequently and reevaluate their necessity. Caching query results can significantly reduce database load.
00:08:08.450 It’s about elevating visibility into your application to optimize its performance effectively.
00:08:14.100 This opportunity to enhance our applications and metrics is exciting as it streamlines tracking critical success factors.
00:08:20.300 I think performance monitoring and instrumentation shouldn't feel burdensome. Instead, it should offer clarity around core application metrics.
00:08:27.940 Ultimately, what this boils down to is the actionable visibility you gain using ActiveSupport::Notifications.
00:08:34.940 It creates opportunities to improve our application's performance through insightful practice.
00:08:41.020 Now, let's pivot to how you can create your own events.
00:08:47.090 Probably the simplest way to use this is to log your desired events using Rails logger.
00:08:53.920 You can streamline your logs for machine readability or utilize products like Papertrail, which is fantastic for real-time searchable logs.
00:09:00.360 Another fantastic tool is New Relic, where you can easily create custom events.
00:09:06.790 Moreover, you can combine it with StatsD for effective collection of metrics.
00:09:12.290 StatsD is a lightweight application that collects and forwards metrics without slowing down your app.
00:09:20.540 You can utilize libraries to integrate well with existing setups, further enhancing your logging capabilities.
00:09:27.460 This integration allows you to stash data for later usage while maintaining efficient processing.
00:09:34.250 You can define patterns that allow your subscribers to operate over multiple notifications seamlessly.
00:09:40.900 Remember, all subscribers can be triggered by a single event within your controller.
00:09:47.890 Understanding performance is essential; whatever runs in your instrumentation block will complete before all related subscribers run sequentially.
00:09:54.460 Avoid long-running operations in your subscribers, as they can introduce latency in request handling.
00:10:00.800 Background operations can run asynchronously, but when performance is crucial, keep your instrumentation fast.
00:10:06.890 ActiveSupport Notifications is straightforward and manageable; you can customize it extensively.
00:10:13.490 While I don't recommend using unsubscribe method often due to its potential impact on performance.
00:10:20.790 When a message invokes, the dispatcher learns if anyone cares about this event and keeps a cache regarding it.
00:10:27.790 Careful when modifying subscribers, as it can invalidate that cache, slowing down your application's responsiveness.
00:10:34.790 Hopefully, you've now covered the basics of ActiveSupport Notifications. Any outstanding questions?
00:10:41.000 If there's anything confusing, please feel free to ask!
00:10:47.000 Now, let’s talk about conditional instrumentation—a simple but powerful practice.
00:10:53.000 Begin subscribers by verifying your relevance, returning immediately if the event does not concern you.
00:10:59.880 This decision accelerates your subscriber operations significantly.
00:11:06.190 I encourage the use of various tools that allow selective feature rollout, such as Rollout.
00:11:12.799 This service enables beta testing of features among select users, gathering insightful feedback before widening your focus.
00:11:19.690 You can enable or disable instrumentation dynamically based on customer-specific needs.
00:11:25.600 Wrap checks around the Rollout functionality to avoid bugs appearing due to Redis or other service unavailability.
00:11:33.000 Incorporate notification bot integrations, like Campfire, to streamline operations and collect user feedback or alerts efficiently.
00:11:40.870 When a service outage occurs, you can respond promptly to resolve technical hiccups.
00:11:47.680 Ruby code can reduce repeated calls to ActiveSupport::Notifications for clarity and simplicity.
00:11:54.990 By leveraging your Application Controller, you could streamline instrumentation calls.
00:12:01.210 Additionally, observe the possibility of shared patterns across Models using modular setups.
00:12:07.640 You may also notice prevalent repetitiveness when defining subscribers.
00:12:13.940 Fortunately, ActiveSupport has a separate LogSubscriber library that alleviates it.
00:12:21.090 This setup allows for dynamic logging without excessive manual annotation.
00:12:27.590 Ensure you set this up correctly; it requires associations with parent namespaces.
00:12:33.940 From here, access log methods directly within LogSubscribers for ease.
00:12:39.930 Most crucial services leverage LogSubscribers for simplifying operational logging.
00:12:46.590 We can also use this methodology beyond Rails, allowing for effective instrumentation in non-Rails code.
00:12:53.240 Even utilizing gems outside Rails can amplify your code's visibility without compromising its core functionality.
00:13:00.000 Open source projects have adopted this instrumentation approach, elevating their communities.
00:13:06.700 For example, Faraday middleware emits instrumentation across entire request environments.
00:13:12.990 On top of that, various gems already utilize this pattern, such as Excon.
00:13:19.090 Integrating instrumentation means you can create unique event signatures for enhanced clarity.
00:13:25.079 This considerably lowers the barrier for identifying performance issues without extensive overhead.
00:13:31.960 Lograge, for instance, converts verbose logs into concise and readable records.
00:13:37.180 The transformation provides parsable logs from multi-threaded environments seamlessly.
00:13:44.080 Engage with interesting projects leveraging ActiveSupport Notifications for better insights.
00:13:50.890 Review log subscribers in Rails for further inspiration and flexibility in your work.
00:13:57.000 Remember, tools only become powerful through collective utilization and understanding within a community.
00:14:04.020 It’s critical for teams to communicate and establish clear guidelines for implementing and using instrumentation.
00:14:10.490 To streamline all subscribers and initializers, clump them together to maximize visibility.
00:14:16.940 Combining client-serving operations with instrumentation can create confusion and inefficient usage.
00:14:23.400 Consider using insights gained for operational tasks while maintaining distinct functionalities for user-focused jobs.
00:14:30.000 Thanks for your time today! I hope you feel inspired to continue exploring the incredible potential of ActiveSupport Notifications.
00:14:37.000 Engage with your applications deeply; identify what matters to you, your team, and your users.
00:14:42.000 Assess your conditions for success meticulously. Explore the opportunities here.
00:14:48.000 How can you better utilize insights from ActiveSupport Notifications? Thank you!
00:34:05.600 Thank you!
Explore all talks recorded at RailsConf 2012
+65