package trace-tef
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
sha256=b51ec546ec1c90f6ed60b330ea7c9212d5c9c26e4d93e38e60224d984fab09b1
sha512=dc617857b0f213765b82b45281ebef2fab4b8c213597f19cf4476356e2c7295c3aeb0d71c8d1954617196d7c491336efba1c67f02138d011ac590053c06ed638
README.md.html
Trace
This small library provides basic types that can be used to instrument a library or application, either by hand or via a ppx.
Features
[x] spans
[x] messages
[x] counters
[ ] other metrics?
Usage
To instrument your code, you can simply add trace
to your dune/opam files, and then write code like such:
let f x =
Trace.with_span ~__FILE__ ~__LINE__ "inside-f" @@ fun _sp ->
(* … code for f *)
let g x =
Trace.with_span ~__FILE__ ~__LINE__ "inside-g" @@ fun _sp ->
let y = f x in
(* … code for f *)
let () =
Some_trace_backend.setup () @@ fun () ->
let result = g 42 in
print_result result
The file test/t1.ml
follows this pattern, using trace-tef
as a simple backend that emits one JSON object per span/message:
let run () =
Trace.set_process_name "main";
Trace.set_thread_name "t1";
let n = ref 0 in
for _i = 1 to 50 do
Trace.with_span ~__FILE__ ~__LINE__ "outer.loop" @@ fun _sp ->
for _j = 2 to 5 do
incr n;
Trace.with_span ~__FILE__ ~__LINE__ "inner.loop" @@ fun _sp ->
Trace.messagef (fun k -> k "hello %d %d" _i _j);
Trace.message "world";
Trace.counter_int "n" !n
done
done
let () =
Trace_tef.with_setup ~out:(`File "trace.json") () @@ fun () ->
run ()
After running this, the file "trace.json" will contain something like:
[{"pid":2,"name":"process_name","ph":"M","args": {"name":"main"}},
{"pid":2,"tid": 3,"name":"thread_name","ph":"M","args": {"name":"t1"}},
{"pid":2,"cat":"","tid": 3,"ts": 2.00,"name":"hello 1 2","ph":"I"},
{"pid":2,"cat":"","tid": 3,"ts": 3.00,"name":"world","ph":"I"},
{"pid":2,"tid":3,"ts":4.00,"name":"c","ph":"C","args": {"n":1}},
…
Opening it in https://ui.perfetto.dev we get something like this:
Backends
Concrete tracing or observability formats such as:
[ ] Fuchsia (see tracing)
Catapult
[x] light bindings here with
trace-tef
[ ] richer bindings with ocaml-catapult, with multi-process backends, etc.
[x] Tracy (see ocaml-tracy, more specifically
tracy-client.trace
)[x] Opentelemetry (see ocaml-opentelemetry, in
opentelemetry.trace
)[ ] landmarks?
[ ] Logs (only for messages, obviously)