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795 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
795 lines
31 KiB
Plaintext
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-----------------------------------------
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The HAProxy OpenTracing filter (OT)
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Version 1.0
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( Last update: 2020-12-10 )
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-----------------------------------------
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Author : Miroslav Zagorac
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Contact : mzagorac at haproxy dot com
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SUMMARY
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--------
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0. Terms
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1. Introduction
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2. Build instructions
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3. Basic concepts in OpenTracing
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4. OT configuration
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4.1. OT scope
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4.2. "ot-tracer" section
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4.3. "ot-scope" section
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4.4. "ot-group" section
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5. Examples
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5.1 Benchmarking results
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6. OT CLI
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7. Known bugs and limitations
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0. Terms
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---------
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* OT: The HAProxy OpenTracing filter
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OT is the HAProxy filter that allows you to send data to distributed
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tracing systems via the OpenTracing API.
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1. Introduction
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----------------
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Nowadays there is a growing need to divide a process into microservices and
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there is a problem of monitoring the work of the same process. One way to
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solve this problem is to use distributed tracing service in a central location,
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the so-called tracer.
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OT is a feature introduced in HAProxy 2.4. This filter enables communication
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via the OpenTracing API with OpenTracing compatible servers (tracers).
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Currently, tracers that support this API include Datadog, Jaeger, LightStep
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and Zipkin.
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The OT filter was primarily tested with the Jaeger tracer, while configurations
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for both Datadog and Zipkin tracers were also set in the test directory.
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The OT filter is a standard HAProxy filter, so what applies to others also
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applies to this one (of course, by that I mean what is described in the
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documentation, more precisely in the doc/internals/filters.txt file).
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The OT filter activation is done explicitly by specifying it in the HAProxy
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configuration. If this is not done, the OT filter in no way participates
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in the work of HAProxy.
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As for the impact on HAProxy speed, this is documented with several tests
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located in the test directory, and the result is found in the README-speed-*
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files. In short, the speed of operation depends on the way it is used and
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the complexity of the configuration, from an almost immeasurable impact to
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a significant deceleration (5x and more). I think that in some normal use
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the speed of HAProxy with the filter on will be quite satisfactory with a
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slowdown of less than 4% (provided that no more than 10% of requests are
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sent to the tracer, which is determined by the keyword 'rate-limit').
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The OT filter allows intensive use of ACLs, which can be defined anywhere in
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the configuration. Thus, it is possible to use the filter only for those
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connections that are of interest to us.
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2. Build instructions
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----------------------
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OT is the HAProxy filter and as such is compiled together with HAProxy.
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To communicate with some OpenTracing compatible tracer, the OT filter uses the
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OpenTracing C Wrapper library (which again uses the OpenTracing CPP library).
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This means that we must have both libraries installed on the system on which
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we want to compile or use HAProxy.
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Instructions for compiling and installing both required libraries can be
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found at https://github.com/haproxytech/opentracing-c-wrapper .
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Also, to use the OT filter when running HAProxy we need to have an OpenTracing
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plugin for the tracer we want to use. We will return to this later, in
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section 5.
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The OT filter can be more easily compiled using the pkg-config tool, if we
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have the OpenTracing C Wrapper library installed so that it contains pkg-config
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files (which have the .pc extension). If the pkg-config tool cannot be used,
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then the path to the directory where the include files and libraries are
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located can be explicitly specified.
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Below are examples of the two ways to compile HAProxy with the OT filter, the
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first using the pkg-congfig tool and the second explicitly specifying the path
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to the OpenTracing C Wrapper include and library.
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Note: prompt '%' indicates that the command is executed under a unprivileged
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user, while prompt '#' indicates that the command is executed under the
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root user.
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Example of compiling HAProxy using the pkg-congfig tool (assuming the
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OpenTracing C Wrapper library is installed in the /opt directory):
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% PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/lib/pkgconfig make USE_OT=1 TARGET=linux-glibc
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The OT filter can also be compiled in debug mode as follows:
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% PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/opt/lib/pkgconfig make USE_OT=1 OT_DEBUG=1 TARGET=linux-glibc
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HAProxy compilation example explicitly specifying path to the OpenTracing C
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Wrapper include and library:
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% make USE_OT=1 OT_INC=/opt/include OT_LIB=/opt/lib TARGET=linux-glibc
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In case we want to use debug mode, then it looks like this:
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% make USE_OT=1 OT_DEBUG=1 OT_INC=/opt/include OT_LIB=/opt/lib TARGET=linux-glibc
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If the library we want to use is not installed on a unix system, then a locally
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installed library can be used (say, which is compiled and installed in the user
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home directory). In this case instead of /opt/include and /opt/lib the
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equivalent paths to the local installation should be specified. Of course,
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in that case the pkg-config tool can also be used if we have a complete
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installation (with .pc files).
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last but not least, if the pkg-config tool is not used when compiling, then
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HAProxy executable may not be able to find the OpenTracing C Wrapper library
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at startup. This can be solved in several ways, for example using the
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LD_LIBRARY_PATH environment variable which should be set to the path where the
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library is located before starting the HAProxy.
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% LD_LIBRARY_PATH=/opt/lib /path-to/haproxy ...
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Another way is to add RUNPATH to HAProxy executable that contains the path to
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the library in question.
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% make USE_OT=1 OT_RUNPATH=1 OT_INC=/opt/include OT_LIB=/opt/lib TARGET=linux-glibc
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After HAProxy is compiled, we can check if the OT filter is enabled:
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% ./haproxy -vv | grep opentracing
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--- command output ----------
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[ OT] opentracing
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--- command output ----------
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3. Basic concepts in OpenTracing
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---------------------------------
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Basic concepts of OpenTracing can be read on the OpenTracing documentation
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website https://opentracing.io/docs/overview/.
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Here we will list only the most important elements of distributed tracing and
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these are 'trace', 'span' and 'span context'. Trace is a description of the
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complete transaction we want to record in the tracing system. A span is an
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operation that represents a unit of work that is recorded in a tracing system.
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Span context is a group of information related to a particular span that is
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passed on to the system (from service to service). Using this context, we can
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add new spans to already open trace (or supplement data in already open spans).
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An individual span may contain one or more tags, logs and baggage items.
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The tag is a key-value element that is valid for the entire span. Log is a
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key-value element that allows you to write some data at a certain time, it
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can be used for debugging. A baggage item is a key-value data pair that can
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be used for the duration of an entire trace, from the moment it is added to
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the span.
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4. OT configuration
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--------------------
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In order for the OT filter to be used, it must be included in the HAProxy
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configuration, in the proxy section (frontend / listen / backend):
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frontend ot-test
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...
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filter opentracing [id <id>] config <file>
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...
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If no filter id is specified, 'ot-filter' is used as default. The 'config'
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parameter must be specified and it contains the path of the file used to
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configure the OT filter.
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4.1 OT scope
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-------------
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If the filter id is defined for the OT filter, then the OT scope with
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the same name should be defined in the configuration file. In the same
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configuration file we can have several defined OT scopes.
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Each OT scope must have a defined (only one) "ot-tracer" section that is
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used to configure the operation of the OT filter and define the used groups
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and scopes.
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OT scope starts with the id of the filter specified in square brackets and
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ends with the end of the file or when a new OT scope is defined.
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For example, this defines two OT scopes in the same configuration file:
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[my-first-ot-filter]
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ot-tracer tracer1
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...
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ot-group group1
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...
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ot-scope scope1
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...
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[my-second-ot-filter]
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...
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4.2. "ot-tracer" section
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-------------------------
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Only one "ot-tracer" section must be defined for each OT scope.
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There are several keywords that must be defined for the OT filter to work.
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These are 'config' which defines the configuration file for the OpenTracing
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API, and 'plugin' which defines the OpenTracing plugin used.
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Through optional keywords can be defined ACLs, logging, rate limit, and groups
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and scopes that define the tracing model.
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ot-tracer <name>
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A new OT with the name <name> is created.
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Arguments :
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name - the name of the tracer section
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The following keywords are supported in this section:
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- mandatory keywords:
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- config
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- plugin
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- optional keywords:
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- acl
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- debug-level
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- groups
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- [no] log
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- [no] option disabled
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- [no] option dontlog-normal
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- [no] option hard-errors
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- rate-limit
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- scopes
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acl <aclname> <criterion> [flags] [operator] <value> ...
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Declare or complete an access list.
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To configure and use the ACL, see section 7 of the HAProxy Configuration
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Manual.
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config <file>
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'config' is one of the two mandatory keywords associated with the OT tracer
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configuration. This keyword sets the path of the configuration file for the
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OpenTracing tracer plugin. To set the contents of this configuration file,
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it is best to look at the documentation related to the OpenTracing tracer we
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want to use.
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Arguments :
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file - the path of the configuration file
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debug-level <value>
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This keyword sets the value of the debug level related to the display of
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debug messages in the OT filter. The 'debug-level' value is binary, ie
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a single value bit enables or disables the display of the corresponding
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debug message that uses that bit. The default value is set via the
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FLT_OT_DEBUG_LEVEL macro in the include/config.h file. Debug level value
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is used only if the OT filter is compiled with the debug mode enabled,
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otherwise it is ignored.
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Arguments :
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value - binary value ranging from 0 to 255 (8 bits)
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groups <name> ...
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A list of "ot-group" groups used for the currently defined tracer is declared.
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Several groups can be specified in one line.
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Arguments :
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name - the name of the OT group
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log global
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log <addr> [len <len>] [format <fmt>] <facility> [<level> [<minlevel>]]
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no log
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Enable per-instance logging of events and traffic.
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To configure and use the logging system, see section 4.2 of the HAProxy
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Configuration Manual.
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option disabled
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no option disabled
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Keyword which turns the operation of the OT filter on or off. By default
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the filter is on.
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option dontlog-normal
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no option dontlog-normal
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Enable or disable logging of normal, successful processing. By default,
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this option is disabled. For this option to be considered, logging must
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be turned on.
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See also: 'log' keyword description.
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option hard-errors
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no option hard-errors
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During the operation of the filter, some errors may occur, caused by
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incorrect configuration of the tracer or some error related to the operation
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of HAProxy. By default, such an error will not interrupt the filter
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operation for the stream in which the error occurred. If the 'hard-error'
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option is enabled, the operation error prohibits all further processing of
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events and groups in the stream in which the error occurred.
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plugin <file>
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'plugin' is one of the two mandatory keywords associated with the OT tracer
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configuration. This keyword sets the path of the OpenTracing tracer plugin.
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Arguments :
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file - the name of the plugin used
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rate-limit <value>
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This option allows limiting the use of the OT filter, ie it can be influenced
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whether the OT filter is activated for a stream or not. Determining whether
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or not a filter is activated depends on the value of this option that is
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compared to a randomly selected value when attaching the filter to the stream.
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By default, the value of this option is set to 100.0, ie the OT filter is
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activated for each stream.
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Arguments :
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value - floating point value ranging from 0.0 to 100.0
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scopes <name> ...
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This keyword declares a list of "ot-scope" definitions used for the currently
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defined tracer. Multiple scopes can be specified in the same line.
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Arguments :
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name - the name of the OT scope
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4.3. "ot-scope" section
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------------------------
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Stream processing begins with filter attachment, then continues with the
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processing of a number of defined events and groups, and ends with filter
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detachment. The "ot-scope" section is used to define actions related to
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individual events. However, this section may be part of a group, so the
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event does not have to be part of the definition.
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ot-scope <name>
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Creates a new OT scope definition named <name>.
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Arguments :
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name - the name of the OT scope
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The following keywords are supported in this section:
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- acl
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- baggage
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- event
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- extract
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- finish
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- inject
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- log
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- span
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- tag
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acl <aclname> <criterion> [flags] [operator] <value> ...
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Declare or complete an access list.
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To configure and use the ACL, see section 7 of the HAProxy Configuration
|
||
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Manual.
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baggage <name> <sample> ...
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Baggage items allow the propagation of data between spans, ie allow the
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assignment of metadata that is propagated to future children spans.
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This data is formatted in the style of key-value pairs and is part of
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the context that can be transferred between processes that are part of
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a server architecture.
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This kewyord allows setting the baggage for the currently active span. The
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data type is always a string, ie any sample type is converted to a string.
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The exception is a binary value that is not supported by the OT filter.
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See the 'tag' keyword description for the data type conversion table.
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||
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Arguments :
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name - key part of a data pair
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sample - sample expression (value part of a data pair), at least one
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sample must be present
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event <name> [{ if | unless } <condition>]
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Set the event that triggers the 'ot-scope' to which it is assigned.
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Optionally, it can be followed by an ACL-based condition, in which case it
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will only be evaluated if the condition is true.
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ACL-based conditions are executed in the context of a stream that processes
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the client and server connections. To configure and use the ACL, see
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section 7 of the HAProxy Configuration Manual.
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||
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||
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Arguments :
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name - the event name
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condition - a standard ACL-based condition
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Supported events are (the table gives the names of the events in the OT
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||
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filter and the corresponding equivalent in the SPOE filter):
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||
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||
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-------------------------------------|------------------------------
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||
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the OT filter | the SPOE filter
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||
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-------------------------------------|------------------------------
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||
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on-client-session-start | on-client-session
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on-frontend-tcp-request | on-frontend-tcp-request
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on-http-wait-request | -
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||
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on-http-body-request | -
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||
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on-frontend-http-request | on-frontend-http-request
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on-switching-rules-request | -
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||
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on-backend-tcp-request | on-backend-tcp-request
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on-backend-http-request | on-backend-http-request
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||
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on-process-server-rules-request | -
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||
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on-http-process-request | -
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||
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on-tcp-rdp-cookie-request | -
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||
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on-process-sticking-rules-request | -
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||
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on-client-session-end | -
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||
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on-server-unavailable | -
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||
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-------------------------------------|------------------------------
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||
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on-server-session-start | on-server-session
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||
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on-tcp-response | on-tcp-response
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||
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on-http-wait-response | -
|
||
|
on-process-store-rules-response | -
|
||
|
on-http-response | on-http-response
|
||
|
on-server-session-end | -
|
||
|
-------------------------------------|------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
extract <name-prefix> [use-vars | use-headers]
|
||
|
For a more detailed description of the propagation process of the span
|
||
|
context, see the description of the keyword 'inject'. Only the process
|
||
|
of extracting data from the carrier is described here.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name-prefix - data name prefix (ie key element prefix)
|
||
|
use-vars - data is extracted from HAProxy variables
|
||
|
use-headers - data is extracted from the HTTP header
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Below is an example of using HAProxy variables to transfer span context data:
|
||
|
|
||
|
--- test/ctx/ot.cfg --------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
ot-scope client_session_start_2
|
||
|
extract "ot_ctx_1" use-vars
|
||
|
span "Client session" child-of "ot_ctx_1"
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
finish <name> ...
|
||
|
Closing a particular span or span context. Instead of the name of the span,
|
||
|
there are several specially predefined names with which we can finish certain
|
||
|
groups of spans. So it can be used as the name '*req*' for all open spans
|
||
|
related to the request channel, '*res*' for all open spans related to the
|
||
|
response channel and '*' for all open spans regardless of which channel they
|
||
|
are related to. Several spans and/or span contexts can be specified in one
|
||
|
line.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name - the name of the span or context context
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
inject <name-prefix> [use-vars] [use-headers]
|
||
|
In OpenTracing, the transfer of data related to the tracing process between
|
||
|
microservices that are part of a larger service is done through the
|
||
|
propagation of the span context. The basic operations that allow us to
|
||
|
access and transfer this data are 'inject' and 'extract'.
|
||
|
|
||
|
'inject' allows us to extract span context so that the obtained data can
|
||
|
be forwarded to another process (microservice) via the selected carrier.
|
||
|
'inject' in the name actually means inject data into carrier. Carrier is
|
||
|
an interface here (ie a data structure) that allows us to transfer tracing
|
||
|
state from one process to another.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Data transfer can take place via one of two selected storage methods, the
|
||
|
first is by adding data to the HTTP header and the second is by using HAProxy
|
||
|
variables. Only data transfer via HTTP header can be used to transfer data
|
||
|
to another process (ie microservice). All data is organized in the form of
|
||
|
key-value data pairs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No matter which data transfer method you use, we need to specify a prefix
|
||
|
for the key element. All alphanumerics (lowercase only) and underline
|
||
|
character can be used to construct the data name prefix. Uppercase letters
|
||
|
can actually be used, but they will be converted to lowercase when creating
|
||
|
the prefix.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name-prefix - data name prefix (ie key element prefix)
|
||
|
use-vars - HAProxy variables are used to store and transfer data
|
||
|
use-headers - HTTP headers are used to store and transfer data
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Below is an example of using HTTP headers and variables, and how this is
|
||
|
reflected in the internal data of the HAProxy process.
|
||
|
|
||
|
--- test/ctx/ot.cfg --------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
ot-scope client_session_start_1
|
||
|
span "HAProxy session" root
|
||
|
inject "ot_ctx_1" use-headers use-vars
|
||
|
...
|
||
|
----------------------------------------------------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
- generated HAProxy variable (key -> value):
|
||
|
txn.ot_ctx_1.uberDtraceDid -> 8f1a05a3518d2283:8f1a05a3518d2283:0:1
|
||
|
|
||
|
- generated HTTP header (key: value):
|
||
|
ot_ctx_1-uber-trace-id: 8f1a05a3518d2283:8f1a05a3518d2283:0:1
|
||
|
|
||
|
Because HAProxy does not allow the '-' character in the variable name (which
|
||
|
is automatically generated by the OpenTracing API and on which we have no
|
||
|
influence), it is converted to the letter 'D'. We can see that there is no
|
||
|
such conversion in the name of the HTTP header because the '-' sign is allowed
|
||
|
there. Due to this conversion, initially all uppercase letters are converted
|
||
|
to lowercase because otherwise we would not be able to distinguish whether
|
||
|
the disputed sign '-' is used or not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thus created HTTP headers and variables are deleted when executing the
|
||
|
'finish' keyword or when detaching the stream from the filter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
log <name> <sample> ...
|
||
|
This kewyord allows setting the log for the currently active span. The
|
||
|
data type is always a string, ie any sample type is converted to a string.
|
||
|
The exception is a binary value that is not supported by the OT filter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
See the 'tag' keyword description for the data type conversion table.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name - key part of a data pair
|
||
|
sample - sample expression (value part of a data pair), at least one
|
||
|
sample must be present
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
span <name> [<reference>]
|
||
|
Creating a new span (or referencing an already opened one). If a new span
|
||
|
is created, it can be a child of the referenced span, follow from the
|
||
|
referenced span, or be root 'span'. In case we did not specify a reference
|
||
|
to the previously created span, the new span will become the root span.
|
||
|
We need to pay attention to the fact that in one trace there can be only
|
||
|
one root span. In case we have specified a non-existent span as a reference,
|
||
|
a new span will not be created.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name - the name of the span being created or referenced (operation
|
||
|
name)
|
||
|
reference - span or span context to which the created span is referenced
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
tag <name> <sample> ...
|
||
|
This kewyord allows setting a tag for the currently active span. The first
|
||
|
argument is the name of the tag (tag ID) and the second its value. A value
|
||
|
can consist of one or more data. If the value is only one data, then the
|
||
|
type of that data depends on the type of the HAProxy sample. If the value
|
||
|
contains more data, then the data type is string. The data conversion table
|
||
|
is below:
|
||
|
|
||
|
HAProxy sample data type | the OpenTracing data type
|
||
|
--------------------------+---------------------------
|
||
|
NULL | NULL
|
||
|
BOOL | BOOL
|
||
|
INT32 | INT64
|
||
|
UINT32 | UINT64
|
||
|
INT64 | INT64
|
||
|
UINT64 | UINT64
|
||
|
IPV4 | STRING
|
||
|
IPV6 | STRING
|
||
|
STRING | STRING
|
||
|
BINARY | UNSUPPORTED
|
||
|
--------------------------+---------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name - key part of a data pair
|
||
|
sample - sample expression (value part of a data pair), at least one
|
||
|
sample must be present
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
4.4. "ot-group" section
|
||
|
------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
This section allows us to define a group of OT scopes, that is not activated
|
||
|
via an event but is triggered from TCP or HTTP rules. More precisely, these
|
||
|
are the following rules: 'tcp-request', 'tcp-response', 'http-request',
|
||
|
'http-response' and 'http-after-response'. These rules can be defined in the
|
||
|
HAProxy configuration file.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
ot-group <name>
|
||
|
Creates a new OT group definition named <name>.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name - the name of the OT group
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The following keywords are supported in this section:
|
||
|
- scopes
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
scopes <name> ...
|
||
|
'ot-scope' sections that are part of the specified group are defined. If
|
||
|
the mentioned 'ot-scope' sections are used only in some OT group, they do
|
||
|
not have to have defined events. Several 'ot-scope' sections can be
|
||
|
specified in one line.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Arguments :
|
||
|
name - the name of the 'ot-scope' section
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
5. Examples
|
||
|
------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Several examples of the OT filter configuration can be found in the test
|
||
|
directory. A brief description of the prepared configurations follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
cmp - the configuration very similar to that of the spoa-opentracing project.
|
||
|
It was made to compare the speed of the OT filter with the
|
||
|
implementation of distributed tracing via spoa-opentracing application.
|
||
|
|
||
|
sa - the configuration in which all possible events are used.
|
||
|
|
||
|
ctx - the configuration is very similar to the previous one, with the only
|
||
|
difference that the spans are opened using the span context as a span
|
||
|
reference.
|
||
|
|
||
|
fe be - a slightly more complicated example of the OT filter configuration
|
||
|
that uses two cascaded HAProxy services. The span context between
|
||
|
HAProxy processes is transmitted via the HTTP header.
|
||
|
|
||
|
empty - the empty configuration in which the OT filter is initialized but
|
||
|
no event is triggered. It is not very usable, except to check the
|
||
|
behavior of the OT filter in the case of a similar configuration.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
In order to be able to collect data (and view results via the web interface)
|
||
|
we need to install some of the supported tracers. We will use the Jaeger
|
||
|
tracer as an example. Installation instructions can be found on the website
|
||
|
https://www.jaegertracing.io/download/. For the impatient, here we will list
|
||
|
how the image to test the operation of the tracer system can be installed
|
||
|
without much reading of the documentation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
# docker pull jaegertracing/all-in-one:latest
|
||
|
# docker run -d --name jaeger -e COLLECTOR_ZIPKIN_HTTP_PORT=9411 \
|
||
|
-p 5775:5775/udp -p 6831:6831/udp -p 6832:6832/udp -p 5778:5778 \
|
||
|
-p 16686:16686 -p 14268:14268 -p 9411:9411 jaegertracing/all-in-one:latest
|
||
|
|
||
|
The last command will also initialize and run the Jaeger container. If we
|
||
|
want to use that container later, it can be started and stopped in the classic
|
||
|
way, using the 'docker container start/stop' commands.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
In order to be able to use any of the configurations from the test directory,
|
||
|
we must also have a tracer plugin in that directory (all examples use the
|
||
|
Jaeger tracer plugin). The simplest way is to download the tracer plugin
|
||
|
using the already prepared shell script get-opentracing-plugins.sh.
|
||
|
The script accepts one argument, the directory in which the download is made.
|
||
|
If run without an argument, the script downloads all plugins to the current
|
||
|
directory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
% ./get-opentracing-plugins.sh
|
||
|
|
||
|
After that, we can run one of the pre-configured configurations using the
|
||
|
provided script run-xxx.sh (where xxx is the name of the configuration being
|
||
|
tested). For example:
|
||
|
|
||
|
% ./run-sa.sh
|
||
|
|
||
|
The script will create a new log file each time it is run (because part of the
|
||
|
log file name is the start time of the script).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Eh, someone will surely notice that all test configurations use the Jaeger
|
||
|
tracing plugin that cannot be downloaded using the get-opentracing-plugins.sh
|
||
|
script. Unfortunately, the latest precompiled version that can be downloaded
|
||
|
is 0.4.2, for newer ones only the source code can be found. Version 0.4.2 has
|
||
|
a bug that can cause the operation of the OT filter to get stuck, so it is
|
||
|
better not to use this version. Here is the procedure by which we can compile
|
||
|
a newer version of the plugin (in our example it is 0.5.0).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Important note: the GCC version must be at least 4.9 or later.
|
||
|
|
||
|
% wget https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-client-cpp/archive/v0.5.0.tar.gz
|
||
|
% tar xf v0.5.0.tar.gz
|
||
|
% cd jaeger-client-cpp-0.5.0
|
||
|
% mkdir build
|
||
|
% cd build
|
||
|
% cmake -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/opt -DJAEGERTRACING_PLUGIN=ON -DHUNTER_CONFIGURATION_TYPES=Release -DHUNTER_BUILD_SHARED_LIBS=OFF ..
|
||
|
% make
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the plugin is compiled, it will be in the current directory. The name
|
||
|
of the plugin is libjaegertracing_plugin.so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
5.1. Benchmarking results
|
||
|
--------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
To check the operation of the OT filter, several different test configurations
|
||
|
have been made which are located in the test directory. The test results of
|
||
|
the same configurations (with the names README-speed-xxx, where xxx is the name
|
||
|
of the configuration being tested) are also in the directory of the same name.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All tests were performed on the same debian 9.13 system, CPU i7-4770, 32 GB RAM.
|
||
|
For the purpose of testing, the thttpd web server on port 8000 was used.
|
||
|
Testing was done with the wrk utility running via run-xxx.sh scripts; that is,
|
||
|
via the test-speed.sh script that is run as follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
% ./test-speed.sh all
|
||
|
|
||
|
The above mentioned thttpd web server is run from that script and it should be
|
||
|
noted that we need to have the same installed on the system (or change the path
|
||
|
to the thttpd server in that script if it is installed elsewhere).
|
||
|
|
||
|
Each test is performed several times over a period of 5 minutes per individual
|
||
|
test. The only difference when running the tests for the same configuration
|
||
|
was in changing the 'rate-limit' parameter (and the 'option disabled' option),
|
||
|
which is set to the following values: 100.0, 50.0, 10.0, 2.5 and 0.0 percent.
|
||
|
Then a test is performed with the OT filter active but disabled for request
|
||
|
processing ('option disabled' is included in the ot.cfg configuration). In
|
||
|
the last test, the OT filter is not used at all, ie it is not active and does
|
||
|
not affect the operation of HAProxy in any way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
6. OT CLI
|
||
|
----------
|
||
|
|
||
|
Via the HAProxy CLI interface we can find out the current status of the OT
|
||
|
filter and change several of its settings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All supported CLI commands can be found in the following way, using the
|
||
|
socat utility with the assumption that the HAProxy CLI socket path is set
|
||
|
to /tmp/haproxy.sock (of course, instead of socat, nc or other utility can
|
||
|
be used with a change in arguments when running the same):
|
||
|
|
||
|
% echo "help" | socat - UNIX-CONNECT:/tmp/haproxy.sock | grep flt-ot
|
||
|
--- command output ----------
|
||
|
flt-ot debug [level] : set the OT filter debug level (default: get current debug level)
|
||
|
flt-ot disable : disable the OT filter
|
||
|
flt-ot enable : enable the OT filter
|
||
|
flt-ot soft-errors : turning off hard-errors mode
|
||
|
flt-ot hard-errors : enabling hard-errors mode
|
||
|
flt-ot logging [state] : set logging state (default: get current logging state)
|
||
|
flt-ot rate [value] : set the rate limit (default: get current rate value)
|
||
|
flt-ot status : show the OT filter status
|
||
|
--- command output ----------
|
||
|
|
||
|
'flt-ot debug' can only be used in case the OT filter is compiled with the
|
||
|
debug mode enabled.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
7. Known bugs and limitations
|
||
|
------------------------------
|
||
|
|
||
|
The name of the span context definition can contain only letters, numbers and
|
||
|
characters '_' and '-'. Also, all uppercase letters in the name are converted
|
||
|
to lowercase. The character '-' is converted internally to the 'D' character,
|
||
|
and since a HAProxy variable is generated from that name, this should be taken
|
||
|
into account if we want to use it somewhere in the HAProxy configuration.
|
||
|
The above mentioned span context is used in the 'inject' and 'extract' keywords.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Let's look a little at the example test/fe-be (configurations are in the
|
||
|
test/fe and test/be directories, 'fe' is here the abbreviation for frontend
|
||
|
and 'be' for backend). In case we have the 'rate-limit' set to a value less
|
||
|
than 100.0, then distributed tracing will not be started with each new HTTP
|
||
|
request. It also means that the span context will not be delivered (via the
|
||
|
HTTP header) to the backend HAProxy process. The 'rate-limit' on the backend
|
||
|
HAProxy must be set to 100.0, but because the frontend HAProxy does not send
|
||
|
a span context every time, all such cases will cause an error to be reported
|
||
|
on the backend server. Therefore, the 'hard-errors' option must be set on the
|
||
|
backend server, so that processing on that stream is stopped as soon as the
|
||
|
first error occurs. Such cases will slow down the backend server's response
|
||
|
a bit (in the example in question it is about 3%).
|