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feat: produce OpenTelemetry traces with hs-opentelemetry #3140

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@develop7 develop7 commented Jan 4, 2024

This PR introduces producing OpenTelemetry traces containing, among others, metrics same as in ServerTiming header from before.

TODO:

Running:

I sort of gave up deploying and configuring all the moving bits locally, so you'd need to create the honeycomb.io account for this one (or ask me for the invite). After that, it's quite straightforward:

  1. Build PostgREST executable with stack build, and get its path with stack exec -- which postgrest
  2. Get a PostgreSQL server running (e.g. run nix-shell, then postgrest-with-postgresql-15 -- cat)
  3. Do the JWT dance (generate the JWT secret and encode the role into a token, e.g. postgrest_test_anonymous for the example DB from the above example)
  4. Run PostgREST server with
    OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT='https://api.honeycomb.io/' \
    OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_HEADERS="x-honeycomb-team=<honeycomb_api_key>"  \
    OTEL_SERVICE_NAME='PostgREST' OTEL_LOG_LEVEL='debug' OTEL_TRACES_SAMPLER='always_on' \
    PGRST_DB_URI='<postgresql_server_url>'  PGRST_JWT_SECRET='<jwt_secret>'  \
    /path/to/compiled/bin/postgrest
    
  5. request some data and check the honeycomb dashboard for the traces:

image

@steve-chavez
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Awesome work! 🔥 🔥

I sort of gave up deploying and configuring all the moving bits locally, so you'd need to create the honeycomb.io account for this one

Found this Nix flake that contains an OTel GUI: https://flakestry.dev/flake/github/FriendsOfOpenTelemetry/opentelemetry-nix/1.0.1

I'll try to integrate that once the PR is ready for review.

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The recent problem I'm seemingly stuck with is hs-opentelemetry is using UnliftIO, which seems not quite composable with our (implicit, correct?) monad stack. So the deeper into the call stack the instrumented code is (the one I'm trying to wrap with inSpan), the more ridiculously complex it should be changed to be instrumented, i.e. https://github.com/PostgREST/postgrest/pull/3140/files#diff-5de3ff2b2d013b33dccece6ead9aeb61feffeb0fbd6e38779750511394cf9701R156-R157, up to the point I have no idea how to proceed further (e.g. wrapping App.handleRequests cases with their own spans, which is semantically correct)

There's a more straightforward MonadIO-involving opentelemetry library, with less activity and quite different approach to the telemetry data export (GHC eventlog → file/pipe by the GHC runtime). It looks less invasive approach, refactoring-wise, but requires more hoops to jump to actually deliver traces to Honeycomb/Lightstep/whatnot (pull eventlog → convert it to zipkin/jaeger/b3 → upload somewhere for analysis).

It also seems to boil down to the conceptual choice between online and offline traces' delivery-wise, or push and pull model.

@steve-chavez @wolfgangwalther @laurenceisla what do you think guys?

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@develop7 Would vault help? It was introduced on #1988, I recall it helped with IORef handling.

It's still used on

jwtDurKey :: Vault.Key Double
jwtDurKey = unsafePerformIO Vault.newKey
{-# NOINLINE jwtDurKey #-}
getJwtDur :: Wai.Request -> Maybe Double
getJwtDur = Vault.lookup jwtDurKey . Wai.vault

I'm still not that familiar with OTel but the basic idea I had was to store these traces on AppState and export them async.

@steve-chavez
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@develop7 Recently merged #3213, which logs schema cache stats to stderr. Perhaps that can be used for introductory OTel integration instead? It might be easier since the scache stats are already in IO space.

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Would vault help?

hs-opentelemetry is using it already

basic idea I had was to store these traces on AppState and export them async

Not only that, you want traces in tests too, for one.

The good news is hs-opentelemetry-utils-exceptions seems to be just what we need, let me try it.

Perhaps that can be used for introductory OTel integration instead?

Good call @steve-chavez, thank you for the suggestion. Will try too.

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image

it works!

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steve-chavez commented Feb 21, 2024

Since now we have an observer function and Observation module

handleRequest :: AuthResult -> AppConfig -> AppState.AppState -> Bool -> Bool -> PgVersion -> ApiRequest -> SchemaCache ->
Maybe Double -> Maybe Double -> (Observation -> IO ()) -> Handler IO Wai.Response
handleRequest AuthResult{..} conf appState authenticated prepared pgVer apiReq@ApiRequest{..} sCache jwtTime parseTime observer =

data Observation
= AdminStartObs (Maybe Int)
| AppStartObs ByteString
| AppServerPortObs NS.PortNumber

Perhaps we can add some observations for the timings?

Also the Logger is now used like:

logObservation :: LoggerState -> Observation -> IO ()
logObservation loggerState obs = logWithZTime loggerState $ observationMessage obs

CmdRun -> App.run appState (Logger.logObservation loggerState))

For OTel, maybe the following would make sense:

otelState <- Otel.init

App.run appState (Logger.logObservation loggerState >> OTel.tracer otelState)) 

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Perhaps we can add some observations for the timings?

Agreed, server timings definitely belong there.

@develop7 develop7 marked this pull request as ready for review March 11, 2024 15:38
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Okay, the PR is in the cooking for long enough, let's pull the plug and start small. Let's have it reviewed while I'm fixing the remaining CI failures.

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source-repository-package
type: git
location: https://github.com/develop7/hs-opentelemetry.git
tag: ec5a87729ad3ad99c59fdcdfa754bafc87edac57
subdir: sdk api propagators/b3 propagators/w3c exporters/otlp utils/exceptions instrumentation/wai otlp
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I've been working hard lately to get rid of non-hackage dependencies and would not like to introduce them again. Why do we need a fork here?

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The original hs-opentelemetry depends on unix, which fails to build on Windows. But there are only two functions it uses from unix, getProcessID and getEffectiveUserID. The former is provided by unix-compat, the latter isn't. So the fork replaces unix dependency with unix-compat and removes the collection of "effective username" attribute, making it build on Windows here and now.

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I see. Do you plan to upstream your fixes into hs-opentelemetry itself?

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I absolutely am, and I have no intent to maintain the fork more than I need to. Windows support is tracked upstream at iand675/hs-opentelemetry#109.

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hs-opentelemetry is, according to the repo, in alpha state. According to the TODO list above, the issue tracker and the repo description, it does not support:

  • GHC 9.8.x
  • Windows
  • Metrics or Logging

I don't think we depend on this in the current state. And we should certainly not depend on an even-less-maintained fork of the same.

So to go forward here, there needs to be some effort put into the upstream package first, to make it usable for us.

@develop7 develop7 marked this pull request as draft March 29, 2024 16:43
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A status update:

  • GHC 9.8: hs-opentelemetry-sdk doesn't build against 9.8 because of hs-opentelemetry-exporter-otlpproto-lens chain. Given the upstream of the latter being bit unresponsive for the suggestions to bump upper bounds, I've managed to make the latter build for 9.8 in develop7/proto-lens@985290f, but haven't figured out how to pick it up to the project since it depends on the google's protobuf compiler installed and the protobuf's source checked out. Another approach is to not use hs-o-sdk and hs-o-e-otlp altogether, which I probably should've tried way before.

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  • GHC 9.8: hs-opentelemetry-sdk doesn't build against 9.8 because of hs-opentelemetry-exporter-otlpproto-lens chain. Given the upstream of the latter being bit unresponsive for the suggestions to bump upper bounds, I've managed to make the latter build for 9.8 in develop7/proto-lens@985290f,

Hm. I looked at your fork. It depends on support for GHC 9.8 in ghc-source-gen. This repo has a PR, which just was updated 3 days ago. I wouldn't call that "unresponsive", yet. Once ghc-source-gen is GHC 9.8 compatible, you could open a PR to update bounds in proto-lens itself. But since the last release for GHC 9.6 support was in December... I would not expect this to take too long to get responded to. It certainly doesn't look like it's unmaintained.

I guess for GHC 9.8 support it's just a matter of time.

What about the other issues mentioned above? Were you able to make progress on those?

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mkleczek commented Apr 4, 2024

The recent problem I'm seemingly stuck with is hs-opentelemetry is using UnliftIO, which seems not quite composable with our (implicit, correct?) monad stack. So the deeper into the call stack the instrumented code is (the one I'm trying to wrap with inSpan), the more ridiculously complex it should be changed to be instrumented, i.e. https://github.com/PostgREST/postgrest/pull/3140/files#diff-5de3ff2b2d013b33dccece6ead9aeb61feffeb0fbd6e38779750511394cf9701R156-R157, up to the point I have no idea how to proceed further (e.g. wrapping App.handleRequests cases with their own spans, which is semantically correct)

There's a more straightforward MonadIO-involving opentelemetry library, with less activity and quite different approach to the telemetry data export (GHC eventlog → file/pipe by the GHC runtime). It looks less invasive approach, refactoring-wise, but requires more hoops to jump to actually deliver traces to Honeycomb/Lightstep/whatnot (pull eventlog → convert it to zipkin/jaeger/b3 → upload somewhere for analysis).

It also seems to boil down to the conceptual choice between online and offline traces' delivery-wise, or push and pull model.

@steve-chavez @wolfgangwalther @laurenceisla what do you think guys?

In my prototype I actually played with replacing HASQL Session with an https://github.com/haskell-effectful/effectful based monad to make it extensible:

https://github.com/mkleczek/hasql-api/blob/master/src/Hasql/Api/Eff/Session.hs#L37

Using it in PostgREST required some mixins usage in Cabal:

29b946e#diff-eb6a76805a0bd3204e7abf68dcceb024912d0200dee7e4e9b9bce3040153f1e1R140

Some work was required in PostgREST startup/configuration code to set-up appropriate effect handlers and middlewares but the changes were quite well isolated.

At the end of the day I think basing your monad stack on an effect library (effectful, cleff etc.) is the way forward as it makes the solution highly extensible and configurable.

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