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telemetry_poller

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Allows to periodically collect measurements and dispatch them as Telemetry events.

telemetry_poller by default runs a poller to perform VM measurements:

You can directly consume those events after adding telemetry_poller as a dependency.

Poller also provides a convenient API for running custom pollers.

Defining custom measurements

Poller also includes conveniences for performing process-based measurements as well as custom ones.

Erlang

First define the poller with the custom measurements. The first measurement is the built-in process_info measurement and the second one is given by a custom module-function-args defined by you:

telemetry_poller:start_link(
  [{measurements, [
    {process_info, [{name, my_app_worker}, {event, [my_app, worker]}, {keys, [memory, message_queue_len]}]},
    {example_app_measurements, dispatch_session_count, []}
  ]},
  {period, timer:seconds(10)}, % configure sampling period - default is timer:seconds(5)
  {init_delay, timer:seconds(600)}, % configure sampling initial delay - default is 0
  {name, my_app_poller}
]).

Now define the custom measurement and you are good to go:

-module(example_app_measurements).

dispatch_session_count() ->
    % emit a telemetry event when called
    telemetry:execute([example_app, session_count], #{count => example_app:session_count()}, #{}).

Elixir

You typically start the poller as a child in your supervision tree:

children = [
  {:telemetry_poller,
   # include custom measurement as an MFA tuple
   measurements: [
     {:process_info, name: :my_app_worker, event: [:my_app, :worker], keys: [:memory, :message_queue_len]},
     {ExampleApp.Measurements, :dispatch_session_count, []},
   ],
   period: :timer.seconds(10), # configure sampling period - default is :timer.seconds(5)
   init_delay: :timer.seconds(600), # configure sampling initial delay - default is 0
   name: :my_app_poller}
]

Supervisor.start_link(children, strategy: :one_for_one)

The poller above has two periodic measurements. The first is the built-in process_info measurement that will gather the memory and message queue length of a process. The second is given by a custom module-function-args defined by you, such as below:

defmodule ExampleApp.Measurements do
  def dispatch_session_count() do
    # emit a telemetry event when called
    :telemetry.execute([:example_app, :session_count], %{count: ExampleApp.session_count()}, %{})
  end
end

Documentation

See documentation for more concrete examples and usage instructions.

VM metrics example

Erlang

Find, in examples/telemetry_poller_vm.erl, an example on how to retrieve to VM measurements, mentioned above.

To see it in action, fire up rebar3 shell, then

{ok, telemetry_poller_vm} = c("examples/telemetry_poller_vm").
ok = file:delete("telemetry_poller_vm.beam").  % Deletes generated BEAM
ok = telemetry_poller_vm:attach().

Elixir

Find, in examples/TelemetryPollerVM.ex, an example on how to retrieve to VM measurements, mentioned above.

To see it in action, first compile the Erlang sources with rebar3 compile.

Then fire up iex -pa "_build/default/lib/*/ebin", then

{:ok, _} = Application.ensure_all_started(:telemetry_poller)

[TelemetryPollerVM] = c("examples/TelemetryPollerVM.ex")
:ok = TelemetryPollerVM.attach()

Copyright and License

Copyright (c) 2019 Erlang Ecosystem Foundation and Erlang Solutions.

telemetry_poller source code is released under Apache License, Version 2.0.

See LICENSE and NOTICE files for more information.