Awesome
sangria-slowlog - Sangria middleware to log slow queries.
SBT Configuration:
- last stable release:
libraryDependencies += "org.sangria-graphql" %% "sangria" % "<last version>"
libraryDependencies += "org.sangria-graphql" %% "sangria-slowlog" % "<last version>"
Usage
With middleware, Sangria provides a very convenient way to instrument GraphQL query execution and introduce profiling logic. sangria-slowlog
provides a simple mechanism to log slow queries and show profiling information.
Library provides a middleware that logs instrumented query information if execution exceeds specific threshold. An example:
import sangria.slowlog.SlowLog
import scala.concurrent.duration._
Executor.execute(schema, query,
middleware = SlowLog(logger, threshold = 10 seconds) :: Nil)
If query execution takes more than 10 seconds to execute, then you will see similar info in the logs:
# [Execution Metrics] duration: 12362ms, validation: 0ms, reducers: 0ms
#
# $id = "1000"
query Test($id: String!) {
# [Query] count: 1, time: 2ms
#
# $id = "1000"
human(id: $id) {
# [Human] count: 1, time: 0ms
name
# [Human] count: 1, time: 11916ms
appearsIn
# [Human] count: 1, time: 358ms
friends {
# [Droid] count: 2, min: 0ms, max: 0ms, mean: 0ms, p75: 0ms, p95: 0ms, p99: 0ms
# [Human] count: 2, min: 0ms, max: 0ms, mean: 0ms, p75: 0ms, p95: 0ms, p99: 0ms
name
}
}
}
sangria-slowlog
has full support for GraphQL fragments and polymorphic types, so you will always see metrics for concrete types.
In addition to logging, sangria-slowlog
also supports graphql extensions. Extensions will add a profiling info in the response under
extensions
top-level field. In the most basic form, you can use it like this (this approach also disables the logging):
Executor.execute(schema, query, middleware = SlowLog.extension :: Nil)
After middleware is added, you will see following JSON in the response:
{
"data": {
"human": {
"name": "Luke Skywalker",
"appearsIn": ["NEWHOPE", "EMPIRE", "JEDI"],
"friends": [
{"name": "Han Solo"},
{"name": "Leia Organa"},
{"name": "C-3PO"},
{"name": "R2-D2"}
]
}
},
"extensions": {
"metrics": {
"executionMs": 362,
"validationMs": 0,
"reducersMs": 0,
"query": "# [Execution Metrics] duration: 362ms, validation: 0ms, reducers: 0ms\n#\n# $id = \"1000\"\nquery Test($id: String!) {\n # [Query] count: 1, time: 2ms\n #\n # $id = \"1000\"\n human(id: $id) {\n # [Human] count: 1, time: 0ms\n name\n\n # [Human] count: 1, time: 216ms\n appearsIn\n\n # [Human] count: 1, time: 358ms\n friends {\n # [Droid] count: 2, min: 0ms, max: 0ms, mean: 0ms, p75: 0ms, p95: 0ms, p99: 0ms\n # [Human] count: 2, min: 0ms, max: 0ms, mean: 0ms, p75: 0ms, p95: 0ms, p99: 0ms\n name\n }\n }\n}",
"types": {
"Human": {
"friends": {
"count": 1, "minMs": 358, "maxMs": 358, "meanMs": 358,
"p75Ms": 358, "p95Ms": 358, "p99Ms": 358
},
"appearsIn": {
"count": 1, "minMs": 216, "maxMs": 216, "meanMs": 216,
"p75Ms": 216, "p95Ms": 216, "p99Ms": 216
},
"name": {
"count": 3, "minMs": 0, "maxMs": 0, "meanMs": 0,
"p75Ms": 0, "p95Ms": 0, "p99Ms": 0
}
},
"Query": {
"human": {
"count": 1, "minMs": 2, "maxMs": 2, "meanMs": 2,
"p75Ms": 2, "p95Ms": 2, "p99Ms": 2
}
},
"Droid": {
"name": {
"count": 2, "minMs": 0, "maxMs": 0, "meanMs": 0,
"p75Ms": 0, "p95Ms": 0, "p99Ms": 0
}
}
}
}
}
}
All SlowLog
methods accept addExtensions
argument which allows you to include these extensions along the way.
With a small tweaking, you can also include "Profile" button in GraphiQL. On the server you just need to conditionally include
SlowLog.extension
middleware to make it work. Here is an example of how this integration might look like.
Apollo Tracing Extension
sangria-slowlog also supports apollo-tracing format for metrics. In order
to enable the extension, just use ApolloTracingExtension
middleware (or a shortcut SlowLog.apolloTracing
).
Here is an example:
import sangria.slowlog.SlowLog
Executor.execute(schema, query, middleware = SlowLog.apolloTracing :: Nil)
OpenTracing Support
sangria-slowlog supports OpenTracing with OpenTracing
middleware. In order
to enable it, just use OpenTracing
middleware (or a shortcut SlowLog.openTracing
).
Here is an example:
import sangria.slowlog.SlowLog
Executor.execute(schema, query, middleware = SlowLog.openTracing() :: Nil)
You would need an implicit instance of a Tracer
available in the scope.
In order to access field's span
in the resolve function, you can use middleware attachment ScopeAttachment
:
Field(..., resolve = ctx => {
val parentSpan: Option[Span] = ctx.attachment[SpanAttachment].map(_.span)
// ...
})
The middleware creates spans using OpenTracings startActive
API, so you can inject the active span into a carrier, for instance an HTTP request, if resolving a field requires a network request, and follow the trace in the responding service.
License
sangria-slowlog is licensed under Apache License, Version 2.0.