README ¶
gRPC-Go Profiling
- Author(s): adtac
- Status: Experimental
- Availability: gRPC-Go >= 1.27
- Last updated: December 17, 2019
gRPC-Go has built-in profiling that can be used to generate a detailed timeline of the lifecycle of an RPC request. This can be done on the client-side and the server-side. This directory contains an example client-server implementation with profiling enabled and some example commands you can run to remotely manage profiling.
Typically, there are three logically separate parts involved in integrating profiling into your application:
- Register the
Profiling
service: this requires a simple code change in your application. - Enable profiling when required: profiling is disabled by default and must be enabled remotely or at server initialization.
- Download and process profiling data: once your application has collected enough profiling data, you must use a bundled command-line application to download your data and process it to generate human-friendly visualization.
Registering the Profiling
Service
Server-Side
Typically, you would create and register a server like so (some Go is shortened
in the interest of brevity; please see the server
subdirectory for a full
implementation):
import (
"google.golang.org/grpc"
profsvc "google.golang.org/grpc/profiling/service"
pb "google.golang.org/grpc/examples/features/proto/echo"
)
type server struct{}
func main() error {
s := grpc.NewServer()
pb.RegisterEchoServer(s, &server{})
// Include this to register a profiling-specific service within your server.
if err := profsvc.Init(&profsvc.ProfilingConfig{Server: s}); err != nil {
fmt.Printf("error calling profsvc.Init: %v\n", err)
return
}
lis, _ := net.Listen("tcp", address)
s.Serve(lis)
}
To register your server for profiling, simply call the profsvc.Init
method
as shown above. The passed ProfilingConfig
parameter must set the Server
field to a server that is being served on a TCP address.
Client-Side
To register profiling on the client-side, you must create a server to expose
your profiling data in order for it to be retrievable. To do this, it is
recommended that you create a dummy, dedicated server with no service other
than profiling's. See the client
directory for an example client.
Enabling/Disabling Profiling
Once profiling is baked into your server (unless otherwise specified, from here
on, the word "server" will be used to refer to a grpc.Server
, not the
server/client distinction from the previous subsection), you need to enable
profiling. There are three ways to do this -- at initialization, remotely
post-initialization, or programmatically within Go.
Enabling Profiling at Initialization
To force profiling to start measuring data right from the first RPC, set the
Enabled
attribute of the ProfilingConfig
struct to true
when you are
initializing profiling.
// Set Enabled: true to turn profiling on at initialization time.
profsvc.Init(&profsvc.ProfilingConfig{
Server: s,
Enabled: true,
})
Enabling/Disabling Remotely
Alternatively, you can enable/disable profiling any time after server
initialization by using a bundled command-line tool designed for remote
profiling management. Assuming example.com:50051
is the address of the server
that you would like to enable profiling in, do the following:
$ go run google.golang.org/grpc/profiling/cmd \
-address example.com:50051 \
-enable-profiling
Similarly, running the command with -disable-profiling
can be used to disable
profiling remotely.
Enabling/Disabling Within Go
In addition to the remote service that is exposed, you may enable/disable profiling within your application in Go:
import (
"google.golang.org/grpc/profiling"
)
func setProfiling(enable bool) {
profiling.Enable(true)
}
The profiling.Enable
function can be safely accessed and called concurrently.
Downloading and Processing Profiling Data
Once your server has collected enough profiling data, you may want to download that data and perform some analysis on the retrieved data. The aforementioned command-line application within gRPC comes bundled with support for both operations.
To retrieve profiling data from a remote server, run the following command:
$ go run google.golang.org/grpc/profiling/cmd \
-address example.com:50051 \
-retrieve-snapshot \
-snapshot /path/to/snapshot
You must provide a path to -snapshot
that can be written to. This file will
store the retrieved data in a raw and binary form.
To process this data into a human-consumable such as Catapult's trace-viewer format:
$ go run google.golang.org/grpc/profiling/cmd \
-snapshot /path/to/snapshot \
-stream-stats-catapult-json /path/to/json
This would read the data stored in /path/to/snapshot
and process it to
generate a JSON format that is understood by Chromium's
Catapult project.
The Catapult project comes with a utility called
trace-viewer,
which can be used to generate human-readable visualizations:
$ git clone https://chromium.googlesource.com/catapult /path/to/catapult
$ /path/to/catapult/tracing/bin/trace2html /path/to/json --output=/path/to/html
When the generated /path/to/html
file is opened with a browser, you will be
presented with a detailed visualization of the lifecycle of all RPC requests.
To learn more about trace-viewer and how to navigate the generated HTML, see
this.
Frequently Asked Questions
grpc.Server
s in my application. Can I register profiling with just one of them?You may not call profsvc.Init
more than once -- all calls except for the
first one will return an error. As a corollary, it is also not possible to
register or enable/disable profiling for just one grpc.Server
or operation.
That is, you can enable/disable profiling globally for all gRPC operations or
none at all.
google.golang.org/grpc/profiling/cmd
the canonical implementation of a client that can talk to the profiling service?No, the command-line tool is simply provided as a reference implementation and as a convenience. You are free to write your own tool as long as it can communicate using the underlying protocol buffers.
trace-viewer
the only option that is supported?Currently, yes. However, support for other (or better) visualization tools is welcome.
When turned off, profiling has virtually no impact on the performance (QPS, latency, memory footprint) of your application. However, when turned on, expect a 5-10% throughput/latency penalty and double the memory footprint.
Profiling is mostly used by gRPC-Go devs. However, if you foresee using
profiling in production machines, because of the negligible impact of profiling
when turned off, you may want to register/initialize your applications with
profiling (but leave it turned off). This will be useful in the off-chance you
want to debug an application later -- in such an event, you can simply remotely
toggle profiling using the go run
command previously described to enable
profiling data collection. Once you're confident that enough profiling data has
been measured, you can turn it off again and retrieve the data for
post-processing (see previous section).
By default, at any given time, the last 214 RPCs worth of data is stored by profiling. Newly generated profiling data overwrites older data. Note that the internal data structure is not strictly LIFO in order to be performant (but is approximately LIFO). All profiling data is timestamped anyway, so a LIFO property is unnecessary.
This number is configurable. When registering your server with profiling, you may specify the number of samples that should be stored, like so:
// Setting StreamStatsSize: 1024 will make profiling store the last 1024
// RPCs' data (if profiling is enabled, of course).
profsvc.Init(&profsvc.ProfilingConfig{
Server: s,
StreamStatsSize: 1024,
})
As an estimate, a typical unary RPC is expected produce ~2-3 KiB of profiling data in memory. This may be useful in estimating how many RPCs worth of data you can afford depending on your memory capacity. For more complex RPCs such as streaming RPCs, each RPC will consume more data. The amount of memory consumed by profiling is mostly independent of the size of messages your application handles.
Unfortunately, there isn't any way to do this without some changes to the way your application is compiled. This is because gRPC's profiling relies on the Goroutine ID to uniquely identify different components.
To enable this, first apply the following patch to your Go runtime installation directory:
diff --git a/src/runtime/runtime2.go b/src/runtime/runtime2.go
--- a/src/runtime/runtime2.go
+++ b/src/runtime/runtime2.go
@@ -392,6 +392,10 @@ type stack struct {
hi uintptr
}
+func Goid() int64 {
+ return getg().goid
+}
+
type g struct {
// Stack parameters.
// stack describes the actual stack memory: [stack.lo, stack.hi).
Then, recompile your application with -tags grpcgoid
to generate a new
binary. This binary should produce profiling data that is much nicer when
visualized.