metrix

2.0.0 • Public • Published

Metrix

Architecture

The library is composed of two central objects: the Recorder and the Aggregator.

You use the Recorder to create Counters, Timers and Histogram, then the Counters, Timers and Histogram are used to send events to the Recorder.

On the other end, the Aggregator listen to events emitted by the Counters / Timers / Histogram and aggregate them. The default Aggregator aggregates counter events as a single value (the latest) and timer event into an histogram. But nothing is preventing you for having different aggregating strategy, for instance you may want to keep a min/avg/latest/max structure for every counters.

The library provides two histograms implementations, one based on the classical bucketed algorithm and one based on the more inovative frugal streaming estimation. The first one is as precise as you want with an impact on speed and memory footprint, the second one is extremly fast with almost no memory impact but is less precise.

Usage

Initializing the library simply like this:

var recorder = new Recorder();
var aggregator = new Aggregator(recorder);

Creating/using counter/timer:

const myCounter = recorder.counter('my_counter');
myCounter.incr();
myCounter.incr();
 
const myHisto = recorder.histogram('my_histo');
myHisto.add(12);
myHisto.add(34);
 
const latencyTimer = recorder.timer('latency');
const id = latencyTimer.start();
// do something...
latencyTimer.stop(id);

Creating a report:

aggregator.report();
aggregator.clear();

This will generate a report like this:

{
    counters: {
        my_counter: 2
    },
    histograms: {
        latency: {
            min: 1,
            max: 56,
            p50: 13.4,
            p90: 34.1,
            p99: 53.2
        }
    }
}

Scoping

The Recorder has a scope method, which will return a new Recorder, every new Counter/Timer created with this new recorder will have their name prefixed by the scope value you provided during scoping.

Scoping is encouraged for categorizing metrics into different namespaces.

Tags

You can add tags to a specific counter / timer, the aggregator is free to do anything with the tags.

aggregator.test.js has a test that demonstrate how to use tags for creating histograms per request url, despite only measuring the latency once.

Configuration

The configuration is pretty flexible and you can control how you send event at both recording-time and aggregation-time.

The config Object contains two entries recorder and aggregator. recorder contains two entries counter, timer and histogram, which are functions used for creating a new Counter / Timer / Histogram. This function can be used to decide how to record metrics event (e.g. disable specific event recording). aggregator contains three entries counter, timer and composites. The first two are used for controlling how to aggregate events, they can create new histogram / counter at will based on the events it receives.

In the following example, I disabled all timers execpt request_latency_ms, I also swaped out the default histogram for a more precise one with more quantiles, and also created a new metrics connections/current out of two existing counters (connections/add and connections/remove).

var config = {
    recorder: {
        timer: function (recorder, name, tags) {
            if (name === 'request_latency_ms') {
                return DefaultTimer(recorder, name, tags);
            } else {
                return NullTimer;
            }
 
        }
    },
    aggregator: {
        timer: function (event, histograms, counters) {
            if (!histograms[event.name]) {
                histograms[event.name] = new BucketedHistogram({
                    max: 60 * 1000,                    // 1 minute
                    error: 2 / 100,                    // 2% precision
                    quantiles: [0.5, 0.9, 0.99, 0.999] // default quantiles
                });
            }
            var duration = event.stopTs - event.startTs;
            histograms[event.name].add(duration);
        },
        composites: function (counters, histograms) {
            var current = counters['connections/add'] - counters['connections/remove'];
            return ['connections/current', current];
        },
    }
};
 
var recorder = new Recorder(config.recorder);
var aggregator = new Aggregator(recorder, config.aggregator);

Convention

It's always better to adopt similar convention in a project, here are the conventions we picked:

Stats names

Counters and Timers names are snake_case and should be postfixed by the unit they represent, e.g request_latency_ms.

Passing Recorder

Recorder has to be passed from Object to Object, the convention is that you never scope the Recorder before passing it, you let the receiving class scope it with its desired namespace.

e.g.

var conn = new Connection(recorder)
 
// ...
 
function Connection(_recorder) {
    var recorder = _recorder.scope('connection');
    this.add = recorder.counter('add');
}

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Install

npm i metrix

Weekly Downloads

66

Version

2.0.0

License

MIT

Last publish

Collaborators

  • stevegury