Low commit activity in last 3 years
Extends Yabeda metrics to collect external calls
2005
2006
2007
2008
2009
2010
2011
2012
2013
2014
2015
2016
2017
2018
2019
2020
2021
2022
2023
2024
 Dependencies

Runtime

 Project Readme
Sponsored by Amplifr

Yabeda::HttpRequests

Built-in metrics for external services HTTP calls! This gem is a Part of the yabeda suite.

Read introduction article on dev.to.

Metrics

Works as the Puma plugin and provides following metrics:

  • http_request_total - the number of external HTTP request attempts (by host, port, method)
  • http_response_total - the number of made external HTTP requeusts (by host, port, method, status)
  • http_response_duration - the histogram of response duration (by host, port, method, status)

Installation

Add this line to your application's Gemfile:

gem 'yabeda-http_requests'

And then execute:

$ bundle install

Or install it yourself as:

$ gem install yabeda-http_requests

Usage

After plugin the gem, you just have to set up metrics exporting with yabeda-prometheus gem.

The metrics page will look like this:

# TYPE http_requests_total_count counter
# HELP http_requests_total_count A counter of the total number of external HTTP requests.
http_request_total{host="twitter.com",port="443",method="GET",query="/dsalahutdinov1"} 149.0
http_request_total{host="dev.to",port="443",method="GET",query="/amplifr"} 145.0
...

To simple set up Grafana, try the sample dashboard.

Sample application

Sample application aims to show how Ruby web-application, this gem and Prometheus/Grafana work togather. Get into example directory and run docker compose:

$ cd example
$ docker-compose up

After docker image builds and all the services get up, you can browse application endpoints:

  • Ruby web-application runs on http://localhost:9292/. Everytime you request page, it schedules random web-scrapping job into sidekiq.
  • Sidekiq exposes prometheus metrics on http://localhost:9394/metrics. This endpoint is scrapped by prometheus exporter every 5 seconds.
  • Grafana runs on http://localhost:3000/. Use admin/foobar as login and password to get in. Grafana already has specific dashboard with data visualisation.

Follow the yabeda-external-http-requests dashboard in Grafana. Finally, after a couple of minutes when data collected you will see the following: Monitor external HTTP calls with Grafana

Development with Docker

Get local development environment working and tests running is very easy with docker-compose:

docker-compose run app bundle
docker-compose run app bundle exec rspec

Contributing

Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/yabeda-rb/yabeda-http_requests.

Releasing

  1. Bump version number in lib/yabeda/http_requests/version.rb

    In case of pre-releases keep in mind rubygems/rubygems#3086 and check version with command like Gem::Version.new(Yabeda::VERSION).to_s

  2. Fill CHANGELOG.md with missing changes, add header with version and date.

  3. Make a commit:

    git add lib/yabeda/http_requests/version.rb CHANGELOG.md
    version=$(ruby -r ./lib/yabeda/http_requests/version.rb -e "puts Gem::Version.new(Yabeda::HttpRequests::VERSION)")
    git commit --message="${version}: " --edit
  4. Create annotated tag:

    git tag v${version} --annotate --message="${version}: " --edit --sign
  5. Fill version name into subject line and (optionally) some description (list of changes will be taken from changelog and appended automatically)

  6. Push it:

    git push --follow-tags
  7. GitHub Actions will create a new release, build and push gem into RubyGems! You're done!

License

The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.