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Spectator library for instrumenting C++ applications, which sends metrics to SpectatorD.

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Spectator-cpp

This implements a basic Spectator library for instrumenting Go applications. It consists of a thin client designed to send metrics through spectatord.

Instrumenting Code

#include <spectator/registry.h>

// use default values
static constexpr auto kDefault = 0;

struct Request {
  std::string country;
};

struct Response {
  int status;
  int size;
};

class Server {
 public:
  explicit Server(spectator::Registry* registry)
      : registry_{registry},
        request_count_id_{registry->CreateId("server.requestCount", spectator::Tags{})},
        request_latency_{registry->GetTimer("server.requestLatency")},
        response_size_{registry->GetDistributionSummary("server.responseSizes")} {}

  Response Handle(const Request& request) {
    auto start = std::chrono::steady_clock::now();

    // do some work and obtain a response...
    Response res{200, 64};

    // Update the Counter id with dimensions, based on information in the request. The Counter
    // will be looked up in the Registry, which is a fairly cheap operation, about the same as
    // the lookup of an id object in a map. However, it is more expensive than having a local
    // variable set to the Counter.
    auto cnt_id = request_count_id_
        ->WithTag("country", request.country)
        ->WithTag("status", std::to_string(res.status));
    registry_->GetCounter(std::move(cnt_id))->Increment();
    request_latency_->Record(std::chrono::steady_clock::now() - start);
    response_size_->Record(res.size);
    return res;
  }

 private:
  spectator::Registry* registry_;
  std::shared_ptr<spectator::Id> request_count_id_;
  std::shared_ptr<spectator::Timer> request_latency_;
  std::shared_ptr<spectator::DistributionSummary> response_size_;
};

Request get_next_request() {
  return Request{"US"};
}

int main() {
  auto logger = spdlog::stdout_color_mt("console"); 
  std::unordered_map<std::string, std::string> common_tags{{"xatlas.process", "some-sidecar"}};
  spectator::Config cfg{"unix:/run/spectatord/spectatord.unix", common_tags};
  spectator::Registry registry{std::move(cfg), logger);

  Server server{&registry};

  for (auto i = 1; i <= 3; ++i) {
    // get a request
    auto req = get_next_request();
    server.Handle(req);
  }
}

High-Volume Publishing

By default, the library sends every meter change to the spectatord sidecar immediately. This involves a blocking send call and underlying system calls, and may not be the most efficient way to publish metrics in high-volume use cases. For this purpose a simple buffering functionality in Publisher is implemented, and it can be turned on by passing a buffer size to the spectator::Config constructor. It is important to note that, until this buffer fills up, the Publisher will not send nay meters to the sidecar. Therefore, if your application doesn't emit meters at a high rate, you should either keep the buffer very small, or do not configure a buffer size at all, which will fall back to the "publish immediately" mode of operation.

Local & IDE Configuration

# setup python venv and activate, to gain access to conan cli
./setup-venv.sh
source venv/bin/activate

./build.sh  # [clean|clean --confirm|skiptest]
  • Install the Conan plugin for CLion.
    • CLion > Settings > Plugins > Marketplace > Conan > Install
  • Configure the Conan plugin.
    • The easiest way to configure CLion to work with Conan is to build the project first from the command line.
      • This will establish the $PROJECT_HOME/CMakeUserPresets.json file, which will allow you to choose the custom CMake configuration created by Conan when creating a new CMake project. Using this custom profile will ensure that sources are properly indexed and explorable.
    • Open the project. The wizard will show three CMake profiles.
      • Disable the default Cmake Debug profile.
      • Enable the CMake conan-debug profile.
    • CLion > View > Tool Windows > Conan > (gear) > Conan Executable: $PROJECT_HOME/venv/bin/conan