📚 gotoprom - Awesome Go Library for Miscellaneous

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Type-safe metrics builder wrapper library for the official Prometheus client.

🏷️ Miscellaneous
📂 These libraries were placed here because none of the other categories seemed to fit.
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Detailed Description of gotoprom

gotoprom

A Prometheus metrics builder

Build Status Coverage Status GoDoc Mentioned in Awesome Go

gotoprom offers an easy to use declarative API with type-safe labels for building and using Prometheus metrics. It doesn't replace the official Prometheus client but adds a wrapper on top of it.

gotoprom is built for developers who like type safety, navigating the code using IDEs and using a “find usages” functionality, making refactoring and debugging easier at the cost of performance and writing slightly more verbose code.

Motivation

Main motivation for this library was to have type-safety on the Prometheus labels, which are just a map[string]string in the original library, and their values can be reported even without mentioning the label name, just relying on the order they were declared in.

For example, it replaces:

httpReqs := prometheus.NewCounterVec(
    prometheus.CounterOpts{
        Name: "http_requests_total",
        Help: "How many HTTP requests processed, partitioned by status code and HTTP method.",
    },
    []string{"code", "method"},
)
prometheus.MustRegister(httpReqs)

// ...

httpReqs.WithLabelValues("404", "POST").Add(42)

With:

var metrics = struct{
	Reqs func(labels) prometheus.Counter `name:"requests_total" help:"How many HTTP requests processed, partitioned by status code and HTTP method."`
}

type labels struct {
	Code   int    `label:"code"`
	Method string `label:"method"`
}

gotoprom.MustInit(&metrics, "http")

// ...

metrics.Reqs(labels{Code: 404, Method: "POST"}).Inc()

This way it's impossible to mess the call by exchanging the order of "POST" & "404" params.

Usage

Define your metrics:

var metrics struct {
	SomeCounter                      func() prometheus.Counter   `name:"some_counter" help:"some counter"`
	SomeHistogram                    func() prometheus.Histogram `name:"some_histogram" help:"Some histogram with default prometheus buckets" buckets:""`
	SomeHistogramWithSpecificBuckets func() prometheus.Histogram `name:"some_histogram_with_buckets" help:"Some histogram with custom buckets" buckets:".01,.05,.1"`
	SomeGauge                        func() prometheus.Gauge     `name:"some_gauge" help:"Some gauge"`
	SomeSummaryWithSpecificMaxAge    func() prometheus.Summary   `name:"some_summary_with_specific_max_age" help:"Some summary with custom max age" max_age:"20m" objectives:"0.50,0.95,0.99"`

	Requests struct {
		Total func(requestLabels) prometheus.Count `name:"total" help:"Total amount of requests served"`
	} `namespace:"requests"`
}

type requestLabels struct {
	Service    string `label:"service"`
	StatusCode int    `label:"status"`
	Success    bool   `label:"success"`
}

Initialize them:

func init() {
	gotoprom.MustInit(&metrics, "namespace")
}

Measure stuff:

metrics.SomeGauge().Set(100)
metrics.Requests.Total(requestLabels{Service: "google", StatusCode: 404, Success: false}).Inc()

Custom metric types

By default, only some basic metric types are registered when gotoprom is intialized:

  • prometheus.Counter
  • prometheus.Histogram
  • prometheus.Gauge
  • prometheus.Summary

You can extend this by adding more types, for instance, if you want to observe time and want to avoid repetitive code you can create a prometheusx.TimeHistogram:

package prometheusx

import (
	"reflect"
	"time"

	"github.com/cabify/gotoprom"
	"github.com/cabify/gotoprom/prometheusvanilla"
	"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
)

var (
	// TimeHistogramType is the reflect.Type of the TimeHistogram interface
	TimeHistogramType = reflect.TypeOf((*TimeHistogram)(nil)).Elem()
)

func init() {
	gotoprom.MustAddBuilder(TimeHistogramType, RegisterTimeHistogram)
}

// RegisterTimeHistogram registers a TimeHistogram after registering the underlying prometheus.Histogram in the prometheus.Registerer provided
// The function it returns returns a TimeHistogram type as an interface{}
func RegisterTimeHistogram(name, help, namespace string, labelNames []string, tag reflect.StructTag) (func(prometheus.Labels) interface{}, prometheus.Collector, error) {
	f, collector, err := prometheusvanilla.BuildHistogram(name, help, namespace, labelNames, tag)
	if err != nil {
		return nil, nil, err
	}

	return func(labels prometheus.Labels) interface{} {
		return timeHistogramAdapter{Histogram: f(labels).(prometheus.Histogram)}
	}, collector, nil
}

// TimeHistogram offers the basic prometheus.Histogram functionality
// with additional time-observing functions
type TimeHistogram interface {
	prometheus.Histogram
	// Duration observes the duration in seconds
	Duration(duration time.Duration)
	// Since observes the duration in seconds since the time point provided
	Since(time.Time)
}

type timeHistogramAdapter struct {
	prometheus.Histogram
}

// Duration observes the duration in seconds
func (to timeHistogramAdapter) Duration(duration time.Duration) {
	to.Observe(duration.Seconds())
}

// Since observes the duration in seconds since the time point provided
func (to timeHistogramAdapter) Since(duration time.Time) {
	to.Duration(time.Since(duration))
}

So you can later define it as:

var metrics struct {
	DurationSeconds func() prometheusx.TimeHistogram `name:"duration_seconds" help:"Duration in seconds" buckets:".001,.005,.01,.025,.05,.1"`
}

func init() {
	gotoprom.MustInit(&metrics, "requests")
}

And use it as:

// ...
defer metrics.DurationSeconds().Since(t0)
// ...

Replacing metric builders

If you don't like the default metric builders, you can replace the DefaultInitializer with your own one.

Performance

Obviously, there's a performance cost to perform the type-safety mapping magic to the original Prometheus client's API.

In general terms, it takes 3x to increment a counter than with vanilla Prometheus, which is around 600ns (we're talking about a portion of a microsecond, less than a thousandth of a millisecond)

$ go test -bench . -benchtime 3s
goos: darwin
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/cabify/gotoprom
BenchmarkVanilla-4    	10000000	       387 ns/op
BenchmarkGotoprom-4   	 5000000	      1049 ns/op
PASS
ok  	github.com/cabify/gotoprom	10.611s

In terms of memory, there's a also a 33% increase in terms of space, and 3x increase in allocations:

$ go test -bench . -benchmem
goos: darwin
goarch: amd64
pkg: github.com/cabify/gotoprom
BenchmarkVanilla-4    	 5000000	       381 ns/op	     336 B/op	       2 allocs/op
BenchmarkGotoprom-4   	 1000000	      1030 ns/op	     432 B/op	       6 allocs/op
PASS
ok  	github.com/cabify/gotoprom	3.369s

This costs are probably assumable in most of the applications, especially when measuring network accesses, etc. which are magnitudes higher.