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Reorder active support instrumentation guide (#37639)
* Keep consistent verb tenses [ci skip] * Add link to "creating your own events" [ci skip] * Move section on how to subscribe to events above list of events The list of events is really long, and most people only care about a specific event or type of event. [ci skip]
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@ -10,9 +10,9 @@ In this guide, you will learn how to use the instrumentation API inside of Activ
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After reading this guide, you will know:
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* What instrumentation can provide.
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* How to add a subscriber to a hook.
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* The hooks inside the Rails framework for instrumentation.
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* Adding a subscriber to a hook.
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* Building a custom instrumentation implementation.
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* How to build a custom instrumentation implementation.
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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@ -23,7 +23,83 @@ The instrumentation API provided by Active Support allows developers to provide
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For example, there is a hook provided within Active Record that is called every time Active Record uses an SQL query on a database. This hook could be **subscribed** to, and used to track the number of queries during a certain action. There's another hook around the processing of an action of a controller. This could be used, for instance, to track how long a specific action has taken.
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You are even able to create your own events inside your application which you can later subscribe to.
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You are even able to [create your own events](#creating-custom-events) inside your application which you can later subscribe to.
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Subscribing to an event
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-----------------------
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Subscribing to an event is easy. Use `ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe` with a block to
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listen to any notification.
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The block receives the following arguments:
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* The name of the event
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* Time when it started
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* Time when it finished
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* A unique ID for the instrumenter that fired the event
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* The payload (described in future sections)
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |name, started, finished, unique_id, data|
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# your own custom stuff
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Rails.logger.info "#{name} Received! (started: #{started}, finished: #{finished})" # process_action.action_controller Received (started: 2019-05-05 13:43:57 -0800, finished: 2019-05-05 13:43:58 -0800)
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end
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```
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If you are concerned about the accuracy of `started` and `finished` to compute a precise elapsed time then use `ActiveSupport::Notifications.monotonic_subscribe`. The given block would receive the same arguments as above but the `started` and `finished` will have values with an accurate monotonic time instead of wall-clock time.
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.monotonic_subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |name, started, finished, unique_id, data|
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# your own custom stuff
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Rails.logger.info "#{name} Received! (started: #{started}, finished: #{finished})" # process_action.action_controller Received (started: 1560978.425334, finished: 1560979.429234)
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end
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```
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Defining all those block arguments each time can be tedious. You can easily create an `ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event`
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from block arguments like this:
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |*args|
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event = ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event.new *args
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event.name # => "process_action.action_controller"
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event.duration # => 10 (in milliseconds)
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event.payload # => {:extra=>information}
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Rails.logger.info "#{event} Received!"
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end
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```
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You may also pass block with only one argument, it will yield an event object to the block:
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |event|
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event.name # => "process_action.action_controller"
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event.duration # => 10 (in milliseconds)
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event.payload # => {:extra=>information}
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Rails.logger.info "#{event} Received!"
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end
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```
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Most times you only care about the data itself. Here is a shortcut to just get the data.
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |*args|
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data = args.extract_options!
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data # { extra: :information }
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end
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```
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You may also subscribe to events matching a regular expression. This enables you to subscribe to
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multiple events at once. Here's how to subscribe to everything from `ActionController`.
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe /action_controller/ do |*args|
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# inspect all ActionController events
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end
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```
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Rails framework hooks
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---------------------
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@ -631,81 +707,6 @@ Rails
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| `:message` | The deprecation warning |
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| `:callstack` | Where the deprecation came from |
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Subscribing to an event
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-----------------------
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Subscribing to an event is easy. Use `ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe` with a block to
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listen to any notification.
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The block receives the following arguments:
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* The name of the event
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* Time when it started
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* Time when it finished
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* A unique ID for the instrumenter that fired the event
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* The payload (described in previous sections)
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |name, started, finished, unique_id, data|
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# your own custom stuff
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Rails.logger.info "#{name} Received! (started: #{started}, finished: #{finished})" # process_action.action_controller Received (started: 2019-05-05 13:43:57 -0800, finished: 2019-05-05 13:43:58 -0800)
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end
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```
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If you are concerned about the accuracy of `started` and `finished` to compute a precise elapsed time then use `ActiveSupport::Notifications.monotonic_subscribe`. The given block would receive the same arguments as above but the `started` and `finished` will have values with an accurate monotonic time instead of wall-clock time.
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.monotonic_subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |name, started, finished, unique_id, data|
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# your own custom stuff
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Rails.logger.info "#{name} Received! (started: #{started}, finished: #{finished})" # process_action.action_controller Received (started: 1560978.425334, finished: 1560979.429234)
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end
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```
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Defining all those block arguments each time can be tedious. You can easily create an `ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event`
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from block arguments like this:
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |*args|
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event = ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event.new *args
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event.name # => "process_action.action_controller"
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event.duration # => 10 (in milliseconds)
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event.payload # => {:extra=>information}
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Rails.logger.info "#{event} Received!"
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end
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```
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You may also pass block with only one argument, it will yield an event object to the block:
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |event|
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event.name # => "process_action.action_controller"
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event.duration # => 10 (in milliseconds)
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event.payload # => {:extra=>information}
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Rails.logger.info "#{event} Received!"
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end
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```
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Most times you only care about the data itself. Here is a shortcut to just get the data.
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe "process_action.action_controller" do |*args|
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data = args.extract_options!
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data # { extra: :information }
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end
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```
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You may also subscribe to events matching a regular expression. This enables you to subscribe to
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multiple events at once. Here's you could subscribe to everything from `ActionController`.
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```ruby
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ActiveSupport::Notifications.subscribe /action_controller/ do |*args|
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# inspect all ActionController events
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end
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```
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Creating custom events
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----------------------
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