Skip to main content
Version: v1.4

Pyroscope

Pyroscope is an open source platform, consisting of server and agent. It allows the user to collect, store, and query the profiling data in a CPU and disk efficient way. This addon is built based Pyroscope

install

vela addon enable pyroscope

After enable pyroscope successfully, you can execute command to expose the port 4040 for Dashboard UI.

vela port-forward addon-pyroscope -n vela-system

How to use pyroscope trait

Use a component typed webservice to start, keep the following to pyroscope-demo.yaml, then vela up -f app-demo.yaml

apiVersion: core.oam.dev/v1beta1
kind: Application
metadata:
name: pyroscope-app
namespace: fourier
spec:
components:
- name: pyroscope-comp-01
type: webservice
properties:
image: nginx:latest
ports:
- expose: true
port: 80
protocol: TCP
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
traits:
- type: pyroscope
properties:
server: "http://pyroscope-server:9084"
logger: "pyroscope.StandardLogger"
appName: "pyroscope-test"
- type: scaler
properties:
replicas: 1

And the parameter appName is a optional field, default value is the component name.

How to use pyroscope client

Pyroscope for Golang applications

  • To start profiling a Go application, you need to include our go module in your app
# make sure you also upgrade pyroscope server to version 0.3.1 or higher
go get github.com/pyroscope-io/client/pyroscope
  • Then add the following code to your application:
package main

import "github.com/pyroscope-io/client/pyroscope"

func main() {
pyroscope.Start(pyroscope.Config{
ApplicationName: "simple.golang.app",
// replace this with the address of pyroscope server
ServerAddress: "http://pyroscope-server:4040",
// you can disable logging by setting this to nil
Logger: pyroscope.StandardLogger,

// optionally, if authentication is enabled, specify the API key:
// AuthToken: os.Getenv("PYROSCOPE_AUTH_TOKEN"),

// by default all profilers are enabled, but you can select the ones you want to use:
ProfileTypes: []pyroscope.ProfileType{
pyroscope.ProfileCPU,
pyroscope.ProfileAllocObjects,
pyroscope.ProfileAllocSpace,
pyroscope.ProfileInuseObjects,
pyroscope.ProfileInuseSpace,
},
})

// your code goes here
}
  • Check out the examples directory in our repository to learn more

Pyroscope for Java applications

  • Java integration is distributed as a single jar file: pyroscope.jar. It contains native async-profiler libraries
  • To start profiling a Java application, run your application with pyroscope.jar javaagent:
export PYROSCOPE_APPLICATION_NAME=my.java.app
export PYROSCOPE_SERVER_ADDRESS=http://pyroscope-server:4040

# Optionally, if authentication is enabled, specify the API key.
# export PYROSCOPE_AUTH_TOKEN={YOUR_API_KEY}

java -javaagent:pyroscope.jar -jar app.jar
  • Check out the examples folder in our repository to learn more

Pyroscope for .net applications

  • To start profiling a .NET application inside a container, you may wrap your application with pyroscope exec as an entrypoint of your image. The tricky part is that you need to copy pyroscope binary to your docker container. To do that, use COPY --from command in your Dockerfile. The following example Dockerfile shows how to build the image:
FROM mcr.microsoft.com/dotnet/sdk:5.0

WORKDIR /dotnet

COPY --from=pyroscope/pyroscope:latest /usr/bin/pyroscope /usr/bin/pyroscope
ADD my-app .
RUN dotnet publish -o . -r $(dotnet --info | grep RID | cut -b 6- | tr -d ' ')

# optionally you may set the pyroscope server address as well as the app name and other configuration options.
ENV PYROSCOPE_SERVER_ADDRESS=http://pyroscope-server:4040
ENV PYROSCOPE_APPLICATION_NAME=my.dotnet.app
ENV PYROSCOPE_LOG_LEVEL=debug

CMD ["pyroscope", "exec", "dotnet", "/dotnet/my-app.dll"]
  • If you are using Docker Compose, you can run both pyroscope server and agent with this configuration:
---
version: "3.9"
services:
pyroscope-server:
image: "pyroscope/pyroscope:latest"
ports:
- "4040:4040"
command:
- "server"
app:
image: "my-app:latest"
environment:
PYROSCOPE_APPLICATION_NAME: my.dotnet.app
PYROSCOPE_SERVER_ADDRESS: http://pyroscope-server:4040
PYROSCOPE_LOG_LEVEL: debug
ASPNETCORE_URLS: http://*:5000
ports:
- "5000:5000"
cap_add:
- SYS_PTRACE
  • Check out the examples folder in our repository to learn more

Pyroscope for Python applications

  • First, install pyroscope-io pip package:
pip install pyroscope-io
  • Add the following code to your application. This code will initialize pyroscope profiler and start profiling:
import pyroscope

pyroscope.configure(
app_name = "my.python.app", # replace this with some name for your application
server_address = "http://my-pyroscope-server:4040", # replace this with the address of your pyroscope server
# auth_token = "{YOUR_API_KEY}", # optionally, if authentication is enabled, specify the API key
)

Pyroscope for PHP applications

  • To start profiling a PHP application in a container, you may wrap your application with pyroscope exec as an entrypoint of your image. The tricky part is that you need to copy pyroscope binary to your docker container. To do that, use COPY --from command in your Dockerfile. The following example Dockerfile shows how to build the image:
FROM php:7.3.27

WORKDIR /var/www/html

# this copies pyroscope binary from pyroscope image to your image:
COPY --from=pyroscope/pyroscope:latest /usr/bin/pyroscope /usr/bin/pyroscope
COPY main.php ./main.php

# optionally you may set the pyroscope server address as well as the app name, make sure you change these:
ENV PYROSCOPE_APPLICATION_NAME=my.php.app
ENV PYROSCOPE_SERVER_ADDRESS=http://pyroscope:4040/

# this starts your app with pyroscope profiler, make sure to change "php" and "main.php" to the actual command.
CMD ["pyroscope", "exec", "php", "main.php"]
  • If you are using Docker Compose, you can run both pyroscope server and agent with this configuration:
---
services:
pyroscope-server:
image: "pyroscope/pyroscope:latest"
ports:
- "4040:4040"
command:
- "server"
app:
image: "my-app:latest"
env:
PYROSCOPE_SERVER_ADDRESS: http://pyroscope-server:4040
PYROSCOPE_APPLICATION_NAME: my.php.app
cap_add:
- SYS_PTRACE
  • Check out the examples folder in our repository to learn more

Pyroscope for NodeJS applications

  • To start profiling a NodeJS application, you need to include the npm module in your app:
npm install @pyroscope/nodejs

# or
yarn add @pyroscope/nodejs
  • Then add the following code to your application:
const Pyroscope = require('@pyroscope/nodejs');

Pyroscope.init({
serverAddress: 'http://pyroscope:4040',
appName: 'myNodeService'
});

Pyroscope.start()
  • Check out the examples directory in our repository to learn more

uninstall

vela addon disable pyroscope