Commit 352bc7d2 authored by Yorick Peterse's avatar Yorick Peterse

Added dev guide for measuring Ruby blocks

parent 1af6cf28
......@@ -4,6 +4,7 @@
- [CI setup](ci_setup.md) for testing GitLab
- [Gotchas](gotchas.md) to avoid
- [How to dump production data to staging](db_dump.md)
- [Instrumentation](instrumentation.md)
- [Migration Style Guide](migration_style_guide.md) for creating safe migrations
- [Rake tasks](rake_tasks.md) for development
- [Shell commands](shell_commands.md) in the GitLab codebase
......
# Instrumenting Ruby Code
GitLab Performance Monitoring allows instrumenting of custom blocks of Ruby
code. This can be used to measure the time spent in a specific part of a larger
chunk of code. The resulting data is written to a separate series.
To start measuring a block of Ruby code you should use
`Gitlab::Metrics.measure` and give it a name for the series to store the data
in:
```ruby
Gitlab::Metrics.measure(:user_logins) do
...
end
```
The first argument of this method is the series name and should be plural. This
name will be prefixed with `rails_` or `sidekiq_` depending on whether the code
was run in the Rails application or one of the Sidekiq workers. In the
above example the final series names would be as follows:
- rails_user_logins
- sidekiq_user_logins
Series names should be plural as this keeps the naming style in line with the
other series names.
By default metrics measured using a block contain a single value, "duration",
which contains the number of milliseconds it took to execute the block. Custom
values can be added by passing a Hash as the 2nd argument. Custom tags can be
added by passing a Hash as the 3rd argument. A simple example is as follows:
```ruby
Gitlab::Metrics.measure(:example_series, { number: 10 }, { class: self.class.to_s }) do
...
end
```
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