Showing posts with label profiling. Show all posts
Showing posts with label profiling. Show all posts

2022-06-07

How to profile your Golang Fiber server

Usually you need to load test your webserver to measure where's the memory leak or where's the bottleneck, and Golang already provided tool to do that, called pprof. What you need to do is depends on your framework that you use, but it's all similar, most framework already have a middleware that you can import and use, for example in fiber there's pprof middleware, to use:

// import
  "github.com/gofiber/fiber/v2/middleware/pprof"

// use
  app.Use(pprof.New())

It would create a route called /debug/pprof that you can use, just start the server, then open that path. To profile or check heap you just need to click profile/heap link, it would wait for around 10 seconds, meanwhile it waits, you must hit other endpoints to generate traffic/function calls. After 10 seconds, it would show a download dialog to save your cpu profile or heap profile. From that file, you can run a command similar to gops, for example if you want to generate svg or generate web that shows your profiling:

pprof -web /tmp/profile # or
pprof -svg /tmp/profile # <-- file that you just downloaded

It would generate something like this:



So you can find out which function that took most of the CPU time (or if it's heap profile, which function that generates/allocate most memory usage. In my case the bottleneck is the default built-in pretty logger, it limits the number of requests it can only handle to ~9K rps for concurrency 255 on database write benchmark, that if we remove built-in logging and replace with zerolog, it can handle ~57K rps for same benchmark.

2021-01-26

GOPS: Trace your Golang service with ease

GoPS is one alternative (also made by Google, other than pprof) to measure, trace or diagnose the performance and memory usage your Go-powered service/long-lived program. The usage is very easy, you just need to import and add 3 lines in your main (so the gops command line can communicate with your program):

import "github.com/google/gops/agent"

func main() {
  if err := agent.Listen(agent.Options{}); err != nil {
    log.Fatal(err)
  }
  // remaining of your long-lived program logic
}

If you don't put those lines, you can still use gops limited to get list of programs running on your computer/server that made with Go with limited statistics information, using these commands:

$ go get -u -v github.com/google/gops

$ gops  # show the list of running golang program
1248    1       dnscrypt-proxy  go1.13.4  /usr/bin/dnscrypt-proxy
1259    1       containerd      go1.13.15 /usr/bin/containerd
18220   1       dockerd         go1.13.15 /usr/bin/dockerd
1342132 1306434 docker          go1.13.15 /usr/bin/docker

$ gops tree # show running process in tree

$ gops PID # check the stats and whether the program have GOPS agent

#########################################################
# these commands below only available
# if the binary compiled with GOPS agent
# PID can be replaced with GOPS host:port of that program

$ gops stack PID # get current stack trace of running PID

$ gops memstats PID # get memory statistics of running PID

$ gops gc PID # force garbage collection

$ gops setgc PID X # set GC percentage

$ gops pprof-cpu PID # get cpu profile graph
$ gops pprof-heap PID # get memory usage profile graph
profile saved at /tmp/heap_profile070676630
$ gops trace PID # get 5 sec execution trace

# you can install graphviz to visualize the cpu/memory profile
$ sudo apt install graphviz

# visualize the cpu/memory profile graph on the web browser
$ go tool pprof /tmp/heap_profile070676630
> web 

Next step is analyze the call graph for the memory leaks (which mostly just wrongly/forgot to defer body/sql rows or holding slice reference of huge buffer or certain framework's cache trashing) or slow functions, whichever your mission are.

What if golang service you need to trace it inside Kubernetes pod that the GOPS address (host:port) not exposed to outside-world? Kubernetes is a popular solution for companies that manages bunch of servers/microservices or cloud like (GKE, AKS, Amazon EKS, ACK, DOKS, etc) but obviously overkill solution for small companies that doesn't need to scale elastically (or the servers are less than 10 or not using microservice architecture).

First, you must compile gops statically so it can be run inside alpine container (which mostly what people use):

$ cd $GOPATH/go/src/github.com/google/gops
$ export CGO_ENABLED=0
$ go mod vendor
$ go build

# copy gops to your kubernetes pod
$ export POD_NAME=blabla
$ kubectl cp ./gops $POD_NAME:/bin

# ssh/exec to your pod
$ kubectl exec -it $POD_NAME -- sh
$ gops

# for example you want to check heap profile for PID=1
$ gops pprof-heap 1
$ exit

# copy back trace file to local, then you can analyze the dump
kubectl cp $POD:/tmp/heap_profile070676630 out.dump

But if your address and port are exposed you can directly use gops from your computer to the pod or create a tunnel inside the pod if it doesn't have public IP, for example using ngrok.

Btw if you know any companies migrating from/to certain language (especially Go), frameworks or database, you can contribute here.