Orion
Official Documentation on Hexdoc
Orion is a Dynamic Distributed Profiler. It allows you to profile any function in a beam cluster and get back an histogram representing the profile of the function calls across the whole cluster. Live, with low overhead, making it suitable to run in production. It uses Erlang dynamic tracing under the hood.
It is meant to be used as a library in part of your existing application.
If you run your application non clustered, you will be able to trace the node you connect to.
If your applications are connected via Distributed Erlang, then you will get a histogram of every call on every node, aggregated.
Non Goals
- Be useable in any BEAM language. This may happen in the future but for now we depend on dog_sketch which is in elixir
- Making it easy to run the UI locally and connect remotely to a cluster. This
may come in the future or in a paid extension. If you are interested, contact
me on the Elixir Forum. In
the meantime, you can use the
mix dev
local development setup as a starting point to do your own. Orion totally work remotely connected with erlang distribution, so as long as you can connect to your cluster (and deactivate the:self_profile
option in your endpont), it should just work. - Session handling, in particular personal auth, and more. This may come in the future or in a paid extension. If you are interested, contact me on the Elixir Forum. Refreshes clean up the UI.
Installation
To start using Orion, you will need three steps:
- Add the
orion
dependency - Configure LiveView
- Add UI access
orion
dependency
1. Add the Add the following to your mix.exs
and run mix deps.get
:
def deps do
[
{:orion, "~> 1.0"}
]
end
2. Configure LiveView
The Orion UI is built on top of LiveView. If LiveView is already installed in your app, feel free to skip this section.
If you plan to use LiveView in your application in the future, we recommend you to follow the official installation instructions. This guide only covers the minimum steps necessary for the Orion UI itself to run.
First, update your endpoint's configuration to include a signing salt. You can
generate a signing salt by running mix phx.gen.secret 32
(note Phoenix v1.5+
apps already have this configuration):
# config/config.exs
config :my_app, MyAppWeb.Endpoint,
live_view: [signing_salt: "SECRET_SALT"]
Then add the Phoenix.LiveView.Socket
declaration to your endpoint:
socket "/live", Phoenix.LiveView.Socket
And you are good to go!
3. Add Orion UI access for development-only usage
Once installed, update your router's configuration to forward requests to an
OrionWeb with a unique name
of your choosing:
# lib/my_app_web/router.ex
use MyAppWeb, :router
import OrionWeb.Router
...
if Mix.env() == :dev do
scope "/" do
pipe_through [:browser]
live_orion "/orion"
end
end
This is all. Run mix phx.server
and access the "/orion" to start profiling.
Extra: Add Orion access on all environments (including production)
If you want to use the Orion UI in production, you should put it behind some authentication and allow only admins to access it.
If you have an authentication layer already for admins, live_orion
accept an
:on_mount
option, to specify the hooks to validate your authentication, as
described in the official phoenix guide about
security
If your application does not have an admins-only section yet, you can use
Plug.BasicAuth
to set up some basic authentication as long as you are also
using SSL (which you should anyway):
# lib/my_app_web/router.ex
use MyAppWeb, :router
import OrionWeb.Router
...
pipeline :admins_only do
plug :admin_basic_auth
end
scope "/" do
pipe_through [:browser, :admins_only]
live_orion "/orion"
end
defp admin_basic_auth(conn, _opts) do
username = System.fetch_env!("AUTH_USERNAME")
password = System.fetch_env!("AUTH_PASSWORD")
Plug.BasicAuth.basic_auth(conn, username: username, password: password)
end
If you are running your application behind a proxy or a webserver, you also have to make sure they are configured for allowing WebSocket upgrades. For example, here is an article on how to configure Nginx with Phoenix and WebSockets.
Finally, you will also want to configure your config/prod.exs
and use your
domain name under the check_origin
configuration:
check_origin: ["//myapp.com"]
Then you should be good to go!
Contributing
You need elixir 1.12+ and OTP 24+.
Orion is a phoenix liveview application for the frontend.
To start your Phoenix server:
- Install dependencies with
mix setup
If you want to see it in action
- Start the development endpoint with
mix dev
Now you can visit localhost:4001
from your browser.
License
MIT License. Copyright (c) 2023 Thomas Depierre.