Simple database-backed performance monitoring for your Rails app.
Add inner_performance
gem to your bundle
$ bundle add inner_performance
Install migrations
$ rails inner_performance:install:migrations
$ rails db:migrate
Mount UI in routes.rb
(don't forget to protect it!)
mount InnerPerformance::Engine, at: '/inner_performance'
inner_performance comes with some good defaults but in order to customize them, you have a following options available:
InnerPerformance.configure do |config|
config.sample_rates = {
# 2% of all the requests will be stored and analyzed. I would
# recommend keeping it low because otherwise your database will
# get full of events quite fast. It will also probably impact
# your app's performance. As an example: In a Spree shop with
# approx. 170 requests per minute, keeping it at default 2%
# provides me more than enough data to analyze and locate the
# bottlenecks.
'process_action.action_controller' => (Rails.env.production? ? 2 : 100),
# 100% of all the jobs will be stored and analyzed.
'perform.active_job' => 100
}
# For how long events should be stored. All the ones that exceeds
# this limit will be cleared out by InnerPerformance::CleanupJob.
config.events_retention = 1.week
# Used mostly by UI. Tells the UI what's the middle range when it
# comes to event duration. For the example below, all the durations
# between 0 and 200ms will be considered fast, all the ones between
# 200ms and 999ms will be considered medium and all above 999ms will
# be considered slow.
config.medium_duration_range = [200, 999]
# Rules for ignoring an event. There are two rules applied by default:
# * sample_rates - operates on configured sample rate and drops events
# which do not got lucky when drawing a random number
# * InnerPerformance job namespace - we don't want to save events for
# the job that saves the events because that leeds to infinite loop.
# Better not remove this rule as it will lead to stack overflow.
config.ignore_rules.unshift(
proc { |event| !event.is_a?(ActiveSupport::Notifications::Event) }
)
end
To ensure optimal performance and avoid data bloat, remember to schedule the cleanup job:
InnerPerformance::CleanupJob.perform_later
- rails_performance - much better but depends on Redis
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.