Jaeger tracing

The Jaeger tracing sandbox demonstrates Envoy’s request tracing capabilities using Jaeger as the tracing provider. This sandbox is very similar to the front proxy architecture described above, with one difference: service1 makes an API call to service2 before returning a response. The three containers will be deployed inside a virtual network called envoymesh.

All incoming requests are routed via the front Envoy, which is acting as a reverse proxy sitting on the edge of the envoymesh network. Port 8000 is exposed by docker compose (see docker-compose.yaml). Notice that all Envoys are configured to collect request traces (e.g., http_connection_manager/config/tracing setup in envoy.yaml) and setup to propagate the spans generated by the Jaeger tracer to a Jaeger cluster (trace driver setup in envoy.yaml).

Before routing a request to the appropriate service Envoy or the application, Envoy will take care of generating the appropriate spans for tracing (parent/child context spans). At a high-level, each span records the latency of upstream API calls as well as information needed to correlate the span with other related spans (e.g., the trace ID).

One of the most important benefits of tracing from Envoy is that it will take care of propagating the traces to the Jaeger service cluster. However, in order to fully take advantage of tracing, the application has to propagate trace headers that Envoy generates, while making calls to other services. In the sandbox we have provided, the simple aiohttp app (see trace function in examples/shared/python/tracing/service.py) acting as service1 propagates the trace headers while making an outbound call to service2.

Step 1: Build the sandbox

To build this sandbox example, and start the example apps run the following commands:

$ pwd
envoy/examples/jaeger-tracing
$ docker compose pull
$ docker compose up --build -d
$ docker compose ps

            Name                          Command             State                                    Ports
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
jaeger-tracing_front-envoy_1   /docker-entrypoint.sh /bin ... Up      10000/tcp, 0.0.0.0:8000->8000/tcp
jaeger-tracing_jaeger_1        /go/bin/all-in-one-linux - ... Up      14250/tcp, 14268/tcp, 0.0.0.0:16686->16686/tcp, 5775/udp, 5778/tcp, 6831/udp, 6832/udp, 9411/tcp
jaeger-tracing_service1_1      /bin/sh -c /usr/local/bin/ ... Up      10000/tcp
jaeger-tracing_service2_1      /bin/sh -c /usr/local/bin/ ... Up      10000/tcp

Step 2: Generate some load

You can now send a request to service1 via the front-envoy as follows:

$ curl -v localhost:8000/trace/1
*   Trying 192.168.99.100...
* Connected to 192.168.99.100 (192.168.99.100) port 8000 (#0)
> GET /trace/1 HTTP/1.1
> Host: 192.168.99.100:8000
> User-Agent: curl/7.54.0
> Accept: */*
>
< HTTP/1.1 200 OK
< content-type: text/html; charset=utf-8
< content-length: 89
< x-envoy-upstream-service-time: 9
< server: envoy
< date: Fri, 26 Aug 2018 19:39:19 GMT
<
Hello from behind Envoy (service 1)! hostname: f26027f1ce28 resolvedhostname: 172.19.0.6
* Connection #0 to host 192.168.99.100 left intact

Step 3: View the traces in Jaeger UI

Point your browser to http://localhost:16686 . You should see the Jaeger dashboard. Set the service to “front-proxy” and hit ‘Find Traces’. You should see traces from the front-proxy. Click on a trace to explore the path taken by the request from front-proxy to service1 to service2, as well as the latency incurred at each hop.

See also

Request tracing

Learn more about using Envoy’s request tracing.

Jaeger

Jaeger tracing website.