Application Insights SDK for Ruby
Ruby is a dynamic, open source programming language with a focus on simplicity and productivity. It has an elegant syntax that is natural to read and easy to write. -- Ruby - Official Site
This project extends the Application Insights API surface to support Ruby. Application Insights is a service that allows developers to keep their application available, performing and succeeding. This Ruby gem will allow you to send telemetry of various kinds (event, trace, exception, etc.) to the Application Insights service where they can be visualized in the Azure Portal.
Requirements
Ruby 1.9.3 is currently supported by this gem.
Installation
To install the latest release you can use gem.
$ gem install application_insights
Usage
Once installed, you can send telemetry to Application Insights. Here are a few samples.
Note: before you can send data to you will need an instrumentation key. Please see the Getting an Application Insights Instrumentation Key section for more information.
Sending a simple event telemetry item
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>'
tc.track_event 'My event'
tc.flush
Sending an event telemetry item with custom properties and measurements
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>'
tc.track_event 'My event', :properties => { 'custom property' => 'some value' }, :measurements => { 'custom metric' => 13 }
tc.flush
Sending a trace telemetry item with custom properties
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>'
tc.track_trace 'My trace statement', ApplicationInsights::Channel::Contracts::SeverityLevel::INFORMATION, :properties => { 'custom property' => 'some value' }
tc.flush
Sending a metric telemetry item (without and with optional values)
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>'
tc.track_metric 'My metric', 42
# with all optional values set
tc.track_metric 'My metric', 42, :kind => ApplicationInsights::Channel::Contracts::DataPointType::AGGREGATION, :count => 3, :min => 1, :max => 100, :std_dev => 10, :properties => { 'custom property' => 'some value' }
tc.flush
Sending an exception telemetry item with custom properties and measurements
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>'
begin
raise ArgumentError, 'Something has gone wrong!'
rescue => e
tc.track_exception e
end
tc.flush
Configuring context for a telemetry client instance
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>'
tc.context.application.ver = '1.2.3'
tc.context.device.id = 'My current device'
tc.context.device.oem_name = 'Asus'
tc.context.device.model = 'X31A'
tc.context.device.type = "Other"
tc.context.user.id = '[email protected]'
tc.track_trace 'My trace with context'
tc.flush
Configuring synchronous (default) channel properties
require 'application_insights'
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new
# flush telemetry if we have 10 or more telemetry items in our queue
tc.channel.queue.max_queue_length = 10
# send telemetry to the service in batches of 5
tc.channel.sender.send_buffer_size = 5
Configuring an asynchronous channel instead of the synchronous default
require 'application_insights'
sender = ApplicationInsights::Channel::AsynchronousSender.new
queue = ApplicationInsights::Channel::AsynchronousQueue.new sender
channel = ApplicationInsights::Channel::TelemetryChannel.new nil, queue
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>', channel
# Note: the event will be sent on a separate thread; if the app finishes before
# the thread finishes, the data is lost
tc.track_event 'My event'
Configuring asynchronous channel properties
require 'application_insights'
sender = ApplicationInsights::Channel::AsynchronousSender.new
queue = ApplicationInsights::Channel::AsynchronousQueue.new sender
channel = ApplicationInsights::Channel::TelemetryChannel.new nil, queue
tc = ApplicationInsights::TelemetryClient.new '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>', channel
# flush telemetry if we have 10 or more telemetry items in our queue
tc.channel.queue.max_queue_length = 10
# send telemetry to the service in batches of 5
tc.channel.sender.send_buffer_size = 5
# the background worker thread will be active for 5 seconds before it shuts down. if
# during this time items are picked up from the queue, the timer is reset.
tc.channel.sender.send_time = 5
# the background worker thread will poll the queue every 0.5 seconds for new items
tc.channel.sender.send_interval = 0.5
Collecting unhandled exceptions
require 'application_insights'
# setup unhandled exception handler
ApplicationInsights::UnhandledException.collect('<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>')
# raise an exception and this would be send to Application Insights Service
raise Exception, 'Boom!'
Collecting requests for rack applications
# set up the TrackRequest middleware in the rackup (config.ru) file
require 'application_insights'
use ApplicationInsights::Rack::TrackRequest, '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>', <buffer size>
# For rails, suggest to set up this middleware in application.rb so that unhandled exceptions from controllers are also collected
config.middleware.use 'ApplicationInsights::Rack::TrackRequest', '<YOUR INSTRUMENTATION KEY GOES HERE>', <buffer size>
Rerieving the Request-Id value from ApplicationInsights
# from time to time you may need to access a request's id from within your app
application_insights_request_id = env['ApplicationInsights.request.id']
# this can be used for a number of different purposes, including telemetry correlation
uri = URI('http://api.example.com/search/?q=test')
req = Net::HTTP::Get.new(uri)
req['Request-Id'] = "#{application_insights_request_id}1" if application_insights_request_id
Net::HTTP.start(uri.hostname, uri.port) { |http| http.request(req) }