title: Introducing HTTP Tracing date: 2016-10-04 by:
In Go 1.7 we introduced HTTP tracing, a facility to gather fine-grained information throughout the lifecycle of an HTTP client request. Support for HTTP tracing is provided by the net/http/httptrace
package. The collected information can be used for debugging latency issues, service monitoring, writing adaptive systems, and more.
The httptrace
package provides a number of hooks to gather information during an HTTP round trip about a variety of events. These events include:
You can enable HTTP tracing by putting an *httptrace.ClientTrace
containing hook functions into a request‘s context.Context
. Various http.RoundTripper
implementations report the internal events by looking for context’s *httptrace.ClientTrace
and calling the relevant hook functions.
The tracing is scoped to the request's context and users should put a *httptrace.ClientTrace
to the request context before they start a request.
{{code “http-tracing/trace.go” /START/
/END/
}}
During a round trip, http.DefaultTransport
will invoke each hook as an event happens. The program above will print the DNS information as soon as the DNS lookup is complete. It will similarly print connection information when a connection is established to the request's host.
The tracing mechanism is designed to trace the events in the lifecycle of a single http.Transport.RoundTrip
. However, a client may make multiple round trips to complete an HTTP request. For example, in the case of a URL redirection, the registered hooks will be called as many times as the client follows HTTP redirects, making multiple requests. Users are responsible for recognizing such events at the http.Client
level. The program below identifies the current request by using an http.RoundTripper
wrapper.
{{code “http-tracing/client.go”}}
The program will follow the redirect of google.com to www.google.com and will output:
Connection reused for https://google.com? false Connection reused for https://www.google.com/? false
The Transport in the net/http
package supports tracing of both HTTP/1 and HTTP/2 requests.
If you are an author of a custom http.RoundTripper
implementation, you can support tracing by checking the request context for an *httptest.ClientTrace
and invoking the relevant hooks as the events occur.
HTTP tracing is a valuable addition to Go for those who are interested in debugging HTTP request latency and writing tools for network debugging for outbound traffic. By enabling this new facility, we hope to see HTTP debugging, benchmarking and visualization tools from the community — such as httpstat.