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    github.com/arl/statsviz

Package statsviz allows visualizing Go runtime metrics data in real time in your browser. Register a Statsviz HTTP handlers with your server's http.ServeMux (preferred method): Alternatively, you can register with http.DefaultServeMux: By default, Statsviz is served at http://host:port/debug/statsviz/. This, and other settings, can be changed by passing some Option to NewServer. If your application is not already running an HTTP server, you need to start one. Add "net/http" and "log" to your imports, and use the following code in your main function: Then open your browser and visit http://localhost:8080/debug/statsviz/. If you want more control over Statsviz HTTP handlers, examples are: then use NewServer to obtain a Server instance. Both the Server.Index and Server.Ws() methods return http.HandlerFunc.


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Statsviz

Statsviz Gopher Logo statsviz ui


Visualize real time plots of your Go program runtime metrics, including heap, objects, goroutines, GC pauses, scheduler and more, in your browser.


Install

Download the latest version:

go get github.com/arl/statsviz@latest

Please note that, as new metrics are added to the /runtime/metrics package, new plots are added to Statsviz. This also means that the presence of some plots on the dashboard depends on the Go version you're using.

When in doubt, use the latest ;-)

Usage

Register Statsviz HTTP handlers with your application http.ServeMux.

mux := http.NewServeMux()
statsviz.Register(mux)

go func() {
    log.Println(http.ListenAndServe("localhost:8080", mux))
}()

Open your browser at http://localhost:8080/debug/statsviz

Advanced Usage

If you want more control over Statsviz HTTP handlers, examples are:

  • you're using some HTTP framework
  • you want to place Statsviz handler behind some middleware

then use statsviz.NewServer to obtain a Server instance. Both the Index() and Ws() methods return http.HandlerFunc.

srv, err := statsviz.NewServer(); // Create server or handle error
srv.Index()                       // UI (dashboard) http.HandlerFunc
srv.Ws()                          // Websocket http.HandlerFunc

Please look at examples of usage in the Examples directory.

How Does That Work?

statsviz.Register registers 2 HTTP handlers within the given http.ServeMux:

  • the Index handler serves Statsviz user interface at /debug/statsviz at the address served by your program.

  • The Ws serves a Websocket endpoint. When the browser connects to that endpoint, runtime/metrics are sent to the browser, once per second.

Data points are in a browser-side circular-buffer.

Documentation

Go API

Check out the API reference on pkg.go.dev.

User interface

Controls at the top of the page act on all plots:

menu
  • the groom shows/hides the vertical lines representing garbage collections.
  • the time range selector defines the visualized time span.
  • the play/pause icons stops and resume the refresh of the plots.
  • the light/dark selector switches between light and dark modes.

On top of each plot there are 2 icons:

menu
  • the camera downloads a PNG image of the plot.
  • the info icon shows details about the metrics displayed.

Plots

Depending on your go version, some plots may not be available.

Heap (global)
heap-global
Heap (details)
heap-details
Live Objects in Heap
live-objects
Live Bytes in Heap
live-bytes
MSpan/MCache
mspan-mcache
Memory classes
memory-classes
Goroutines
goroutines
Size Classes
size-classes
GC Scan
gc-scan
GC Cycles
gc-cycles
Stop-the-world Pause Latencies
gc-pauses
CPU Classes (GC)
cpu-classes-gc
Time Goroutines Spend in 'Runnable' state
runnable-time
Time Goroutines Spend Blocked on Mutexes
mutex-wait
Starting Size of Goroutines Stacks
gc-stack-size
Goroutine Scheduling Events
sched-events
CGO Calls
cgo

User Plots

Since v0.6 you can add your own plots to Statsviz dashboard, in order to easily visualize your application metrics next to runtime metrics.

Please see the userplots example.

Examples

Check out the _example directory to see various ways to use Statsviz, such as:

  • use of http.DefaultServeMux or your own http.ServeMux
  • wrap HTTP handler behind a middleware
  • register the web page at /foo/bar instead of /debug/statsviz
  • use https:// rather than http://
  • register Statsviz handlers with various Go HTTP libraries/frameworks:

Questions / Troubleshooting

Either use GitHub's discussions or come to say hi and ask a live question on #statsviz channel on Gopher's slack.

Contributing

Please use issues for bugs and feature requests.
Pull-requests are always welcome!
More details in CONTRIBUTING.md.

Changelog

See CHANGELOG.md.

License: MIT

See LICENSE

FAQs

Last updated on 08 Oct 2023

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