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This is the official Python agent for Auklet. It officially supports Python 2.7.9+ and 3.4-3.7, and runs on most POSIX-based operating systems (Debian, Ubuntu Core, Raspbian, QNX, etc).
Auklet is an edge first application performance monitor; therefore, starting with version 1.0.0 we maintain the following compliance levels:
If there are additional compliances that your industry requires please contact the team at hello@auklet.io.
To install the agent with pip:
pip install auklet
To setup Auklet monitoring in your application:
from auklet.monitoring import Monitoring
auklet_monitoring = Monitoring(
api_key="<API_KEY>",
app_id="<APP_ID>",
release="<CURRENT_COMMIT_HASH>"
)
auklet_monitoring.start()
# Call your main function
main()
auklet_monitoring.stop()
To authorize your application you need to provide both an API key and app ID. These values are available in the connection settings of your application as well as during initial setup.
You can track releases and identify which devices are running what variant of code. To do this, you may provide the git commit hash of your deployed code and a version string you can modify. This release value should be passed into the constructor through the release argument, and your custom version should be passed via the version argument. The release value must be the git commit hash that represents the deployed version of your application. The version value is a string that you may set to whatever value you wish to define your versions. Please note that you can provide either a release value, version value, or both.
curl -X POST https://api.auklet.io/v1/releases/ \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "Authorization: JWT <API_KEY>" \
-d '{"application": "<APP_ID>", "release": "'$(git rev-parse HEAD)'", "version": "<YOUR_DEFINED_VERSION>"}'
If you package and deploy your entire Git repository (including the .git
directory), and if you have git
installed on your devices, you can get the commit hash via a subprocess:
git_commit_hash = subprocess.check_output(['git', 'rev-parse', 'HEAD'])
.decode('utf8').strip('\n')
If you package your app and deploy it without access to git
, you can pass the commit hash to your app using the environment variable APPLICATION_GIT_COMMIT_HASH
:
git_commit_hash = os.environ.get("APPLICATION_GIT_COMMIT_HASH")
Lastly, if it is difficult or impossible to set an environment variable via your deployment platform, you can include a new file in your packaged deployment which contains the commit hash. You can read from this file and supply the value to the constructor.
At packaging time, write the commit hash to a file and then include it in your package:
git rev-parse HEAD > path/to/git_commit_hash.txt
At runtime, read the included file as follows:
release_file = open("git_commit_hash.txt", "r")
git_commit_hash = release_file.read().decode('utf8').strip('\n')
You can also provide your own version string in the constructor:
from auklet.monitoring import Monitoring
auklet_monitoring = Monitoring(
api_key="<API_KEY>",
app_id="<APP_ID>",
release="<CURRENT_COMMIT_HASH>",
version="<DEFINED_VERSION>"
)
FAQs
Auklet performance monitoring agent for Python IoT apps
We found that auklet demonstrated a healthy version release cadence and project activity because the last version was released less than a year ago. It has 8 open source maintainers collaborating on the project.
Did you know?
Socket for GitHub automatically highlights issues in each pull request and monitors the health of all your open source dependencies. Discover the contents of your packages and block harmful activity before you install or update your dependencies.
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