WARNING: Version 5.6 of Packetbeat has passed its EOL date.
This documentation is no longer being maintained and may be removed. If you are running this version, we strongly advise you to upgrade. For the latest information, see the current release documentation.
Configuring Thrift-RPC Support
editConfiguring Thrift-RPC Support
editApache Thrift is a communication protocol and RPC framework initially created at Facebook. It is sometimes used in microservices architectures because it provides better performance when compared to the more obvious HTTP/RESTful API choice, while still supporting a wide range of programming languages and frameworks.
Packetbeat works based on a copy of the traffic, which means that you get performance management features without having to modify your services in any way and without any latency overhead. Packetbeat captures the transactions from the network and indexes them in Elasticsearch so that they can be analyzed and searched.
Packetbeat indexes the method, parameters, return value, and
exceptions of each Thrift-RPC call. You can search by and create statistics
based on any of these fields. Packetbeat automatically fills in the status
column with either OK
or Error
, so it’s easy to find the problematic RPC calls.
A transaction is put into the Error
state if it returned an exception.
Packetbeat also indexes the responsetime
field so you can get performance
analytics and find the slow RPC calls.
Here is an example performance dashboard:
Thrift supports multiple transport
and protocol types. Currently Packetbeat supports the default TSocket
transport as well as the TFramed
transport. From the protocol point of view,
Packetbeat currently supports only the default TBinary
protocol.
Packetbeat also has several configuration options that allow you to get the right balance between visibility, disk usage, and data protection. You can, for example, choose to obfuscate all strings or to store the requests but not the responses, while still capturing the response time for each of the RPC calls. You can also choose to limit the size of strings and lists to a given number of elements, so you can fine tune how much data you want to have stored in Elasticsearch.
Here is an example configuration section for the Thrift protocol:
packetbeat.protocols.thrift: transport_type: socket protocol_type: binary idl_files: ["tutorial.thrift", "shared.thrift"] string_max_size: 200 collection_max_size: 20 capture_reply: true obfuscate_strings: true drop_after_n_struct_fields: 100
For more details about the configuration options, see the Thrift Configuration Options section.
Providing the Thrift IDL files to Packetbeat is optional. The binary Thrift messages include the called method name and enough structural information to decode the messages without needing the IDL files. However, if you provide the IDL files, Packetbeat can also resolve the service name, arguments, and exception names.