Open source zero-code automatic instrumentation with eBPF and OpenTelemetry.
Beyla is a vendor agnostic, eBPF-based, OpenTelemetry/Prometheus application auto-instrumentation tool, which lets you easily get started with Application Observability. eBPF is used to automatically inspect application executables and the OS networking layer, allowing us to capture essential application observability events for HTTP/S and gRPC services. From these captured eBPF events, we produce OpenTelemetry web transaction trace spans and Rate-Errors-Duration (RED) metrics. As with most eBPF tools, all data capture and instrumentation occurs without any modifications to your application code or configuration.
To engage with the Beyla community and to chat with us on our community Slack channel, please invite yourself to the Grafana Slack, visit https://slack.grafana.com/ and join the #beyla channel.
We also run a monthly Beyla community call, on the second Wednesday of the month at 4pm UTC. You can find all of the details about our community call on the Grafana Community Calendar.
To try out Beyla, you need to run a network service for Beyla to instrument.
Beyla supports a wide range of programming languages (Go, Java, .NET, NodeJS, Python, Ruby, Rust, etc.),
so if you already have an example service you can use it.
If you don't have an example, you can download and run example-http-service.go
from the examples/
directory:
curl -OL https://raw.githubusercontent.com/grafana/beyla/main/examples/example-http-service/example-http-service.go
go run ./example-http-service.go
Next, generate some traffic. The following command will trigger a GET request to http://localhost:8080 every two seconds.
watch curl -s http://localhost:8080
Now that we have an example running, we are ready to download and run Beyla.
First, download and unpack the latest release from the GitHub releases page.
The release should contain the ./beyla
executable.
Beyla supports multiple ways to find the service to be instrumented (by network port, executable name, process ID), and multiple exposition formats (Prometheus, OpenTelemetry metrics, Distributed Traces for Go, Single Span traces for other languages).
For getting started, we'll tell Beyla to instrument the service running on port 8080 (our example service) and expose metrics in Prometheus format on port 9400.
export BEYLA_PROMETHEUS_PORT=9400
export BEYLA_OPEN_PORT=8080
sudo -E ./beyla
Now, you should see metrics on http://localhost:9400/metrics.
See Documentation and the tutorials for more info.
- Linux with Kernel 5.8 or higher with BTF
enabled. BTF became enabled by default on most Linux distributions with kernel 5.14 or higher.
You can check if your kernel has BTF enabled by verifying if
/sys/kernel/btf/vmlinux
exists on your system. If you need to recompile your kernel to enable BTF, the configuration optionCONFIG_DEBUG_INFO_BTF=y
must be set. - eBPF enabled on the host
- For instrumenting Go programs, they must have been compiled with at least Go 1.17. We currently support Go applications built with a major Go version no earlier than 3 versions behind the current stable major release.
- Some level of elevated permissions to execute the instrumenter:
- On host systems, running Beyla requires
sudo
. - For Kubernetes we have detailed configuration example on how to run with minimum required capabilities in the examples/k8s/unprivileged.yaml file.
- For docker compose, you need to setup Beyla as
privileged
container or grand theSYS_ADMIN
capability.
- On host systems, running Beyla requires
Available Instrumentations | Supported |
---|---|
HTTP/HTTPS/HTTP2 | ✅ |
gRPC | ✅ |
SQL | ✅ |
Redis | ✅ |
Kafka | ✅ |
The Go instrumentation is limited to certain specific libraries.
Available Go Instrumentations | Supported |
---|---|
Standard Go net/http |
✅ |
Gorilla Mux | ✅ |
Gin | ✅ |
gRPC-Go | ✅ |
Go x/net/http2 | ✅ |
Go-Redis v9 | ✅ |
Sarama Kafka | ✅ |
kafka-Go | ✅ |
HTTPS instrumentation is limited to Go programs and libraries/languages using libssl3.
You can just trigger the Kubernetes descriptors in the deployments/
folder.
-
Provide your Grafana credentials. Use the following K8s Secret template to introduce the endpoints, usernames and API keys for Mimir and Tempo:
$ cp deployments/01-grafana-credentials.template.yml 01-grafana-credentials.yml $ # EDIT the fields $ vim 01-grafana-credentials.yml $ kubectl apply -f 01-grafana-credentials.yml
-
Deploy the Grafana Agent:
kubectl apply -f deployments/02-grafana-agent.yml
-
Deploy a demo app with the auto-instrumenter as a sidecar. You can use the blog example in the deployments/03-instrumented-app.yml file.
$ kubectl apply -f ./deployments/03-instrumented-app.yml $ kubectl port-forward service/goblog 8443:8443
You should be able to query traces and metrics in your Grafana board.
The eBPF program is embedded into the pkg/internal/ebpf/bpf_*
generated files.
This step is generally not needed unless you change the C code in the bpf
folder.
If you have Docker installed, you just need to run:
make docker-generate
If you can't install docker, you should locally install the following required packages:
dnf install -y kernel-devel make llvm clang glibc-devel.i686
make generate
Tested in Fedora 35, 38 and Red Hat Enterprise Linux 8.
Part of the code is taken from: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-go-instrumentation