Tuning and Overhead considerations

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Using an APM solution comes with certain trade-offs, and the Python agent for Elastic APM is no different. Instrumenting your code, measuring timings, recording context data etc. all need resources:

  • CPU time
  • memory
  • bandwidth use
  • Elasticsearch storage

We invested and continue to invest a lot of effort to keep the overhead of using Elastic APM as low as possible. But because every deployment is different, there are some knobs you can turn to adapt it to your specific needs.

Transaction Sample Rate

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The most straight forward way to reduce the overhead of the agent is to tell the agent to do less. If you set the transaction_sample_rate to a value below 1.0, the agent will randomly sample only a subset of transactions. If a transaction is not sampled, the agent has to do a lot less work, as we only record the the name of the transaction, the overall transaction time and the result for unsampled transactions.

Field Sampled Unsampled

Transaction name

yes

yes

Duration

yes

yes

Result

yes

yes

Context

yes

no

Tags

yes

no

Spans

yes

no

Reducing the sample rate to a fraction of all transactions can make a huge difference in all four of the mentioned resource types.

Transaction Queue

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To reduce the load on the APM Server, the agent does not send every transaction up as it happens. Instead, it queues them up, and flushes the queue periodically, or when it reaches a maximum size, using a background thread.

While this reduces the load on the APM Server (and to a certain extent on the agent), holding on to the transaction data in a queue uses memory. If you notice that using the Python agent results in a large increase of memory use, you can use these settings:

The first setting, flush_interval, is helpful if you have a sustained high number of transactions. The second setting, max_queue_size, can help if you experience peaks of transactions (a large amount of transactions in a short period of time).

Keep in mind that reducing the value of either setting will cause the agent to send more HTTP requests to the APM Server, potentially causing a higher load.

Spans per transaction

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The average amount of spans per transaction can influence how much time the agent spends in each transaction collecting contextual data for each span, and the the storage space needed in Elasticsearch. In our experience, most usual transactions should have well below 100 spans. In some cases however, the number of spans can explode:

  • long-running transactions
  • unoptimized code, e.g. doing hundreds of SQL queries in a loop

To avoid that such edge cases overload both the agent and the APM Server, the agent stops recording spans when a limit is reached. You can configure this limit by changing the transaction_max_spans setting.

Another option to reduce overhead of collecting contextual data for spans is to disable collection for very short spans. While this contextual data (specifically, the stack trace) can be very useful to pinpoint where exectly the span is caused in your code, it is less interesting for very short spans. You can define a minimal threshold for span duration in milliseconds, using the span_frames_min_duration_ms setting. If a span takes less than this duration, no stack frames will be collected for this span. Other contextual information, like the SQL query, will still be available.