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I'd like to use loadgen to build Honeycomb graphs for training purposes. I'd like to construct scenarios where I know what symptom caused what visible display, so that I can then talk trainees through the logic of digging into and through spans.
Currently, loadgen creates a handful of services but there's no way for users to define the names, or set an order of nesting.
Describe the solution you'd like
I'd like to see either a YAML or JSON file with a simple ordering of services. Something like this YAML:
(I suppose a gnarly CLI option could be supported, too, but I suspect that's a lot more work for very little benefit?)
I would then like to be able to define some variable results for the sub-spans. For my specific use case, I want to generate a bunch of good data over a period of time, and then generate a bunch of data where one of the sub-systems fails completely. This failure may or may not be reported as an error on the higher-up services. In this way, we can simulate "Application sub3 had a bad deploy / fell over / lost its database" and see real-world graphing results of that.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered:
I'd like to use
loadgen
to build Honeycomb graphs for training purposes. I'd like to construct scenarios where I know what symptom caused what visible display, so that I can then talk trainees through the logic of digging into and through spans.Currently,
loadgen
creates a handful of services but there's no way for users to define the names, or set an order of nesting.Describe the solution you'd like
I'd like to see either a YAML or JSON file with a simple ordering of services. Something like this YAML:
(I suppose a gnarly CLI option could be supported, too, but I suspect that's a lot more work for very little benefit?)
I would then like to be able to define some variable results for the sub-spans. For my specific use case, I want to generate a bunch of good data over a period of time, and then generate a bunch of data where one of the sub-systems fails completely. This failure may or may not be reported as an error on the higher-up services. In this way, we can simulate "Application sub3 had a bad deploy / fell over / lost its database" and see real-world graphing results of that.
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: