Add custom monitoring for specific app code


Performance Monitoring collects traces to help you monitor the performance of your app. A trace is a report of performance data captured between two points in time in your app.

You can create your own traces to monitor performance data associated with specific code in your app. With a custom code trace, you can measure how long it takes your app to complete a specific task or a set of tasks, for example loading a set of images or querying your database.

The default metric for a custom code trace is its "duration" (the time between the starting and stopping points of the trace), but you can add custom metrics, as well.

In your code, you define the beginning and the end of a custom code trace using the APIs provided by the Performance Monitoring SDK.

Custom code traces can be started anytime after they've been created, and they are thread safe.

Since the default metric collected for these traces is "duration", they are sometimes called "Duration traces".

You can view data from these traces in the Custom traces subtab of the traces table, which is at the bottom of the Performance dashboard (learn more about using the console later on this page).

Default attributes, custom attributes, and custom metrics

For custom code traces, Performance Monitoring automatically logs default attributes (common metadata like app version, country, device, etc.) so that you can filter the data for the trace in the Firebase console. You can also add and monitor custom attributes (such as, game level or user properties).

You can further configure a custom code trace to record custom metrics for performance-related events that occur within the trace's scope. For example, you can create a custom metric for the number of cache hits and misses or the number of times that the UI becomes unresponsive for a noticeable period of time.

Custom attributes and custom metrics display in the Firebase console alongside the default attributes and default metric for the trace.

Add custom code traces

Use the Performance Monitoring Trace API to add custom code traces to monitor specific application code.

Note the following:

  • An app can have multiple custom code traces.
  • More than one custom code trace can run at the same time.
  • Names for custom code traces must meet the following requirements: no leading or trailing whitespace, no leading underscore (_) character, and max length is 100 characters.
  • Custom code traces support adding custom metrics and custom attributes.

To start and stop a custom code trace, wrap the code that you want to trace with code similar to the following:

Trace customTrace = FirebasePerformance.instance.newTrace('custom-trace');
await customTrace.start();

// Code you want to trace

await customTrace.stop();

Add custom metrics to custom code traces

Use the Performance Monitoring Trace API to add custom metrics to custom code traces.

Note the following:

  • Names for custom metrics must meet the following requirements: no leading or trailing whitespace, no leading underscore (_) character, and max length is 100 characters.
  • Each custom code trace can record up to 32 metrics (including the default Duration metric).

To add a custom metric, add a line of code similar to the following each time that the event occurs. For example, this custom metric counts performance- related events that occur in your app, such as cache hits or retries.

Trace customTrace = FirebasePerformance.instance.newTrace("custom-trace");
await customTrace.start();

// Code you want to trace

customTrace.incrementMetric("metric-name", 1);

// More code

await customTrace.stop();

Create custom attributes for custom code traces

To use custom attributes, add code to your app that defines the attribute and associates it with a specific custom code trace. You can set the custom attribute anytime between when the trace starts and when the trace stops.

Note the following:

  • Names for custom attributes must meet the following requirements: no leading or trailing whitespace, no leading underscore (_) character, and max length is 32 characters.

  • Each custom code trace can record up to 5 custom attributes.

  • You shouldn't use custom attributes that contain information that personally identifies an individual to Google.

Trace trace = FirebasePerformance.instance.newTrace("test_trace");

// Update scenario.
trace.putAttribute("experiment", "A");

// Reading scenario.
String? experimentValue = trace.getAttribute("experiment");

// Delete scenario.
trace.removeAttribute("experiment");

// Read attributes.
Map<String, String> traceAttributes = trace.getAttributes();

Track, view, and filter performance data

Track specific metrics in your dashboard

To learn how your key metrics are trending, add them to your metrics board at the top of the Performance dashboard. You can quickly identify regressions by seeing week-over-week changes or verify that recent changes in your code are improving performance.

To add a metric to your metrics board, go to the Performance dashboard in the Firebase console, then click the Dashboard tab. Click an empty metric card, then select an existing metric to add to your board. Click the vertical ellipsis () on a populated metric card for more options, like to replace or remove a metric.

The metrics board shows collected metric data over time, both in graphical form and as a numerical percentage change.

Learn more about using the dashboard.

View traces and their data

To view your traces, go to the Performance dashboard in the Firebase console, scroll down to the traces table, then click the appropriate subtab. The table displays some top metrics for each trace, and you can even sort the list by the percentage change for a specific metric.

If you click a trace name in the traces table, you can then click throug various screens to explore the trace and drill down into metrics of interest. On most pages, you can use the Filter button (top-left of the screen) to filter the data by attribute, for example:

  • Filter by App version to view data about a past release or your latest release
  • Filter by Device to learn how older devices handle your app
  • Filter by Country to make sure your database location isn't affecting a specific region

Learn more about viewing data for your traces.

Next Steps

  • Learn more about using attributes to examine performance data.

  • Learn more about how to track performance issues in the Firebase console.

  • Set up alerts for code changes that are degrading the performance of your app. For example, you can configure an email alert for your team if the duration of a specific custom code trace exceeds a threshold that you set.