- Configuration
- Sample Configurations
- Configuration for Emissions data Using WattTime
- Configuration for Forecast data Using ElectricityMaps
- Configuration for Emissions data using ElectricityMaps and Forecast data using WattTime
- Configuration for Emissions data using ElectricityMapsFree and Forecast data using WattTime
- Configuration For Emissions data Using JSON
- Configuration Using WattTime and Defined Location Source Files
The default LogLevel settings for the application are found in the corresponding
appsettings.json
, which may contain the following section -- see here for
additional details on
Logging in .NET
and on
Logging Providers in .NET
"Logging": {
"LogLevel": {
"Default": "Information",
"Microsoft.AspNetCore": "Warning"
}
}
To permanently change the LogLevel, just update the appsettings.json
for the
app. To override a LogLevel at runtime, an environment variable can set the
LogLevel value. For example to set the Logging:LogLevel:Default LogLevel to
Debug: export Logging__LogLevel__Default="Debug"
Example using the CLI:
cd src/CarbonAware.CLI
export Logging__LogLevel__Default="Debug"
dotnet run -l westus
Example using the WebApp:
cd src/CarbonAware.WebApi
export Logging__LogLevel__Default="Debug"
dotnet run
Or, to change the LogLevel for just one run of the app:
cd src/CarbonAware.WebApi
Logging__LogLevel__Default="Debug" dotnet run
The SDK supports multiple data sources for getting carbon data. At this time, only a JSON file, WattTime and ElectricityMaps are supported.
Each data source interface is configured with a specific data source implementation.
If set to WattTime
or ElectricityMaps
, the configuration specific to that
data provider must also be supplied.
JSON
will result in the data being loaded from the file specified in the
DataFileLocation
property
{
"DataSources": {
"EmissionsDataSource": "Json",
"ForecastDataSource": "WattTime",
"Configurations": {
"WattTime": {
"Type": "WattTime",
"Username": "username",
"Password": "password",
"BaseURL": "https://api2.watttime.org/v2/",
"Proxy": {
"useProxy": true,
"url": "http://10.10.10.1",
"username": "proxyUsername",
"password": "proxyPassword"
}
},
"ElectricityMaps": {
"Type": "ElectricityMaps",
"APITokenHeader": "auth-token",
"APIToken": "myAwesomeToken",
"BaseURL": "https://api.electricitymap.org/v3/"
},
"Json": {
"Type": "Json",
"DataFileLocation": "test-data-azure-emissions.json"
}
}
}
}
If using the WattTime data source, WattTime configuration is required.
{
"username": "",
"password": "",
"baseUrl": "https://api2.watttime.org/v2/"
}
Sign up for a test account: To create an account, follow these steps from the WattTime documentation
The username you receive from WattTime. This value is required when using a WattTime data source.
The WattTime password for the username supplied. This value is required when using a WattTime data source.
The url to use when connecting to WattTime. Defaults to https://api2.watttime.org/v2/.
In normal use, you shouldn't need to set this value, but this value can be used to enable integration testing scenarios or if the WattTime url should change in the future.
This value is used to set proxy information in situations where internet egress
requires a proxy. For proxy values to be used useProxy
must be set to true
.
Other values should be set as needed for your environment.
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__UseProxy
To improve performance communicating with the WattTime API service, the client
caches the data mapping location coordinates to balancing authorities. By
default, this data is stored in an in-memory cache for 86400
seconds, but
expiration can be configured using the setting BalancingAuthorityCacheTTL
(Set
to "0" to disable the caching feature). The regional boundaries of a balancing
authority tend to be stable, but as they can change, the
WattTime documentation
recommends not caching for longer than 1 month.
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__BalancingAuthorityCacheTTL="90"
By setting
DataSources__Configurations__Json__DataFileLocation=mycustomfile.json
property
when Data source is set to Json
, the user can specify a file that can contains
custom EmissionsData
sets. The file should be located under the
<user's repo>/src/data/data-sources/
directory that is part of the repository.
At build time, all the JSON files under <user's repo>/src/data/data-sources/
are copied over the destination directory
<user's repo>/src/CarbonAware.WebApi/src/bin/[Debug|Publish]/net6.0/data-sources/json
that is part of the CarbonAware.WebApi
assembly. Also the file can be placed
where the assembly CarbonAware.WebApi.dll
is located under data-sources/json
directory. For instance, if the application is installed under /app
, copy the
file to /app/data-sources/json
.
cp <mydir>/mycustomfile.json /app/data-sources/json
export DataSources__Configurations=Json
export DataSources__Configurations__JSON__Type=JSON
export DataSources__Configurations__Json__DataFileLocation=mycustomfile.json
dotnet /app/CarbonAware.WebApi.dll
As soon a first request is performed, a log entry shows:
info: CarbonAware.DataSources.Json.JsonDataSource[0]
Reading Json data from /app/data-sources/json/mycustomfile.json
If using the ElectricityMaps data source, ElectricityMaps configuration is required.
With an account token:
NOTE The ElectricityMaps API does not currently support access to historical forecasts. This means that functionality such as the CLI
emissions-forecasts
--requested-at
flag and the API/forecasts/batch
>requestedAt
input will respond with aNotImplemented
error.Depending on the goal, the historical measured
emissions
commands may be a reasonable workaround. This would treat the measured emissions as a "perfect historical forecast" effectively. Otherwise, use a data source that has support for historical forecasts, such as WattTime.
{
"APITokenHeader": "auth-token",
"APIToken": "<api-token>",
"baseUrl": "https://api.electricitymap.org/v3/"
}
With a free trial token:
{
"APITokenHeader": "X-BLOBR-KEY",
"APIToken": "<api-token>",
"baseUrl": "https://api-access.electricitymaps.com/<url-token>"
}
Sign up for a free trial: Select the free trial product from the ElectricityMaps catalog. Note that there are some restrictions on the free trial product.
The API Token Header for ElectricityMaps. If you have a paid account, the header is "auth-token". If you're using the free trial, the header is "X-BLOBR-KEY"
The ElectricityMaps token you receive with your account or free trial.
The url to use when connecting to ElectricityMaps. Defaults to "https://api.electricitymap.org/v3/" but can be overridden in the config if needed (such as for free-trial users or enable integration testing scenarios).
String value for the optional emissionFactorType
parameter to be sent on every
ElectricityMaps API request that accepts this parameter.
See the ElectricityMaps API Documentation for more details and valid values.
Boolean value for the optional disableEstimations
parameter to be sent on
every ElectricityMaps API request that accepts this parameter.
See the ElectricityMaps API Documentation for more details.
If using the ElectricityMapsFree data source, ElectricityMapsFree configuration is required.
With an account token:
NOTE The ElectricityMapsFree API does not currently support access to historical forecasts. This means that functionality such as the CLI
emissions-forecasts
>--requested-at
flag and the API/forecasts/batch
>requestedAt
input will respond with aNotImplemented
error.The ElectricityMapsFree API also does not currently support access to historical emissions data. It only supports getting the single latest emissions data point for the given location.
If either of these restrictions are an issue, a data source that has support for historical forecasts, such as WattTime or historical emissions, such as ElectricityMaps may be preferable.
{
"token": "<api-token>",
"baseUrl": "https://api.co2signal.com/v1/"
}
The ElectricityMapsFree token you receive with your account.
The url to use when connecting to ElectricityMapsFree. Defaults to "https://api.co2signal.com/v1/" but can be overridden in the config if needed (such as to enable integration testing scenarios).
This section contains the global settings for the SDK. The configuration looks like this:
{
"carbonAwareVars": {
"TelemetryProvider": "ApplicationInsights",
"VerboseApi": "true",
"webApiRoutePrefix": ""
}
}
The application uses Opentelemetry to create traces locally in the console. In order to configure it to send the traces to a tracing app like Zipkin, Jaeger etc, please refer to the Open Telemetry documentation.
Application monitoring and tracing can be configured using the
TelemetryProvider
variable in the application configuration.
CarbonAwareVars__TelemetryProvider="ApplicationInsights"
This application is integrated with Application Insights for monitoring
purposes. The telemetry collected in the app is pushed to AppInsights and can be
tracked for logs, exceptions, traces and more. To connect to your Application
Insights instance, configure the ApplicationInsights_Connection_String
variable.
ApplicationInsights_Connection_String="AppInsightsConnectionString"
You can alternatively configure using Instrumentation Key by setting the
AppInsights_InstrumentationKey
variable. However, Microsoft is ending
technical support for instrumentation key�based configuration of the Application
Insights feature soon. ConnectionString-based configuration should be used over
InstrumentationKey. For more details, please refer to
the documentation.
AppInsights_InstrumentationKey="AppInsightsInstrumentationKey"
You can configure the verbosity of the application error messages by setting the 'VerboseApi' environment variable. Typically, you would set this value to 'true' in the development or staging regions. When set to 'true', a detailed stack trace would be presented for any errors in the request.
CarbonAwareVars__VerboseApi="true"
Used to add a prefix to all routes in the WebApi project. Must start with a /
.
Invalid paths will cause an exception to be thrown at startup.
By default, all controllers are off of the root path. For example:
http://localhost/emissions
If webApiRoutePrefix
is set, it will allow calls to controllers using the
prefix, which can be helpful for cross cluster calls, or when proxies strip out
information from headers. For example, if this value is set to:
CarbonAwareVars__webApiRoutePrefix="/mydepartment/myapp"
/mydepartment/myapp
Then calls can be made that look like this:
http://localhost/mydepartment/myapp/emissions
Note that the controllers still respond off of the root path.
By setting LocationDataSourcesConfiguration
property with one or more location
data sources, it is possible to load different Location
data sets in order to
have more than one location. For instance by setting two location regions, the
property would be set as follow using
environment
variables:
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration__LocationSourceFiles__0__DataFileLocation": "azure-regions.json",
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration__LocationSourceFiles__0__Prefix": "az",
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration__LocationSourceFiles__0__Delimiter": "-",
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration__LocationSourceFiles__1__DataFileLocation": "custom-regions.json",
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration__LocationSourceFiles__1__Prefix": "custom",
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration__LocationSourceFiles__1__Delimiter": "_",
This way when the application starts, it open the files specified by
DataFileLocation
property that should located under location-sources/json
directory. The format of these files is the same as the Location
Model class.
In order to differentiate between regions, a Prefix
and Delimiter
properties
are used to allow the user to select the region when a request is performed. By
settings the properties, the region should be made of
region=Prefix
+Delimiter
+RegionName
, so when the query is performed, it
would be found. The following example shows how to perform an http request:
PREFIX=az
DELIMITER='-'
REGION=${PREFIX}${DELIMITER}eastus
curl "http://${IP_HOST}:${PORT}/emissions/bylocations/best?location=${REGION}&time=2022-05-25&toTime=2022-05-26&durationMinutes=0"
At build time, all the JSON files under
<user's repo>/src/data/location-sources
are copied over the destination
directory
<user's repo>/src/CarbonAware.WebApi/src/bin/[Debug|Publish]/net6.0/location-sources/json
that is part of the CarbonAware.WebApi
assembly. Also the file can be placed
where the assembly CarbonAware.WebApi.dll
is located under
location-sources/json
directory. For instance, if the application is installed
under /app
, copy the file to /app/location-sources/json
.
Note: Under <user's repo>/src/data/location-sources
there is a template
file custom-azure-zones.json.template
that can be used for locations that
don't have latitude and logitude, and the underline datasource requires a zone
name. This is the case for data source ElectricityMaps
where the routes can be
accessible using lat/lon, but some regions are zone name based.
One can also specify these values in appsettings.json
like this:
{
"LocationDataSourcesConfiguration": {
"LocationSourceFiles": [
{
"DataFileLocation": "azure-regions.json",
"Prefix": "az",
"Delimiter": "-"
},
{
"DataFileLocation": "custom-regions.json",
"Prefix": "custom",
"Delimiter": "_"
}
]
}
}
DataSources__EmissionsDataSource="WattTime"
CarbonAwareVars__WebApiRoutePrefix="/microsoft/cse/fsi"
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__Proxy__UseProxy=true
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__Proxy__Url="http://10.10.10.1"
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__Proxy__Username="proxyUsername"
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__Password="proxyPassword"
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__Username="wattTimeUsername"
DataSources__Configurations__WattTime__Password="wattTimePassword"
{
"DataSources": {
"ForecastDataSource": "ElectricityMaps",
"Configurations": {
"ElectricityMaps": {
"Type": "ElectricityMaps",
"APITokenHeader": "auth-token",
"APIToken": "token",
"BaseURL": "https://api.electricitymap.org/v3/"
}
}
}
}
"DataSources": {
"EmissionsDataSource": "ElectricityMaps",
"ForecastDataSource": "WattTime",
"Configurations": {
"WattTime": {
"Type": "WattTime",
"Username": "username",
"Password": "password",
"BaseURL": "https://api2.watttime.org/v2/",
},
"ElectricityMaps": {
"Type": "ElectricityMaps",
"APITokenHeader": "auth-token",
"APIToken": "token",
"BaseURL": "https://api.electricitymap.org/v3/"
}
}
}
"DataSources": {
"EmissionsDataSource": "ElectricityMapsFree",
"ForecastDataSource": "WattTime",
"Configurations": {
"WattTime": {
"Type": "WattTime",
"Username": "username",
"Password": "password",
"BaseURL": "https://api2.watttime.org/v2/",
},
"ElectricityMapsFree": {
"Type": "ElectricityMapsFree",
"token": "token",
"BaseURL": "https://api.co2signal.com/v1/"
}
}
}
{
"DataSources": {
"EmissionsDataSource": "Json",
"Configurations": {
"Json": {
"Type": "Json",
"DataFileLocation": "test-data.json"
}
}
}
}
{
"DataSources": {
"EmissionsDataSource": "WattTime",
"Configurations": {
"WattTime": {
"Type": "WattTime",
"Username": "user",
"Password": "password"
}
},
"locationDataSourcesConfiguration": {
"locationSourceFiles": [
{
"prefix": "az",
"delimiter": "-",
"dataFileLocation": "azure-regions.json"
},
{
"prefix": "custom",
"delimiter": "_",
"dataFileLocation": "custom-regions.json"
}
]
}
}