The features of this plugin have been merged into WPGraphQL core.
See: https://github.com/wp-graphql/wp-graphql/releases/tag/v0.13.0
This adds tracing to WPGraphQL, per the proposed Apollo Tracing Spec: https://github.com/apollographql/apollo-tracing.
To install/activate the plugin, download from Github, unzip, and place in your plugins directory as wp-graphql-insights
then activate like any other plugin.
There is no admin screen, the plugin will automatically add tracing to your GraphQL (v0.0.18+) requests.
You might want to have Tracing enabled on the server to allow for tools to make use of that data, but you might not want to include tracing in the response.
Here's an example of disabling the trace from the response of the GraphQL Request (so the consumer won't see it), but making use of the trace data on the server, in this case saving the trace to an options table. But you could do anything like send the trace to a remote service, or schedule a Cron to do something with it.
add_filter( 'graphql_tracing_include_in_response', '__return_false' );
add_action( 'graphql_execute', function() {
$trace = \WPGraphQL\Extensions\Insights\Tracing::get_trace();
update_option( 'graphql_trace_yo', $trace );
}, 100 );
Currently, there is no built-in solution for sending data to Apollo Optics, but there has been discussion regarding potential solutions for getting WPGraphQL Insights trace data over to Optics, so hopefully there will be official Apollo Optics support soon!