How to trace Portkey AI Gateway requests with Phoenix for comprehensive LLM observability
Phoenix provides seamless integration with Portkey, the AI Gateway and observability platform that routes to 200+ LLMs with enterprise-grade features including guardrails, caching, and load balancing.
pip install openinference-instrumentation-portkey portkey-ai
Use the register function to connect your application to Phoenix:
from phoenix.otel import register
# configure the Phoenix tracer
tracer_provider = register(
project_name="my-portkey-app", # Default is 'default'
auto_instrument=True # Auto-instrument your app based on installed OI dependencies
)
By instrumenting Portkey, spans will be created whenever requests are made through the AI Gateway and will be sent to the Phoenix server for collection.
import os
from openai import OpenAI
from portkey_ai import PORTKEY_GATEWAY_URL, createHeaders
# Set up your API keys
os.environ["OPENAI_API_KEY"] = "your-openai-api-key"
os.environ["PORTKEY_API_KEY"] = "your-portkey-api-key" # Optional for self-hosted
client = OpenAI(
api_key=os.environ.get("OPENAI_API_KEY"),
base_url=PORTKEY_GATEWAY_URL,
default_headers=createHeaders(
provider="openai",
api_key=os.environ.get("PORTKEY_API_KEY")
)
)
response = client.chat.completions.create(
model="gpt-4o-mini",
messages=[{"role": "user", "content": "What is artificial intelligence?"}]
)
print(response.choices[0].message.content)
from portkey_ai import Portkey
# Initialize Portkey client
portkey = Portkey(
api_key="your-portkey-api-key", # Optional for self-hosted
virtual_key="your-openai-virtual-key" # Or use provider-specific virtual keys
)
response = portkey.chat.completions.create(
model="gpt-4o-mini",
messages=[{"role": "user", "content": "Explain machine learning"}]
)
print(response.choices[0].message.content)
Now that you have tracing setup, all requests through Portkey's AI Gateway will be streamed to your running Phoenix instance for observability and evaluation. You'll be able to see:
Request/Response Traces: Complete visibility into LLM interactions
Routing Decisions: Which provider was selected and why
Fallback Events: When and why fallbacks were triggered
Cache Performance: Hit/miss rates and response times
Cost Tracking: Token usage and costs across providers
Latency Metrics: Response times for each provider and route
Sign up for Phoenix:
Sign up for an Arize Phoenix account at https://app.phoenix.arize.com/login
Click Create Space
, then follow the prompts to create and launch your space.
Install packages:
pip install arize-phoenix-otel
Set your Phoenix endpoint and API Key:
From your new Phoenix Space
Create your API key from the Settings page
Copy your Hostname
from the Settings page
In your code, set your endpoint and API key:
import os
os.environ["PHOENIX_API_KEY"] = "ADD YOUR PHOENIX API KEY"
os.environ["PHOENIX_COLLECTOR_ENDPOINT"] = "ADD YOUR PHOENIX HOSTNAME"
# If you created your Phoenix Cloud instance before June 24th, 2025,
# you also need to set the API key as a header:
# os.environ["PHOENIX_CLIENT_HEADERS"] = f"api_key={os.getenv('PHOENIX_API_KEY')}"
Launch your local Phoenix instance:
pip install arize-phoenix
phoenix serve
For details on customizing a local terminal deployment, see Terminal Setup.
Install packages:
pip install arize-phoenix-otel
Set your Phoenix endpoint:
import os
os.environ["PHOENIX_COLLECTOR_ENDPOINT"] = "http://localhost:6006"
See Terminal for more details.
Pull latest Phoenix image from Docker Hub:
docker pull arizephoenix/phoenix:latest
Run your containerized instance:
docker run -p 6006:6006 arizephoenix/phoenix:latest
This will expose the Phoenix on localhost:6006
Install packages:
pip install arize-phoenix-otel
Set your Phoenix endpoint:
import os
os.environ["PHOENIX_COLLECTOR_ENDPOINT"] = "http://localhost:6006"
For more info on using Phoenix with Docker, see Docker.
Install packages:
pip install arize-phoenix
Launch Phoenix:
import phoenix as px
px.launch_app()