opentracing-go
opentelemetry-specification
opentracing-go | opentelemetry-specification | |
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5 | 99 | |
3,467 | 3,610 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 9.2 | |
about 1 year ago | 4 days ago | |
Go | Makefile | |
Apache License 2.0 | Apache License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
opentracing-go
- Incomprehensible Performance Issues unraveled with Kubernetes Tracing Tools
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Distributed Tracing with OpenTelemetry - Part I
OpenTelemetry was born from the merger of two other standards that decided to unify forces instead of competing with each other; these projects were OpenTracing and OpenCensus.
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Spring WebFlux and gRPC 👋✨💫
Spring web framework Spring WebFlux Reactive REST Services gRPC Java gRPC gRPC-Spring-Boot-Starter gRPC Spring Boot Starter Salesforce Reactive gRPC Salesforce Reactive gRPC Spring Data R2DBC a specification to integrate SQL databases using reactive drivers Zipkin open source, end-to-end distributed tracing Spring Cloud Sleuth autoconfiguration for distributed tracing Prometheus monitoring and alerting Grafana for to compose observability dashboards with everything from Prometheus Kubernetes automating deployment, scaling, and management of containerized applications Docker and docker-compose Helm The package manager for Kubernetes Flywaydb for migrations
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Learning Go by examples: part 10 - Instrument your Go app with OpenTelemetry and send traces to Jaeger - Distributed Tracing
If you have ever heard of OpenTracing or are used to using it, know that now OpenTracing is deprecated, so it is better to use OpenTelemetry 🙂. If you want to migrate from OpenTracing to OpenTelemetry, an official guide exists.
- Go stack for REST APIs?
opentelemetry-specification
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OpenTelemetry Journey #00 - Introduction to OpenTelemetry
It means that the OpenTelemetry project provides not only a specification to define the contract between the applications, collectors, and telemetry databases, but also a set of APIs, SDKs, and tools like instrumentation libraries (for different languages), collectors, operators, etc. OpenTelemetry is open-source and vendor-agnostic, so the project is not tied to any specific vendor or cloud provider.
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Migrating to OpenTelemetry
Sure, happy to provide more specifics!
Our main issue was the lack of a synchronous gauge. The officially supported asynchronous API of registering a callback function to report a gauge metric is very different from how we were doing things before, and would have required lots of refactoring of our code. Instead, we wrote a wrapper that exposes a synchronous-like API: https://gist.github.com/yolken-airplane/027867b753840f7d15d6....
It seems like this is a common feature request across many of the SDKs, and it's in the process of being fixed in some of them (https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specificatio...)? I'm not sure what the plans are for the golang SDK specifically.
Another, more minor issue, is the lack of support for "constant" attributes that are applied to all metrics. We use these to identify the app, among other use cases, so we added wrappers around the various "Add", "Record", "Observe", etc. calls that automatically add these. (It's totally possible that this is supported and I missed it, in which case please let me know!).
Overall, the SDK was generally well-written and well-documented, we just needed some extra work to make the interfaces more similar to the ones were were using before.
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OpenTelemetry Exporters - Types and Configuration Steps
OpenTelemetry is an open-source collection of tools, APIs, and SDKs that aims to standardize the way we generate and collect telemetry data. It follows a specification-driven development. The OpenTelemetry specification has design and implementation guidelines for how the instrumentation libraries should be implemented. In addition, it provides client libraries in all the major programming languages that follow the specification.
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OpenTelemetry in 2023
Two problems with OpenTelemetry:
1. It doesn't know what the hell it is. Is it a semantic standard? Is a protocol? It is a facade? What layer of abstraction does it provide? Answer: All of the above! All the things! All the layers!
2. No one from OpenTelemetry has actually tried instrumenting a library. And if they have, they haven't the first suggestion on how instrumenters should actually use metrics, traces, and logs. Do you write to all three? To one? I asked this question two years ago, not a single response. [1]
[1] https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specificatio...
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Tracetest Analyzer: Identify patterns and issues with code instrumentation
OpenTelemetry Specification GitHub
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OpenTelemetry vs. OpenMetrics: Which semantic convention should you use?
One update to this: we proposed replacing the count suffix in OpenTelemetry with total to match Prometheus/OpenMetrics. That discussion resulted in the count suffix being removed from the OpenTelemetry semantic conventions. We'll soon update our metric from being called function.calls.count to just function.calls and the generated Prometheus queries will refer to function_calls_total. That resolves one of the main conflicts between the two specs.
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OpenTelemetry Logs status?
This is your best bet if you want to track status updates: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/issues/2911
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Distributed Tracing with OpenTelemetry - Part I
OpenTelemetry is a standard for implementing telemetry in your applications. It provides a specification, containing the requirements that all implementations should follow as well as some implementations for major languages, including an API and a SDK to interact with it.
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Observability - ApostropheCMS, OpenTelemetry, and New Relic
At this point, we are about to do the real work where we have to configure OpenTelemetry and export telemetry data to New Relic. Exporting this kind of data relies on a specific protocol; the OpenTelemetry Protocol or OTLP.
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OpenTelemetry Logs - A Complete Introduction & Implementation
OpenTelemetry provides instrumentation libraries for your application. The development of these libraries is guided by the OpenTelemetry specification. The OpenTelemetry specification describes the cross-language requirements and design expectations for all OpenTelemetry implementations in various programming languages.
What are some alternatives?
rest-template-go - Template go lang service to showcase REST best practices. Built by the Speakeasy team.
Sentry - Developer-first error tracking and performance monitoring
grpc-spring-boot-starter - Spring Boot starter module for gRPC framework.
Serilog - Simple .NET logging with fully-structured events
rest - Web services with OpenAPI and JSON Schema done quick in Go
zipkin - Zipkin is a distributed tracing system
reactive-grpc - Reactive stubs for gRPC
pino - 🌲 super fast, all natural json logger
rejoiner - Generates a unified GraphQL schema from gRPC microservices and other Protobuf sources
Hangfire - An easy way to perform background job processing in .NET and .NET Core applications. No Windows Service or separate process required
grpc-graphql-gateway - A protoc plugin that generates graphql execution code from Protocol Buffers.
otel-with-apache-pulsar - Example of application that produces and consumes events to/from Apache Pulsar. Traces from the transactions are captured using OpenTelemetry and sent to Elastic Observability.