OpenTracing instrumentation for gRPC.
pom.xml
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentracing.contrib</groupId>
<artifactId>opentracing-grpc</artifactId>
<version>VERSION</version>
</dependency>
- Instantiate tracer
- Optionally register tracer with GlobalTracer:
GlobalTracer.register(tracer)
- Create a
TracingServerInterceptor
- Intercept a service
import io.opentracing.Tracer;
public class YourServer {
private int port;
private Server server;
private final Tracer tracer;
private void start() throws IOException {
TracingServerInterceptor tracingInterceptor = TracingServerInterceptor
.newBuilder()
.withTracer(this.tracer)
.build();
// If GlobalTracer is used:
TracingServerInterceptor
server = ServerBuilder.forPort(port)
.addService(tracingInterceptor.intercept(someServiceDef))
.build()
.start();
}
}
- Instantiate a tracer
- Optionally register tracer with GlobalTracer:
GlobalTracer.register(tracer)
- Create a
TracingClientInterceptor
- Intercept the client channel
import io.opentracing.Tracer;import io.opentracing.contrib.grpc.TracingClientInterceptor;
public class YourClient {
private final ManagedChannel channel;
private final GreeterGrpc.GreeterBlockingStub blockingStub;
private final Tracer tracer;
public YourClient(String host, int port) {
channel = ManagedChannelBuilder.forAddress(host, port)
.usePlaintext(true)
.build();
TracingClientInterceptor tracingInterceptor = TracingClientInterceptor
.newBuilder()
.withTracer(this.tracer)
.build();
// If GlobalTracer is used:
TracingClientInterceptor
blockingStub = GreeterGrpc.newBlockingStub(tracingInterceptor.intercept(channel));
}
}
A TracingServerInterceptor
uses default settings, which you can override by creating it using a TracingServerInterceptor.Builder
.
withOperationName(OperationNameConstructor constructor)
: Define how the operation name is constructed for all spans created for the intercepted service. Default sets the operation name as the name of the RPC method. More details in theOperation Name
section.withStreaming()
: Logs to the server span whenever a message is received. Note: This package supports streaming but has not been rigorously tested. If you come across any issues, please let us know.withVerbosity()
: Logs to the server span additional events, such as message received, half close (client finished sending messages), and call complete. Default only logs if a call is cancelled.withTracedAttributes(ServerRequestAttribute... attrs)
: Sets tags on the server span in case you want to track information about the RPC call. See ServerRequestAttribute.java for a list of traceable request attributes.
TracingServerInterceptor tracingInterceptor = TracingServerInterceptor
.newBuilder()
.withTracer(tracer)
.withStreaming()
.withVerbosity()
.withOperationName(new OperationNameConstructor() {
@Override
public <ReqT, RespT> String constructOperationName(MethodDescriptor<ReqT, RespT> method) {
// construct some operation name from the method descriptor
}
})
.withTracedAttributes(ServerRequestAttribute.HEADERS,
ServerRequestAttribute.METHOD_TYPE)
.build();
A TracingClientInterceptor
also has default settings, which you can override by creating it using a TracingClientInterceptor.Builder
.
withOperationName(String operationName)
: Define how the operation name is constructed for all spans created for this intercepted client. Default is the name of the RPC method. More details in theOperation Name
section.withActiveSpanSource(ActiveSpanSource activeSpanSource)
: Define how to extract the current active span, if any. More details in theActive Span Sources
section.withActiveSpanContextSource(ActiveSpanContextSource activeSpanContextSource)
: Define how to extract the current active span context, if any. More details in theActive Span Context Sources
section.withStreaming()
: Logs to the client span whenever a message is sent or a response is received. Note: This package supports streaming but has not been rigorously tested. If you come across any issues, please let us know.withVerbosity()
: Logs to the client span additional events, such as call started, message sent, half close (client finished sending messages), response received, and call complete. Default only logs if a call is cancelled.withTracedAttributes(ClientRequestAttribute... attrs)
: Sets tags on the client span in case you want to track information about the RPC call. See ClientRequestAttribute.java for a list of traceable request attributes.
import io.opentracing.Span;
TracingClientInterceptor tracingInterceptor = TracingClientInterceptor
.newBuilder()
.withTracer(tracer)
.withStreaming()
.withVerbosity()
.withOperationName(new OperationNameConstructor() {
@Override
public <ReqT, RespT> String constructOperationName(MethodDescriptor<ReqT, RespT> method) {
// construct some operation name from the method descriptor
}
})
.withActiveSpanSource(new ActiveSpanSource() {
@Override
public Span getActiveSpan() {
// implement how to get the current active span, for example:
return OpenTracingContextKey.activeSpan();
}
})
.withTracingAttributes(ClientRequestAttribute.ALL_CALL_OPTIONS,
ClientRequestAttribute.HEADERS)
.build();
In your server request handler, you can access the current active span for that request by calling
Span span = OpenTracingContextKey.activeSpan();
This is useful if you want to manually set tags on the span, log important events, or create a new child span for internal units of work. You can also use this key to wrap these internal units of work with a new context that has a user-defined active span.
For example:
Tracer tracer = ...;
// some unit of internal work that you want to trace
Runnable internalWork = someInternalWork
// a wrapper that traces the work of the runnable
class TracedRunnable implements Runnable {
Runnable work;
Tracer tracer;
TracedRunnable(Runnable work, Tracer tracer) {
this.work = work;
this.tracer = tracer;
}
public void run() {
// create a child span for the current active span
Span span = tracer
.buildSpan("internal-work")
.asChildOf(OpenTracingContextKey.activeSpan())
.start();
// create a new context with the child span as the active span
Context contextWithNewSpan = Context.current()
.withValue(OpenTracingContextKey.get(), span);
// wrap the original work and run it
Runnable tracedWork = contextWithNewSpan.wrap(this.work);
tracedWork.run();
// make sure to finish any manually created spans!
span.finish();
}
}
Runnable tracedInternalWork = new TracedRunnable(internalWork, tracer);
tracedInternalWork.run();
The default operation name for any span is the RPC method name (io.grpc.MethodDescriptor.getFullMethodName()
). However, you may want to add your own prefixes, alter the name, or define a new name. For examples of good operation names, check out the OpenTracing semantics
.
To alter the operation name, you need to add an implementation of the interface OperationNameConstructor
to the TracingClientInterceptor.Builder
or TracingServerInterceptor.Builder
. For example, if you want to add a prefix to the default operation name of your ClientInterceptor, your code would look like this:
TracingClientInterceptor interceptor = TracingClientInterceptor.Builder ...
.withOperationName(new OperationNameConstructor() {
@Override
public <ReqT, RespT> String constructOperationName(MethodDescriptor<ReqT, RespT> method) {
return "your-prefix" + method.getFullMethodName();
}
})
.with....
.build()
If you want your client to continue a trace rather than starting a new one, then you can tell your TracingClientInterceptor
how to extract the current active span by building it with your own implementation of the interface ActiveSpanSource
. This interface has one method, getActiveSpan
, in which you will define how to access the current active span.
For example, if you're creating the client in an environment that has the active span stored in a global dictionary-style context under OPENTRACING_SPAN_KEY
, then you could configure your Interceptor as follows:
import io.opentracing.Span;
TracingClientInterceptor interceptor = TracingClientInterceptor
.newBuilder().withTracer(tracer)
...
.withActiveSpanSource(new ActiveSpanSource() {
@Override
public Span getActiveSpan() {
return Context.get(OPENTRACING_SPAN_KEY);
}
})
...
.build();
We also provide two built-in implementations:
ActiveSpanSource.GRPC_CONTEXT
uses the currentio.grpc.Context
and returns the active span forOpenTracingContextKey
.ActiveSpanSource.NONE
always returns null as the active span, which means the client will retrieve the span fromio.opentracing.Tracer.activeSpan()
. This is the default active span source.
Instead of ActiveSpanSource
it's possible to use ActiveSpanContextSource
if span is not available
import io.opentracing.Span;
TracingClientInterceptor interceptor = TracingClientInterceptor
.newBuilder().withTracer(tracer)
...
.withActiveSpanContextSource(new ActiveSpanContextSource() {
@Override
public SpanContext getActiveSpanContext() {
return Context.get(OPENTRACING_SPAN_CONTEXT_KEY);
}
})
...
.build();
We also provide two built-in implementations:
ActiveSpanContextSource.GRPC_CONTEXT
uses the currentio.grpc.Context
and returns the active span context forOpenTracingContextKey
.ActiveSpanContextSource.NONE
always returns null as the active span context, which means the client will retrieve the span fromio.opentracing.Tracer.activeSpan().context()
. This is the default active span context source.
If you want to add custom tags or logs to the server and client spans, then you can implement the
ClientSpanDecorator
, ClientCloseDecorator
, ServerSpanDecorator
, and ServerCloseDecorator
interfaces.
Multiple different decorators may be added to the builder.
TracingClientInterceptor clientInterceptor = TracingClientInterceptor
.newBuilder().withTracer(tracer)
...
.withClientSpanDecorator(new ClientSpanDecorator() {
@Override
public void interceptCall(Span span, MethodDescriptor method, CallOptions callOptions) {
span.setTag("some_tag", "some_value");
span.log("Example log");
}
})
.withClientCloseDecorator(new ClientCloseDecorator() {
@Override
public void close(Span span, Status status, Metadata trailers) {
span.setTag("some_other_tag", "some_other_value");
}
})
...
.build();
TracingServerInterceptor serverInterceptor = TracingServerInterceptor
.newBuilder().withTracer(tracer)
...
.withServerSpanDecorator(new ServerSpanDecorator() {
@Override
public void interceptCall(Span span, ServerCall call, Metadata headers) {
span.setTag("some_tag", "some_value");
span.log("Intercepting server call");
}
})
.withServerCloseDecorator(new ServerCloseDecorator() {
@Override
public void close(Span span, Status status, Metadata trailers) {
span.setTag("some_other_tag", "some_other_value");
}
})
...
.build();
Although we provide TracingServerInterceptor.intercept(service)
and TracingClientInterceptor.intercept(channel)
methods, you don't want to use these if you're chaining multiple interceptors. Instead, use the following code (preferably putting the tracing interceptor at the top of the interceptor stack so that it traces the entire request lifecycle, including other interceptors):
server = ServerBuilder.forPort(port)
.addService(ServerInterceptors.intercept(service, someInterceptor,
someOtherInterceptor, TracingServerInterceptor))
.build()
.start();
blockingStub = GreeterGrpc.newBlockingStub(ClientInterceptors.intercept(channel,
someInterceptor, someOtherInterceptor, TracingClientInterceptor));