This library is a Java platform API for OpenTracing.
In order to understand the Java platform API, one must first be familiar with the OpenTracing project and terminology more specifically.
Initialization is OpenTracing-implementation-specific. Generally speaking, the pattern is to initialize a Tracer
once for the entire process and to use that Tracer
for the remainder of the process lifetime. It is a best practice to set the GlobalTracer, even if also making use of cleaner, more modern dependency injection. (See the next section below for rationale)
Where possible, use some form of dependency injection (of which there are many) to access the Tracer
instance. For vanilla application code, this is often reasonable and cleaner for all of the usual DI reasons.
That said, instrumentation for packages that are themselves statically configured (e.g., JDBC drivers) may be unable to make use of said DI mechanisms for Tracer
access, and as such they should fall back on GlobalTracer. By and large, OpenTracing instrumentation should always allow the programmer to specify a Tracer
instance to use for instrumentation, though the GlobalTracer is a reasonable fallback or default value.
For any thread, at most one Span
may be "active". Of course there may be many other Spans
involved with the thread which are (a) started, (b) not finished, and yet (c) not "active": perhaps they are waiting for I/O, blocked on a child Span, or otherwise off of the critical path.
It's inconvenient to pass an active Span
from function to function manually, so OpenTracing requires that every Tracer
contains a ScopeManager
that grants access to the active Span
along with a Scope
to signal deactivation. Any Span
may be transferred to another callback or thread, but not Scope
; more on this below.
Access to the active span is straightforward:
io.opentracing.Tracer tracer = ...;
...
Span span = tracer.scopeManager().activeSpan();
if (span != null) {
span.log("...");
}
The common case starts a Span
and then sets it as the active instance via ScopeManager
:
io.opentracing.Tracer tracer = ...;
...
Span span = tracer.buildSpan("someWork").start();
try (Scope scope = tracer.scopeManager().activate(span)) {
// Do things.
} catch(Exception ex) {
Tags.ERROR.set(span, true);
span.log(Map.of(Fields.EVENT, "error", Fields.ERROR_OBJECT, ex, Fields.MESSAGE, ex.getMessage()));
} finally {
span.finish();
}
If there is already an active Span
, it will act as the parent to any newly started Span
unless
the programmer invokes ignoreActiveSpan()
at buildSpan()
time or specified parent context explicitly:
io.opentracing.Tracer tracer = ...;
...
Span span = tracer.buildSpan("someWork").ignoreActiveSpan().start();
Consider the case where a Span
's lifetime logically starts in one thread and ends in another. For instance, the Span's own internal timing breakdown might look like this:
[ ServiceHandlerSpan ]
|·FunctionA·|·····waiting on an RPC······|·FunctionB·|
---------------------------------------------------------> time
The "ServiceHandlerSpan"
is active while it's running FunctionA and FunctionB, and inactive while it's waiting on an RPC (presumably modelled as its own Span, though that's not the concern here).
The ScopeManager
API makes it possible to fetch the span
in FunctionA
and re-activate it in FunctionB
. Note that every Tracer
contains a ScopeManager
. These are the steps:
- Start a
Span
viastart
. - At the beginning of the closure/
Runnable
/Future
/etc itself, invoketracer.scopeManager().activate(span)
to re-activate theSpan
and get a newScope
, thenclose()
it when theSpan
is no longer active (or use try-with-resources for less typing). - Invoke
span.finish()
when the work is done.
Here is an example using CompletableFuture
:
io.opentracing.Tracer tracer = ...;
...
// STEP 1 ABOVE: start the Span.
final Span span = tracer.buildSpan("ServiceHandlerSpan").start();
try (Scope scope = tracer.scopeManager().activate(span)) {
// Do work.
...
future = CompletableFuture.supplyAsync(() -> {
// STEP 2 ABOVE: reactivate the Span in the callback.
try (Scope scope = tracer.scopeManager().activate(span)) {
...
}
}).thenRun(() -> {
// STEP 3 ABOVE: finish the Span when the work is done.
span.finish();
});
}
Observe that passing Scope
to another thread or callback is not supported. Only Span
can be used under this scenario.
In practice, all of this is most fluently accomplished through the use of an OpenTracing-aware ExecutorService
and/or Runnable
/Callable
adapter; they factor out most of the typing.
ScopeManager.active(Span, boolean)
and SpanBuilder.startActive()
have been deprecated as part of removing automatic Span
finish upon Scope
close, as doing it through try-with statements would make it hard to properly handle errors (Span
objects would get finished before a catch block would be reached).
This improves API safety, and makes it more difficult to do the wrong thing and end up with unexpected errors.
Scope.span()
and ScopeManager.scope()
have been deprecated in order to prevent the anti-pattern of passing Scope
objects between threads (Scope
objects are not guaranteed to be thread-safe).
Now Scope
will be responsible for Span
deactivation only, instead of being a Span
container.
This project has a working design of interfaces for the OpenTracing API. There is a MockTracer to facilitate unit-testing of OpenTracing Java instrumentation.
Packages are deployed to Maven Central under the io.opentracing
group.
This is a maven project, and provides a wrapper, ./mvnw
to pin a consistent
version. Run ./mvnw clean install
to build, run tests, and create jars.
This wrapper was generated by mvn -N io.takari:maven:wrapper -Dmaven=3.5.0
See Contributing for matters such as license headers.