Resources in OpenTelemetry .NET
Estás viendo la versión en inglés de está página porque aún no ha sido traducida. ¿Te interesa ayudar? Mira en Contribuir.
Un recurso representa la entidad que produce telemetría como atributos de recurso. Por ejemplo, un proceso que produce telemetría y que se está ejecutando en un contenedor en Kubernetes tiene un nombre de un proceso, un nombre de pod, un namespace y, posiblemente, un nombre de despliegue. Los cuatro atributos pueden incluirse en el recurso.
En tu backend de observabilidad, puedes usar la información del recurso para investigar mejor un comportamiento interesante. Por ejemplo, si tus datos de trazas o métricas indican latencia en tu sistema, puedes reducirla a un contenedor, pod o despliegue de Kubernetes específico.
What are resources?
In OpenTelemetry, a resource is an immutable representation of the entity producing telemetry. For example, a resource could represent a Kubernetes container, a Linux or Windows process, or an application running within a process.
Resources are a fundamental concept in OpenTelemetry, and they are used to describe the source of telemetry data. This information is valuable for debugging and analyzing telemetry data.
Resource attributes
Resource attributes are key-value pairs that provide metadata about the resource. OpenTelemetry defines a set of semantic conventions for resource attributes, which should be used when applicable.
Common resource attributes include:
service.name
: The name of the service generating telemetryservice.version
: The version of the serviceservice.namespace
: A namespace for the serviceservice.instance.id
: A unique identifier for the service instancehost.name
: The name of the hostdeployment.environment
: The deployment environment (e.g., production, staging)
Setup
Follow the instructions in the Getting Started, so that you have a running .NET app exporting data to the console.
Adding resources with environment variables
You can use the OTEL_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTES
environment variable to inject
resources into your application. The .NET SDK will automatically detect these
resources.
The following example adds Service, Host and OS resource attributes
via environment variables, running unix programs like uname
to generate the
resource data.
$ env OTEL_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTES="service.name=resource-tutorial-dotnet,service.namespace=tutorial,service.version=1.0,service.instance.id=`uuidgen`,host.name=`HOSTNAME`,host.type=`uname -m`,os.name=`uname -s`,os.version=`uname -r`" dotnet run
Activity.TraceId: d1cbb7787440cc95b325835cb2ff8018
Activity.SpanId: 2ca007300fcb3068
Activity.TraceFlags: Recorded
Activity.ActivitySourceName: tutorial-dotnet
Activity.DisplayName: SayHello
Activity.Kind: Internal
Activity.StartTime: 2022-10-02T13:31:12.0175090Z
Activity.Duration: 00:00:00.0003920
Activity.Tags:
foo: 1
bar: Hello, World!
baz: [1,2,3]
Resource associated with Activity:
service.name: resource-tutorial-dotnet
service.namespace: tutorial
service.version: 1.0
service.instance.id: 93B14BAD-813D-48EE-9FB1-2ADFD07C5E78
host.name: myhost
host.type: arm64
os.name: Darwin
os.version: 21.6.0
Adding resources in code
You can also add custom resources in code by attaching them to a
ResourceBuilder
.
The following example builds on the getting started sample and adds two custom
resources, environment.name
and team.name
in code:
using System.Diagnostics;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using OpenTelemetry;
using OpenTelemetry.Trace;
using OpenTelemetry.Resources;
var serviceName = "resource-tutorial-dotnet";
var serviceVersion = "1.0";
var resourceBuilder =
ResourceBuilder
.CreateDefault()
.AddService(serviceName: serviceName, serviceVersion: serviceVersion)
.AddAttributes(new Dictionary<string, object>
{
["environment.name"] = "production",
["team.name"] = "backend"
});
var sourceName = "tutorial-dotnet";
using var tracerProvider = Sdk.CreateTracerProviderBuilder()
.AddSource(sourceName)
.SetResourceBuilder(resourceBuilder)
.AddConsoleExporter()
.Build();
var MyActivitySource = new ActivitySource(sourceName);
using var activity = MyActivitySource.StartActivity("SayHello");
activity?.SetTag("foo", 1);
activity?.SetTag("bar", "Hello, World!");
activity?.SetTag("baz", new int[] { 1, 2, 3 });
In this example, the service.name
and service.version
values are set in code
as well. Additionally, service.instance.id
gets a default value.
If you run the same command as in
Adding resources with environment variables,
but this time without service.name
service.version
, and
service.instance.id
, you’ll see the environment.name
and team.name
resources in the resource list:
$ env OTEL_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTES="service.namespace=tutorial,host.name=`HOSTNAME`,host.type=`uname -m`,os.name=`uname -s`,os.version=`uname -r`" dotnet run
Activity.TraceId: d1cbb7787440cc95b325835cb2ff8018
Activity.SpanId: 2ca007300fcb3068
Activity.TraceFlags: Recorded
Activity.ActivitySourceName: tutorial-dotnet
Activity.DisplayName: SayHello
Activity.Kind: Internal
Activity.StartTime: 2022-10-02T13:31:12.0175090Z
Activity.Duration: 00:00:00.0003920
Activity.Tags:
foo: 1
bar: Hello, World!
baz: [1,2,3]
Resource associated with Activity:
environment.name: production
team.name: backend
service.name: resource-tutorial-dotnet
service.namespace: tutorial
service.version: 1.0
service.instance.id: 28976A1C-BF02-43CA-BAE0-6E0564431462
host.name: pcarter
host.type: arm64
os.name: Darwin
os.version: 21.6.0
Note: If you set resource attributes with both environment variables and code, the values in code take precedence.
Next steps
There are more resource detectors you can add to your configuration, for example to get details about your Cloud environment or Deployment.
Learn more
For more information about resources in OpenTelemetry, see the Resources SDK specification.
Comentarios
¿Fue útil esta página?
Thank you. Your feedback is appreciated!
Please let us know how we can improve this page. Your feedback is appreciated!