prometheus/vendor/github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go/README.md

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[![GoDoc][doc-img]][doc] [![Build Status][ci-img]][ci] [![Coverage Status][cov-img]][cov] [![OpenTracing 1.0 Enabled][ot-img]][ot-url]
# Jaeger Bindings for Go OpenTracing API
Instrumentation library that implements an
[OpenTracing Go](https://github.com/opentracing/opentracing-go) Tracer for Jaeger (https://jaegertracing.io).
**IMPORTANT**: The library's import path is based on its original location under `github.com/uber`. Do not try to import it as `github.com/jaegertracing`, it will not compile. We might revisit this in the next major release.
* :white_check_mark: `import "github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go"`
* :x: `import "github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-client-go"`
## How to Contribute
Please see [CONTRIBUTING.md](CONTRIBUTING.md).
## Installation
We recommended using a dependency manager like [dep](https://golang.github.io/dep/)
and [semantic versioning](http://semver.org/) when including this library into an application.
For example, Jaeger backend imports this library like this:
```toml
[[constraint]]
name = "github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go"
version = "2.17"
```
If you instead want to use the latest version in `master`, you can pull it via `go get`.
Note that during `go get` you may see build errors due to incompatible dependencies, which is why
we recommend using semantic versions for dependencies. The error may be fixed by running
`make install` (it will install `dep` if you don't have it):
```shell
go get -u github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go/
cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go/
git submodule update --init --recursive
make install
```
## Initialization
See tracer initialization examples in [godoc](https://godoc.org/github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go/config#pkg-examples)
and [config/example_test.go](./config/example_test.go).
### Environment variables
The tracer can be initialized with values coming from environment variables. None of the env vars are required
and all of them can be overridden via direct setting of the property on the configuration object.
Property| Description
--- | ---
JAEGER_SERVICE_NAME | The service name
JAEGER_AGENT_HOST | The hostname for communicating with agent via UDP
JAEGER_AGENT_PORT | The port for communicating with agent via UDP
JAEGER_ENDPOINT | The HTTP endpoint for sending spans directly to a collector, i.e. http://jaeger-collector:14268/api/traces
JAEGER_USER | Username to send as part of "Basic" authentication to the collector endpoint
JAEGER_PASSWORD | Password to send as part of "Basic" authentication to the collector endpoint
JAEGER_REPORTER_LOG_SPANS | Whether the reporter should also log the spans
JAEGER_REPORTER_MAX_QUEUE_SIZE | The reporter's maximum queue size
JAEGER_REPORTER_FLUSH_INTERVAL | The reporter's flush interval, with units, e.g. "500ms" or "2s" ([valid units][timeunits])
JAEGER_SAMPLER_TYPE | The sampler type
JAEGER_SAMPLER_PARAM | The sampler parameter (number)
JAEGER_SAMPLER_MANAGER_HOST_PORT | The HTTP endpoint when using the remote sampler, i.e. http://jaeger-agent:5778/sampling
JAEGER_SAMPLER_MAX_OPERATIONS | The maximum number of operations that the sampler will keep track of
JAEGER_SAMPLER_REFRESH_INTERVAL | How often the remotely controlled sampler will poll jaeger-agent for the appropriate sampling strategy, with units, e.g. "1m" or "30s" ([valid units][timeunits])
JAEGER_TAGS | A comma separated list of `name = value` tracer level tags, which get added to all reported spans. The value can also refer to an environment variable using the format `${envVarName:default}`, where the `:default` is optional, and identifies a value to be used if the environment variable cannot be found
JAEGER_DISABLED | Whether the tracer is disabled or not. If true, the default `opentracing.NoopTracer` is used.
JAEGER_RPC_METRICS | Whether to store RPC metrics
By default, the client sends traces via UDP to the agent at `localhost:6831`. Use `JAEGER_AGENT_HOST` and
`JAEGER_AGENT_PORT` to send UDP traces to a different `host:port`. If `JAEGER_ENDPOINT` is set, the client sends traces
to the endpoint via `HTTP`, making the `JAEGER_AGENT_HOST` and `JAEGER_AGENT_PORT` unused. If `JAEGER_ENDPOINT` is
secured, HTTP basic authentication can be performed by setting the `JAEGER_USER` and `JAEGER_PASSWORD` environment
variables.
### Closing the tracer via `io.Closer`
The constructor function for Jaeger Tracer returns the tracer itself and an `io.Closer` instance.
It is recommended to structure your `main()` so that it calls the `Close()` function on the closer
before exiting, e.g.
```go
tracer, closer, err := cfg.NewTracer(...)
defer closer.Close()
```
This is especially useful for command-line tools that enable tracing, as well as
for the long-running apps that support graceful shutdown. For example, if your deployment
system sends SIGTERM instead of killing the process and you trap that signal to do a graceful
exit, then having `defer closer.Close()` ensures that all buffered spans are flushed.
### Metrics & Monitoring
The tracer emits a number of different metrics, defined in
[metrics.go](metrics.go). The monitoring backend is expected to support
tag-based metric names, e.g. instead of `statsd`-style string names
like `counters.my-service.jaeger.spans.started.sampled`, the metrics
are defined by a short name and a collection of key/value tags, for
example: `name:jaeger.traces, state:started, sampled:y`. See [metrics.go](./metrics.go)
file for the full list and descriptions of emitted metrics.
The monitoring backend is represented by the `metrics.Factory` interface from package
[`"github.com/uber/jaeger-lib/metrics"`](https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-lib/tree/master/metrics). An implementation
of that interface can be passed as an option to either the Configuration object or the Tracer
constructor, for example:
```go
import (
"github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go/config"
"github.com/uber/jaeger-lib/metrics/prometheus"
)
metricsFactory := prometheus.New()
tracer, closer, err := config.Configuration{
ServiceName: "your-service-name",
}.NewTracer(
config.Metrics(metricsFactory),
)
```
By default, a no-op `metrics.NullFactory` is used.
### Logging
The tracer can be configured with an optional logger, which will be
used to log communication errors, or log spans if a logging reporter
option is specified in the configuration. The logging API is abstracted
by the [Logger](logger.go) interface. A logger instance implementing
this interface can be set on the `Config` object before calling the
`New` method.
Besides the [zap](https://github.com/uber-go/zap) implementation
bundled with this package there is also a [go-kit](https://github.com/go-kit/kit)
one in the [jaeger-lib](https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-lib) repository.
## Instrumentation for Tracing
Since this tracer is fully compliant with OpenTracing API 1.0,
all code instrumentation should only use the API itself, as described
in the [opentracing-go](https://github.com/opentracing/opentracing-go) documentation.
## Features
### Reporters
A "reporter" is a component that receives the finished spans and reports
them to somewhere. Under normal circumstances, the Tracer
should use the default `RemoteReporter`, which sends the spans out of
process via configurable "transport". For testing purposes, one can
use an `InMemoryReporter` that accumulates spans in a buffer and
allows to retrieve them for later verification. Also available are
`NullReporter`, a no-op reporter that does nothing, a `LoggingReporter`
which logs all finished spans using their `String()` method, and a
`CompositeReporter` that can be used to combine more than one reporter
into one, e.g. to attach a logging reporter to the main remote reporter.
### Span Reporting Transports
The remote reporter uses "transports" to actually send the spans out
of process. Currently the supported transports include:
* [Jaeger Thrift](https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-idl/blob/master/thrift/agent.thrift) over UDP or HTTP,
* [Zipkin Thrift](https://github.com/jaegertracing/jaeger-idl/blob/master/thrift/zipkincore.thrift) over HTTP.
### Sampling
The tracer does not record all spans, but only those that have the
sampling bit set in the `flags`. When a new trace is started and a new
unique ID is generated, a sampling decision is made whether this trace
should be sampled. The sampling decision is propagated to all downstream
calls via the `flags` field of the trace context. The following samplers
are available:
1. `RemotelyControlledSampler` uses one of the other simpler samplers
and periodically updates it by polling an external server. This
allows dynamic control of the sampling strategies.
1. `ConstSampler` always makes the same sampling decision for all
trace IDs. it can be configured to either sample all traces, or
to sample none.
1. `ProbabilisticSampler` uses a fixed sampling rate as a probability
for a given trace to be sampled. The actual decision is made by
comparing the trace ID with a random number multiplied by the
sampling rate.
1. `RateLimitingSampler` can be used to allow only a certain fixed
number of traces to be sampled per second.
#### Delayed sampling
Version 2.20 introduced the ability to delay sampling decisions in the life cycle
of the root span. It involves several features and architectural changes:
* **Shared sampling state**: the sampling state is shared across all local
(i.e. in-process) spans for a given trace.
* **New `SamplerV2` API** allows the sampler to be called at multiple points
in the life cycle of a span:
* on span creation
* on overwriting span operation name
* on setting span tags
* on finishing the span
* **Final/non-final sampling state**: the new `SamplerV2` API allows the sampler
to indicate if the negative sampling decision is final or not (positive sampling
decisions are always final). If the decision is not final, the sampler will be
called again on further span life cycle events, like setting tags.
These new features are used in the experimental `x.TagMatchingSampler`, which
can sample a trace based on a certain tag added to the root
span or one of its local (in-process) children. The sampler can be used with
another experimental `x.PrioritySampler` that allows multiple samplers to try
to make a sampling decision, in a certain priority order.
### Baggage Injection
The OpenTracing spec allows for [baggage][baggage], which are key value pairs that are added
to the span context and propagated throughout the trace. An external process can inject baggage
by setting the special HTTP Header `jaeger-baggage` on a request:
```sh
curl -H "jaeger-baggage: key1=value1, key2=value2" http://myhost.com
```
Baggage can also be programatically set inside your service:
```go
if span := opentracing.SpanFromContext(ctx); span != nil {
span.SetBaggageItem("key", "value")
}
```
Another service downstream of that can retrieve the baggage in a similar way:
```go
if span := opentracing.SpanFromContext(ctx); span != nil {
val := span.BaggageItem("key")
println(val)
}
```
### Debug Traces (Forced Sampling)
#### Programmatically
The OpenTracing API defines a `sampling.priority` standard tag that
can be used to affect the sampling of a span and its children:
```go
import (
"github.com/opentracing/opentracing-go"
"github.com/opentracing/opentracing-go/ext"
)
span := opentracing.SpanFromContext(ctx)
ext.SamplingPriority.Set(span, 1)
```
#### Via HTTP Headers
Jaeger Tracer also understands a special HTTP Header `jaeger-debug-id`,
which can be set in the incoming request, e.g.
```sh
curl -H "jaeger-debug-id: some-correlation-id" http://myhost.com
```
When Jaeger sees this header in the request that otherwise has no
tracing context, it ensures that the new trace started for this
request will be sampled in the "debug" mode (meaning it should survive
all downsampling that might happen in the collection pipeline), and the
root span will have a tag as if this statement was executed:
```go
span.SetTag("jaeger-debug-id", "some-correlation-id")
```
This allows using Jaeger UI to find the trace by this tag.
### Zipkin HTTP B3 compatible header propagation
Jaeger Tracer supports Zipkin B3 Propagation HTTP headers, which are used
by a lot of Zipkin tracers. This means that you can use Jaeger in conjunction with e.g. [these OpenZipkin tracers](https://github.com/openzipkin).
However it is not the default propagation format, see [here](zipkin/README.md#NewZipkinB3HTTPHeaderPropagator) how to set it up.
## SelfRef
Jaeger Tracer supports an additional [span reference][] type call `Self`, which was proposed
to the OpenTracing Specification (https://github.com/opentracing/specification/issues/81)
but not yet accepted. This allows the caller to provide an already created `SpanContext`
when starting a new span. The `Self` reference bypasses trace and span id generation,
as well as sampling decisions (i.e. the sampling bit in the `SpanContext.flags` must be
set appropriately by the caller).
The `Self` reference supports the following use cases:
* the ability to provide externally generated trace and span IDs
* appending data to the same span from different processes, such as loading and continuing spans/traces from offline (ie log-based) storage
Usage requires passing in a `SpanContext` and the `jaeger.Self` reference type:
```
span := tracer.StartSpan(
"continued_span",
jaeger.SelfRef(yourSpanContext),
)
...
defer span.Finish()
```
## License
[Apache 2.0 License](LICENSE).
[doc-img]: https://godoc.org/github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go?status.svg
[doc]: https://godoc.org/github.com/uber/jaeger-client-go
[ci-img]: https://travis-ci.org/jaegertracing/jaeger-client-go.svg?branch=master
[ci]: https://travis-ci.org/jaegertracing/jaeger-client-go
[cov-img]: https://codecov.io/gh/jaegertracing/jaeger-client-go/branch/master/graph/badge.svg
[cov]: https://codecov.io/gh/jaegertracing/jaeger-client-go
[ot-img]: https://img.shields.io/badge/OpenTracing--1.0-enabled-blue.svg
[ot-url]: http://opentracing.io
[baggage]: https://github.com/opentracing/specification/blob/master/specification.md#set-a-baggage-item
[timeunits]: https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration
[span reference]: https://github.com/opentracing/specification/blob/1.1/specification.md#references-between-spans