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OpenTelemetry End-User Discussions Summary for January 2023

With contributions from Henrik Rexed (Dynatrace), Michael Hausenblas (AWS), Pranay Prateek (Signoz), Rynn Mancuso (Honeycomb), and Reese Lee (New Relic).

Each month, users in the OpenTelemetry (OTel) community gather to talk about how they use OpenTelemetry in real life. Sessions are held for users in the Americas (AMER), Europe Middle-East & Africa (EMEA), and Asia-Pacific (APAC). The discussions take place using a Lean Coffee format, whereby folks are invited to post their topics to the Agile Coffee board like this one, and everyone in attendance votes on what they want to talk about.

This is a great way to meet other users in the OpenTelemetry community, and to learn about and share practical experience on how OpenTelemetry is being used in the wild. Each meeting is attended by an OTel Governance Committee member and/or maintainer to help answer questions, listen to user feedback, and provide additional context and insight into the topics discussed.

This is the first in a series of blog posts summarizing our monthly OTel End User Discussions, starting with our January 2023 sessions.

What we talked about

We saw a few common themes this month across our three sessions:

  • OpenTelemetry adoption & enablement
  • Connectors (Collector)
  • Service Graph Processor (Collector)
  • Signal correlation (e.g., metrics/traces correlation, logs/traces correlation)

We’ll dig into these and more!

Discussion highlights

Below is a summary of this month’s discussions.

OpenTelemetry Collector

1- OpenTelemetry Transformation Language (OTTL)

Q: Will exporters support OTTL (a language for transforming OpenTelemetry data)? Use case: data needs to be transformed, but don’t want to do it in a processor.

A: Due to separation of concerns, it is unlikely that OTTL will be added to exporters; however, this may be a use case for either connectors (a new Collector component that acts as an exporter/receiver pair to join pipelines together) or the routing processor. A routing processor reads data from an HTTP request or attribute, and routes it to a specified exporter.

2- Service Graph Processor

Q: How can OpenTelemetry be used to generate a service graph, generate metrics, and send the data to a visualization tool?

A: The Service Graph Processor generates a service graph. This processor is still in alpha, and as a result, some known issues around the Service Graph regarding the dependency mapping. One span doesn’t have the entire context, and in order to get the complete picture, you will have to send the spans to a centralized service.

3- Bifurcating data in a pipeline

Q: If I want to use the Collector to send different sets of data to different back-ends, what’s the best way to go about it?

A: Connectors (a new Collector component that acts as an exporter/receiver pair to join pipelines together) can be used to solve this. Connectors will be launching soon. For more info, see the Connector PR here.

Another approach would be to use a routing processor. A routing processor reads data from an HTTP request or attribute, and routes it to a specified exporter. This is done by making new network connections, which can make this approach inefficient.

4- Managing time drift in telemetry data

Q: When clocks on servers are not in sync, you can end up with some data points being recorded in the future. Can something be implemented on the OTel Collector to mitigate this?

A: Clock skew is always going to happen. There is no way for clocks to be synchronized, especially in microservices architectures. The owner of the system that generates the telemetry is in a better position to understand the clock nuances. The Collector is not suited to address this.

5- Advanced Collector deployment and configuration

Q: When should I be horizontally scaling my pod vs modifying config of an individual collector? When do I add more collectors or change collector config?

A: There are a few things to consider when deploying and configuring Collectors.

  • If you only have stateless components in your Collector, you can scale (add more replicas) based on metrics.
  • You may want to shard your pipelines based on the type of processing that you’re doing. For example, creating one metrics pipeline, one logs pipeline, and one traces pipeline, because the workload for each of these pipelines is different.
  • You might want to split your Collectors based on the type of data being processed. If there’s one namespace where there’s more data that comes in with personally identifiable information (PII), you might want to have a dedicated Collector for that namespace that uses the attributes processor.

OpenTelemetry Adoption & Enablement

Q: So you’ve decided to go with OpenTelemetry at your organization…now what? What’s the best way to promote OpenTelemetry adoption, and get developers excited about using OpenTelemetry, without overwhelming them?

A: Some suggestions from the community:

  • Find folks who are willing to be OpenTelemetry champions
  • Pair developers new to OpenTelemetry with those who are more familiar with it
  • The real value of OpenTelemetry won’t be seen until you instrument a few services, to see how things are stitched together.
  • Developers must be mentally ready to start instrumenting their code. Keep in mind that it may mean going into existing code to instrument it.
  • A “big bang” approach may not be the best way to adopt OpenTelemetry, as it may be too overwhelming for an organization. Start with a component or two.

OpenTelemetry Language API & SDKs

1- New language instrumentation

Q: How do you find information on OTel implementations for different languages, for example, Dart and Lua?

A: CNCF Slack is always a good place to start your search. There are language-specific channels, which follow the naming convention otel-<language_name>. If you don’t find a channel for your language, feel free to start a discussion on the OpenTelemetry CNCF Slack channel, or on GitHub, like with this issue for OTel for Perl. Please also check out this page for more info.

2- Python instrumentation

Q: How mature is auto-instrumentation for Python and what has been the experience of folks working with OpenTelemetry Python?

A: Python auto-instrumentation is in beta; however, there are companies using OTel Python in production, so it likely won’t cause any issues in prod. As a SIG, OTel Python tries to minimize shipping breaking changes, but as with everything, there is no guarantee that there will be no breaking changes. There is no firm timeframe on when Python instrumentation will be marked as stable.

Misc Items

1- OpenTelemetry exemplars

Q: Where can users learn more about Exemplars and how they are being used in the real world?

A: Exemplars are used to correlate OpenTelemetry metrics to traces. Exemplars are currently in the early stages of development, and more work still needs to be done. For more on the state of exemplars, check out the #otel-metrics channel on CNCF Slack. Please also check out Michael Hausenblas’ recent talk on this topic.

2- Correlation between traces and logs

Q: Is there a way to more easily correlate traces to logs?

A: Implementing correlation takes time and is a work in progress. Correlation work is more mature for some languages (e.g. Java, Go) than for others. The best approach is to raise this issue in one of the language-specific repos that pertains to your situation. A possible work-around is to start traces at the log level, whereby every log will have its own associated trace.

3- Profiling

Q: What is the status of Profiling in OpenTelemetry?

A: There is an OTel proposal on profiling, which has been accepted and is being actively being worked on and discussed. The current focus is on finalizing the protocol, before SDK work can start. You can check out the profiling repo on GitHub, as well as the Profiling Vision pull request on GitHub.

4- Context propagation

Q: Browsers cannot track context propagation automatically, and must therefore be done manually. Current workarounds have come with a lot of overhead. How can this be addressed?

A: The way to address this is to join the JavaScript SIG and to raise the issue there. If anyone is actively working on an API to solve this internally, it would be great to contribute this back to the OTel community.

Meeting Notes & Recordings

For a deeper dive on the above topics, check out the following:

Going forward, we will be recording all End-User Discussion meetings.

Join us!

If you have a story to share about how you use OpenTelemetry at your organization, we’d love to hear from you! Ways to share:

Be sure to follow OpenTelemetry on Mastodon and Twitter, and share your stories using the #OpenTelemetry hashtag!