OpenTracing JAX-RS Instrumentation
OpenTracing instrumentation for JAX-RS standard. It supports tracing of server and client requests.
Instrumentation by default adds a set of standard HTTP tags and as an operation name it uses a string defined in @Path
annotation. Custom tags or operation name can be added via span decorators. This instrumentation also supports tracing of (de)serialization of response and requests bodies.
MicroProfile-OpenTracing
This implementation is compatible with MicroProfile-OpenTracing (MP-OT). It can be used as a building block of MicroProfile compatible application server. Note that application servers have to add a few things which are not provided by this project: CDI interceptor, automatically register tracing filters into client... SmallRye-OpenTracing uses this library to provide a vendor neutral implementation of MP-OT.
Tracing server requests
Tracing server requests requires two components: JAX-RS dynamic feature and servlet filter. Span is started in JAX-RS filter and finished in servlet filter.
Auto discovery
Tracing can be automatically enabled by adding the following dependency on classpath. This mechanism requires a tracer to be registered in GlobalTracer
. This is typically done in ServletContextListener
. Note that JAX-RS clients are not automatically instrumented. Client tracing feature has to be explicitly registered to all client instances.
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentracing.contrib</groupId>
<artifactId>opentracing-jaxrs2-discovery</artifactId>
</dependency>
Custom configuration
For custom configuration use the following dependency:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.opentracing.contrib</groupId>
<artifactId>opentracing-jaxrs2</artifactId>
</dependency>
The Custom configuration can be achieved by adding ServerTracingDynamicFeature
to Application.singletons
or by wrapping the feature with a class annotated with @Provider
. This approach does not require adding all classes to singletons set.
Dynamic feature registration via custom provider:
@Provider
public class TracingInitializer implements DynamicFeature {
private final ServerTracingDynamicFeature serverTracingDynamicFeature =
new ServerTracingDynamicFeature.Builder(GlobalTracer.get())
.withOperationNameProvider(ClassNameOperationName.newBuilder())
.build();
@Override
public void configure(ResourceInfo resourceInfo, FeatureContext context) {
serverTracingDynamicFeature.configure(resourceInfo, context);
}
}
Dynamic feature registration via singletons:
public class JaxRsApp extends javax.ws.rs.core.Application {
@Override
public Set<Object> getSingletons() {
DynamicFeature tracing = new ServerTracingDynamicFeature.Builder(tracer)
.withDecorators(decorators)
.withSerializationDecorators(serializationDecorators)
.build();
return Collections.singleton(tracing);
}
}
Filter registration:
@WebListener
public class OpenTracingContextInitializer implements javax.servlet.ServletContextListener {
@Override
public void contextInitialized(ServletContextEvent servletContextEvent) {
io.opentracing.tracer tracer = new ....
GlobalTracer.register(tracer); // or preferably use CDI
ServletContext servletContext = servletContextEvent.getServletContext();
Dynamic filterRegistration = servletContext
.addFilter("tracingFilter", new SpanFinishingFilter());
filterRegistration.setAsyncSupported(true);
filterRegistration.addMappingForUrlPatterns(EnumSet.of(DispatcherType.REQUEST, DispatcherType.ASYNC), false, "*");
}
}
An example of traced REST endpoint:
@GET
@Path("/hello")
@Traced(operationName = "helloRenamed") // optional, see javadoc
public Response hello() { // optional to get server span context
// this span will be ChildOf of span representing server request processing
Span childSpan = tracer.buildSpan("businessOperation")
.start())
// business logic
childSpan.finish();
return Response.status(Response.Status.OK).build();
}
Tracing client requests
Client client = ClientBuilder.newBuilder()
.reqister(ClientTracingFeature.class)
.build();
Response response = client.target("http://localhost/endpoint")
.request()
.property(TracingProperties.CHILD_OF, parentSpanContext) // optional, by default new parent is inferred from span source
.property(TracingProperties.TRACING_DISABLED, false) // optional, by default everything is traced
.get();
Async
Async requests are executed in a different thread than when the client has been invoked, therefore spans representing client requests are not connected to appropriate parent. To fix this JAX-RS client has to use OpenTracing-aware ExecutorService
.
Jersey
@ClientAsyncExecutor
public class DelegateExecutorServiceProvider implements ExecutorServiceProvider {
private final ExecutorService executorService;
public DelegateExecutorServiceProvider(ExecutorService executorService) {
this.executorService = executorService;
}
@Override
public ExecutorService getExecutorService() {
return executorService;
}
@Override
public void dispose(ExecutorService executorService) {
}
}
Client client = ClientBuilder.newBuilder()
.register(new DelegateExecutorServiceProvider(
new TracedExecutorService(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(8), tracer)))
...
RestEasy
Client client = new ResteasyClientBuilder()
.executorService(new TracedExecutorService(Executors.newFixedThreadPool(8), tracer))
...
Development
./mvnw clean install
Release
Follow instructions in RELEASE