--- title: Manual Instrumentation linkTitle: Manual aliases: - /docs/instrumentation/ruby/manual_instrumentation - /docs/instrumentation/ruby/events - /docs/instrumentation/ruby/context-propagation weight: 20 description: Manual instrumentation for OpenTelemetry Ruby --- {{% docs/instrumentation/manual-intro %}} ## Setup First, ensure you have the SDK package installed: ```sh gem install opentelemetry-sdk ``` Then include configuration code that runs when your program initializes. Make sure that `service.name` is set by configuring a service name. ## Traces ### Acquiring a Tracer To begin [tracing](/docs/concepts/signals/traces), you will need to ensure you have an initialized [`Tracer`](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#tracer) that comes from a [`TracerProvider`](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#tracer-provider). The easiest and most common way to do this is to use the globally-registered TracerProvider. If you are using [instrumentation libraries](/docs/instrumentation/ruby/automatic), such as in a Rails app, then one will be registered for you. ```ruby # If in a rails app, this lives in config/initializers/opentelemetry.rb require "opentelemetry/sdk" OpenTelemetry::SDK.configure do |c| c.service_name = '' end # 'Tracer' can be used throughout your code now MyAppTracer = OpenTelemetry.tracer_provider.tracer('') ``` With a `Tracer` acquired, you can manually trace code. ### Get the current span It's very common to add information to the current [span](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#spans) somewhere within your program. To do so, you can get the current span and add [attributes](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#attributes) to it. ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" def track_extended_warranty(extended_warranty) # Get the current span current_span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span # And add useful stuff to it! current_span.add_attributes({ "com.extended_warranty.id" => extended_warranty.id, "com.extended_warranty.timestamp" => extended_warranty.timestamp }) end ``` ### Creating New Spans To create a [span](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#spans), you’ll need a [configured `Tracer`](#acquiring-a-tracer). Typically when you create a new span, you'll want it to be the active/current span. To do that, use `in_span`: ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" def do_work MyAppTracer.in_span("do_work") do |span| # do some work that the 'do_work' span tracks! end end ``` ### Creating nested spans If you have a distinct sub-operation you’d like to track as a part of another one, you can create nested [spans](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#spans) to represent the relationship: ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" def parent_work MyAppTracer.in_span("parent") do |span| # do some work that the 'parent' span tracks! child_work # do some more work afterwards end end def child_work MyAppTracer.in_span("child") do |span| # do some work that the 'child' span tracks! end end ``` In the preceding example, two spans are created - named `parent` and `child` - with `child` nested under `parent`. If you view a trace with these spans in a trace visualization tool, `child` will be nested under `parent`. ### Add attributes to a span [Attributes](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#attributes) let you attach key/value pairs to a [span](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#spans) so it carries more information about the current operation that it’s tracking. You can use `set_attribute` to add a single attribute to a span: ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" current_span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span current_span.set_attribute("animals", ["elephant", "tiger"]) ``` You can use `add_attributes` to add a map of attributes: ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" current_span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span current_span.add_attributes({ "my.cool.attribute" => "a value", "my.first.name" => "Oscar" }) ``` You can also add attributes to a span as [it's being created](#creating-new-spans): ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" MyAppTracer.in_span('foo', attributes: { "hello" => "world", "some.number" => 1024 }) do |span| # do stuff with the span end ``` > ⚠ Spans are thread safe data structures that require locks when they are > mutated. You should therefore avoid calling `set_attribute` multiple times and > instead assign attributes in bulk with a Hash, either during span creation or > with `add_attributes` on an existing span. > ⚠ Sampling decisions happen at the moment of span creation. If your > sampler considers span attributes when deciding to sample a span, then you > _must_ pass those attributes as part of span creation. Any attributes added > after creation will not be seen by the sampler, because the sampling decision > has already been made. ### Add semantic attributes [Semantic Attributes][semconv-spec] are pre-defined [Attributes](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#attributes) that are well-known naming conventions for common kinds of data. Using Semantic Attributes lets you normalize this kind of information across your systems. To use Semantic Attributes in Ruby, add the appropriate gem: ```sh gem install opentelemetry-semantic_conventions ``` Then you can use it in code: ```ruby require 'opentelemetry/sdk' require 'opentelemetry/semantic_conventions' current_span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span current_span.add_attributes({ OpenTelemetry::SemanticConventions::Trace::HTTP_METHOD => "GET", OpenTelemetry::SemanticConventions::Trace::HTTP_URL => "https://opentelemetry.io/", }) ``` ### Add Span Events A [span event](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#span-events) is a human-readable message on a span that represents "something happening" during it's lifetime. For example, imagine a function that requires exclusive access to a resource that is under a mutex. An event could be created at two points - once, when we try to gain access to the resource, and another when we acquire the mutex. ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span span.add_event("Acquiring lock") if mutex.try_lock span.add_event("Got lock, doing work...") # some code here span.add_event("Releasing lock") else span.add_event("Lock already in use") end ``` A useful characteristic of events is that their timestamps are displayed as offsets from the beginning of the span, allowing you to easily see how much time elapsed between them. Events can also have attributes of their own e.g. ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" span.add_event("Cancelled wait due to external signal", attributes: { "pid" => 4328, "signal" => "SIGHUP" }) ``` ### Add Span Links A [span](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#spans) can be created with zero or more [span links](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#span-links) that causally link it to another span. A link needs a [span context](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#span-context) to be created. ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" span_to_link_from = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span link = OpenTelemetry::Trace::Link.new(span_to_link_from.context) MyAppTracer.in_span("new-span", links: [link]) # do something that 'new_span' tracks # The link in 'new_span' casually associated it with the span it's linked from, # but it is not necessarily a child span. end ``` Span Links are often used to link together different traces that are related in some way, such as a long-running task that calls into sub-tasks asynchronously. Links can also be created with additional attributes: ```ruby link = OpenTelemetry::Trace::Link.new(span_to_link_from.context, attributes: { "some.attribute" => 12 }) ``` ### Set span status A [status](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#span-status) can be set on a [span](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#spans), typically used to specify that a span has not completed successfully - StatusCode.ERROR. In rare scenarios, you could override the Error status with StatusCode.OK, but don’t set StatusCode.OK on successfully-completed spans. The status can be set at any time before the span is finished: ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" current_span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span begin 1/0 # something that obviously fails rescue current_span.status = OpenTelemetry::Trace::Status.error("error message here!") end ``` ### Record exceptions in spans It can be a good idea to record exceptions when they happen. It’s recommended to do this in conjunction with [setting span status](#set-span-status). ```ruby require "opentelemetry/sdk" current_span = OpenTelemetry::Trace.current_span begin 1/0 # something that obviously fails rescue Exception => e current_span.status = OpenTelemetry::Trace::Status.error("error message here!") current_span.record_exception(e) end ``` Recording an exception creates a [Span Event](/docs/concepts/signals/traces#span-events) on the current span with a stack trace as an attribute on the span event. Exceptions can also be recorded with additional attributes: ```ruby current_span.record_exception(ex, attributes: { "some.attribute" => 12 }) ``` ### Context Propagation > Distributed Tracing tracks the progression of a single Request, called a > Trace, as it is handled by Services that make up an Application. A Distributed > Trace transverses process, network and security boundaries. [Glossary][] This requires _context propagation_, a mechanism where identifiers for a trace are sent to remote processes. > ℹ The OpenTelemetry Ruby SDK will take care of context propagation as > long as your service is leveraging auto-instrumented libraries. Please refer > to the [README][auto-instrumentation] for more details. In order to propagate trace context over the wire, a propagator must be registered with the OpenTelemetry SDK. The W3 TraceContext and Baggage propagators are configured by default. Operators may override this value by setting `OTEL_PROPAGATORS` environment variable to a comma separated list of [propagators][propagators]. For example, to add B3 propagation, set `OTEL_PROPAGATORS` to the complete list of propagation formats you wish to support: ```sh export OTEL_PROPAGATORS=tracecontext,baggage,b3 ``` Propagators other than `tracecontext` and `baggage` must be added as gem dependencies to your Gemfile, e.g.: ```ruby gem 'opentelemetry-propagator-b3' ``` ## Metrics The metrics API & SDK are currently under development. ## Logs The logs API & SDK are currently under development. ## Next Steps You’ll also want to configure an appropriate exporter to [export your telemetry data](/docs/instrumentation/ruby/exporters) to one or more telemetry backends. [glossary]: /docs/concepts/glossary/ [propagators]: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-ruby/tree/main/propagator [auto-instrumentation]: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-ruby-contrib/tree/main/instrumentation [semconv-gem]: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-ruby/tree/main/semantic_conventions [semconv-spec]: /docs/specs/otel/trace/semantic_conventions/ [opentelemetry specification]: /docs/specs/otel/