386 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
386 lines
21 KiB
Plaintext
[[observability]]
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= Observability Support
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Micrometer defines an {micrometer-docs}/observation.html[Observation concept that enables both Metrics and Traces] in applications.
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Metrics support offers a way to create timers, gauges, or counters for collecting statistics about the runtime behavior of your application.
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Metrics can help you to track error rates, usage patterns, performance, and more.
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Traces provide a holistic view of an entire system, crossing application boundaries; you can zoom in on particular user requests and follow their entire completion across applications.
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Spring Framework instruments various parts of its own codebase to publish observations if an `ObservationRegistry` is configured.
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You can learn more about {spring-boot-docs-ref}/actuator/observability.html[configuring the observability infrastructure in Spring Boot].
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[[observability.list]]
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== List of produced Observations
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Spring Framework instruments various features for observability.
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As outlined xref:integration/observability.adoc[at the beginning of this section], observations can generate timer Metrics and/or Traces depending on the configuration.
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.Observations produced by Spring Framework
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[%autowidth]
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|===
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|Observation name |Description
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|xref:integration/observability.adoc#observability.http-client[`"http.client.requests"`]
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|Time spent for HTTP client exchanges
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|xref:integration/observability.adoc#observability.http-server[`"http.server.requests"`]
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|Processing time for HTTP server exchanges at the Framework level
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|xref:integration/observability.adoc#observability.jms.publish[`"jms.message.publish"`]
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|Time spent sending a JMS message to a destination by a message producer.
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|xref:integration/observability.adoc#observability.jms.process[`"jms.message.process"`]
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|Processing time for a JMS message that was previously received by a message consumer.
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|xref:integration/observability.adoc#observability.tasks-scheduled[`"tasks.scheduled.execution"`]
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|Processing time for an execution of a `@Scheduled` task
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|===
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NOTE: Observations use Micrometer's official naming convention, but Metrics names will be automatically converted
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{micrometer-docs}/concepts/naming.html[to the format preferred by the monitoring system backend]
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(Prometheus, Atlas, Graphite, InfluxDB...).
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[[observability.concepts]]
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== Micrometer Observation concepts
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If you are not familiar with Micrometer Observation, here's a quick summary of the concepts you should know about.
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* `Observation` is the actual recording of something happening in your application. This is processed by `ObservationHandler` implementations to produce metrics or traces.
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* Each observation has a corresponding `ObservationContext` implementation; this type holds all the relevant information for extracting metadata for it.
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In the case of an HTTP server observation, the context implementation could hold the HTTP request, the HTTP response, any exception thrown during processing, and so forth.
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* Each `Observation` holds `KeyValues` metadata. In the case of an HTTP server observation, this could be the HTTP request method, the HTTP response status, and so forth.
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This metadata is contributed by `ObservationConvention` implementations which should declare the type of `ObservationContext` they support.
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* `KeyValues` are said to be "low cardinality" if there is a low, bounded number of possible values for the `KeyValue` tuple (HTTP method is a good example).
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Low cardinality values are contributed to metrics only.
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Conversely, "high cardinality" values are unbounded (for example, HTTP request URIs) and are only contributed to traces.
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* An `ObservationDocumentation` documents all observations in a particular domain, listing the expected key names and their meaning.
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[[observability.config]]
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== Configuring Observations
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Global configuration options are available at the `ObservationRegistry#observationConfig()` level.
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Each instrumented component will provide two extension points:
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* setting the `ObservationRegistry`; if not set, observations will not be recorded and will be no-ops
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* providing a custom `ObservationConvention` to change the default observation name and extracted `KeyValues`
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[[observability.config.conventions]]
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=== Using custom Observation conventions
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Let's take the example of the Spring MVC "http.server.requests" metrics instrumentation with the `ServerHttpObservationFilter`.
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This observation uses a `ServerRequestObservationConvention` with a `ServerRequestObservationContext`; custom conventions can be configured on the Servlet filter.
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If you would like to customize the metadata produced with the observation, you can extend the `DefaultServerRequestObservationConvention` for your requirements:
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include-code::./ExtendedServerRequestObservationConvention[]
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If you want full control, you can implement the entire convention contract for the observation you're interested in:
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include-code::./CustomServerRequestObservationConvention[]
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You can also achieve similar goals using a custom `ObservationFilter` – adding or removing key values for an observation.
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Filters do not replace the default convention and are used as a post-processing component.
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include-code::./ServerRequestObservationFilter[]
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You can configure `ObservationFilter` instances on the `ObservationRegistry`.
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[[observability.tasks-scheduled]]
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== @Scheduled tasks instrumentation
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An Observation is created for xref:integration/scheduling.adoc#scheduling-enable-annotation-support[each execution of an `@Scheduled` task].
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Applications need to configure the `ObservationRegistry` on the `ScheduledTaskRegistrar` to enable the recording of observations.
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This can be done by declaring a `SchedulingConfigurer` bean that sets the observation registry:
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include-code::./ObservationSchedulingConfigurer[]
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It uses the `org.springframework.scheduling.support.DefaultScheduledTaskObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `ScheduledTaskObservationContext`.
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You can configure a custom implementation on the `ObservationRegistry` directly.
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During the execution of the scheduled method, the current observation is restored in the `ThreadLocal` context or the Reactor context (if the scheduled method returns a `Mono` or `Flux` type).
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By default, the following `KeyValues` are created:
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`code.function` _(required)_|Name of the Java `Method` that is scheduled for execution.
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|`code.namespace` _(required)_|Canonical name of the class of the bean instance that holds the scheduled method, or `"ANONYMOUS"` for anonymous classes.
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|`error` _(required)_|Class name of the exception thrown during the execution, or `"none"` if no exception happened.
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|`outcome` _(required)_|Outcome of the method execution. Can be `"SUCCESS"`, `"ERROR"` or `"UNKNOWN"` (if for example the operation was cancelled during execution).
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|===
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[[observability.jms]]
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== JMS messaging instrumentation
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Spring Framework uses the Jakarta JMS instrumentation provided by Micrometer if the `io.micrometer:micrometer-jakarta9` dependency is on the classpath.
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The `io.micrometer.jakarta9.instrument.jms.JmsInstrumentation` instruments `jakarta.jms.Session` and records the relevant observations.
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This instrumentation will create 2 types of observations:
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* `"jms.message.publish"` when a JMS message is sent to the broker, typically with `JmsTemplate`.
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* `"jms.message.process"` when a JMS message is processed by the application, typically with a `MessageListener` or a `@JmsListener` annotated method.
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NOTE: Currently there is no instrumentation for `"jms.message.receive"` observations as there is little value in measuring the time spent waiting for the receipt of a message.
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Such an integration would typically instrument `MessageConsumer#receive` method calls. But once those return, the processing time is not measured and the trace scope cannot be propagated to the application.
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By default, both observations share the same set of possible `KeyValues`:
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`error` |Class name of the exception thrown during the messaging operation (or "none").
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|`messaging.destination.temporary` _(required)_|Whether the destination is a `TemporaryQueue` or `TemporaryTopic` (values: `"true"` or `"false"`).
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|`messaging.operation` _(required)_|Name of the JMS operation being performed (values: `"publish"` or `"process"`).
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|===
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.High cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`messaging.message.conversation_id` |The correlation ID of the JMS message.
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|`messaging.destination.name` |The name of the destination the current message was sent to.
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|`messaging.message.id` |Value used by the messaging system as an identifier for the message.
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|===
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[[observability.jms.publish]]
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=== JMS message Publication instrumentation
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`"jms.message.publish"` observations are recorded when a JMS message is sent to the broker.
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They measure the time spent sending the message and propagate the tracing information with outgoing JMS message headers.
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You will need to configure the `ObservationRegistry` on the `JmsTemplate` to enable observations:
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include-code::./JmsTemplatePublish[]
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It uses the `io.micrometer.jakarta9.instrument.jms.DefaultJmsPublishObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `io.micrometer.jakarta9.instrument.jms.JmsPublishObservationContext`.
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Similar observations are recorded with `@JmsListener` annotated methods when response messages are returned from the listener method.
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[[observability.jms.process]]
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=== JMS message Processing instrumentation
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`"jms.message.process"` observations are recorded when a JMS message is processed by the application.
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They measure the time spent processing the message and propagate the tracing context with incoming JMS message headers.
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Most applications will use the xref:integration/jms/annotated.adoc#jms-annotated[`@JmsListener` annotated methods] mechanism to process incoming messages.
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You will need to ensure that the `ObservationRegistry` is configured on the dedicated `JmsListenerContainerFactory`:
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include-code::./JmsConfiguration[]
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A xref:integration/jms/annotated.adoc#jms-annotated-support[default container factory is required to enable the annotation support],
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but note that `@JmsListener` annotations can refer to specific container factory beans for specific purposes.
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In all cases, Observations are only recorded if the observation registry is configured on the container factory.
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Similar observations are recorded with `JmsTemplate` when messages are processed by a `MessageListener`.
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Such listeners are set on a `MessageConsumer` within a session callback (see `JmsTemplate.execute(SessionCallback<T>)`).
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This observation uses the `io.micrometer.jakarta9.instrument.jms.DefaultJmsProcessObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `io.micrometer.jakarta9.instrument.jms.JmsProcessObservationContext`.
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[[observability.http-server]]
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== HTTP Server instrumentation
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HTTP server exchange observations are created with the name `"http.server.requests"` for Servlet and Reactive applications.
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[[observability.http-server.servlet]]
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=== Servlet applications
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Applications need to configure the `org.springframework.web.filter.ServerHttpObservationFilter` Servlet filter in their application.
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It uses the `org.springframework.http.server.observation.DefaultServerRequestObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `ServerRequestObservationContext`.
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This will only record an observation as an error if the `Exception` has not been handled by the web framework and has bubbled up to the Servlet filter.
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Typically, all exceptions handled by Spring MVC's `@ExceptionHandler` and xref:web/webmvc/mvc-ann-rest-exceptions.adoc[`ProblemDetail` support] will not be recorded with the observation.
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You can, at any point during request processing, set the error field on the `ObservationContext` yourself:
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include-code::./UserController[]
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NOTE: Because the instrumentation is done at the Servlet Filter level, the observation scope only covers the filters ordered after this one as well as the handling of the request.
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Typically, Servlet container error handling is performed at a lower level and won't have any active observation or span.
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For this use case, a container-specific implementation is required, such as a `org.apache.catalina.Valve` for Tomcat; this is outside the scope of this project.
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By default, the following `KeyValues` are created:
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`error` _(required)_|Class name of the exception thrown during the exchange, or `"none"` if no exception happened.
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|`method` _(required)_|Name of the HTTP request method or `"none"` if not a well-known method.
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|`outcome` _(required)_|Outcome of the HTTP server exchange.
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|`status` _(required)_|HTTP response raw status code, or `"UNKNOWN"` if no response was created.
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|`uri` _(required)_|URI pattern for the matching handler if available, falling back to `REDIRECTION` for 3xx responses, `NOT_FOUND` for 404 responses, `root` for requests with no path info, and `UNKNOWN` for all other requests.
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|===
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.High cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`http.url` _(required)_|HTTP request URI.
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|===
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[[observability.http-server.reactive]]
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=== Reactive applications
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Applications need to configure the `WebHttpHandlerBuilder` with a `MeterRegistry` to enable server instrumentation.
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This can be done on the `WebHttpHandlerBuilder`, as follows:
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include-code::./HttpHandlerConfiguration[]
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It uses the `org.springframework.http.server.reactive.observation.DefaultServerRequestObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `ServerRequestObservationContext`.
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This will only record an observation as an error if the `Exception` has not been handled by an application Controller.
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Typically, all exceptions handled by Spring WebFlux's `@ExceptionHandler` and xref:web/webflux/ann-rest-exceptions.adoc[`ProblemDetail` support] will not be recorded with the observation.
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You can, at any point during request processing, set the error field on the `ObservationContext` yourself:
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include-code::./UserController[]
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By default, the following `KeyValues` are created:
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`error` _(required)_|Class name of the exception thrown during the exchange, or `"none"` if no exception happened.
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|`method` _(required)_|Name of the HTTP request method or `"none"` if not a well-known method.
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|`outcome` _(required)_|Outcome of the HTTP server exchange.
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|`status` _(required)_|HTTP response raw status code, or `"UNKNOWN"` if no response was created.
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|`uri` _(required)_|URI pattern for the matching handler if available, falling back to `REDIRECTION` for 3xx responses, `NOT_FOUND` for 404 responses, `root` for requests with no path info, and `UNKNOWN` for all other requests.
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|===
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.High cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`http.url` _(required)_|HTTP request URI.
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|===
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[[observability.http-client]]
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== HTTP Client Instrumentation
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HTTP client exchange observations are created with the name `"http.client.requests"` for blocking and reactive clients.
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Unlike their server counterparts, the instrumentation is implemented directly in the client so the only required step is to configure an `ObservationRegistry` on the client.
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[[observability.http-client.resttemplate]]
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=== RestTemplate
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Applications must configure an `ObservationRegistry` on `RestTemplate` instances to enable the instrumentation; without that, observations are "no-ops".
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Spring Boot will auto-configure `RestTemplateBuilder` beans with the observation registry already set.
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Instrumentation uses the `org.springframework.http.client.observation.ClientRequestObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `ClientRequestObservationContext`.
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`method` _(required)_|Name of the HTTP request method or `"none"` if not a well-known method.
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|`uri` _(required)_|URI template used for HTTP request, or `"none"` if none was provided. Only the path part of the URI is considered.
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|`client.name` _(required)_|Client name derived from the request URI host.
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|`status` _(required)_|HTTP response raw status code, or `"IO_ERROR"` in case of `IOException`, or `"CLIENT_ERROR"` if no response was received.
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|`outcome` _(required)_|Outcome of the HTTP client exchange.
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|`error` _(required)_|Class name of the exception thrown during the exchange, or `"none"` if no exception happened.
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|===
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.High cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`http.url` _(required)_|HTTP request URI.
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|===
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[[observability.http-client.restclient]]
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=== RestClient
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Applications must configure an `ObservationRegistry` on the `RestClient.Builder` to enable the instrumentation; without that, observations are "no-ops".
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Instrumentation uses the `org.springframework.http.client.observation.ClientRequestObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `ClientRequestObservationContext`.
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`method` _(required)_|Name of the HTTP request method or `"none"` if the request could not be created.
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|`uri` _(required)_|URI template used for HTTP request, or `"none"` if none was provided. Only the path part of the URI is considered.
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|`client.name` _(required)_|Client name derived from the request URI host.
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|`status` _(required)_|HTTP response raw status code, or `"IO_ERROR"` in case of `IOException`, or `"CLIENT_ERROR"` if no response was received.
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|`outcome` _(required)_|Outcome of the HTTP client exchange.
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|`error` _(required)_|Class name of the exception thrown during the exchange, or `"none"` if no exception happened.
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|===
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.High cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`http.url` _(required)_|HTTP request URI.
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|===
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[[observability.http-client.webclient]]
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=== WebClient
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Applications must configure an `ObservationRegistry` on the `WebClient.Builder` to enable the instrumentation; without that, observations are "no-ops".
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Spring Boot will auto-configure `WebClient.Builder` beans with the observation registry already set.
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Instrumentation uses the `org.springframework.web.reactive.function.client.ClientRequestObservationConvention` by default, backed by the `ClientRequestObservationContext`.
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.Low cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`method` _(required)_|Name of the HTTP request method or `"none"` if not a well-known method.
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|`uri` _(required)_|URI template used for HTTP request, or `"none"` if none was provided. Only the path part of the URI is considered.
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|`client.name` _(required)_|Client name derived from the request URI host.
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|`status` _(required)_|HTTP response raw status code, or `"IO_ERROR"` in case of `IOException`, or `"CLIENT_ERROR"` if no response was received.
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|`outcome` _(required)_|Outcome of the HTTP client exchange.
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|`error` _(required)_|Class name of the exception thrown during the exchange, or `"none"` if no exception happened.
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|`exception` _(deprecated)_|Duplicates the `error` key and might be removed in the future.
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|===
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.High cardinality Keys
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[cols="a,a"]
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|===
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|Name | Description
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|`http.url` _(required)_|HTTP request URI.
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|===
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[[observability.application-events]]
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== Application Events and `@EventListener`
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Spring Framework does not contribute Observations for xref:core/beans/context-introduction.adoc#context-functionality-events-annotation[`@EventListener` calls],
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as they don't have the right semantics for such instrumentation.
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By default, event publication and processing are done synchronously and on the same thread.
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This means that during the execution of that task, the ThreadLocals and logging context will be the same as the event publisher.
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If the application globally configures a custom `ApplicationEventMulticaster` with a strategy that schedules event processing on different threads, this is no longer true.
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All `@EventListener` methods will be processed on a different thread, outside the main event publication thread.
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In these cases, the {micrometer-context-propagation-docs}/[Micrometer Context Propagation library] can help propagate such values and better correlate the processing of the events.
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The application can configure the chosen `TaskExecutor` to use a `ContextPropagatingTaskDecorator` that decorates tasks and propagates context.
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For this to work, the `io.micrometer:context-propagation` library must be present on the classpath:
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include-code::./ApplicationEventsConfiguration[]
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Similarly, if that asynchronous choice is made locally for each `@EventListener` annotated method, by adding `@Async` to it,
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you can choose a `TaskExecutor` that propagates context by referring to it by its qualifier.
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Given the following `TaskExecutor` bean definition, configured with the dedicated task decorator:
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include-code::./EventAsyncExecutionConfiguration[]
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Annotating event listeners with `@Async` and the relevant qualifier will achieve similar context propagation results:
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include-code::./EmailNotificationListener[]
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