OpenTelemetry SDK for R packages and projects
High-quality, ubiquitous, and portable telemetry to enable effective observability. OpenTelemetry is a collection of tools, APIs, and SDKs used to instrument, generate, collect, and export telemetry data (metrics, logs, and traces) for analysis in order to understand your software’s performance and behavior.
Use the otel package as a dependency if you want to instrument your R package or project for OpenTelemetry.
Use this package (otelsdk) to produce OpenTelemetry output from an R package or project that was instrumented with the otel package.
Warning
This package is experimental and may introduce breaking changes any time. It probably works best with the latest commit of the otel package.
You can install the development version of otel from GitHub with:
# install.packages("pak")
pak::pak("r-lib/otelsdk")
-
Instrument your R package or project using the otel package.
-
Choose an exporter from the otelsdk package. The
http
exporter sends OpenTelemetry output through OTLP/HTTP. -
Set the
OTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER
environment variable to point to the exporter of your choice. E.g. for OTLP/HTTP setOTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER=http
. -
If you are sending telemetry data through HTTP, then you typically need to configure the URL of your OpenTelemetry collector, and you possibly also need to supply a token in an HTTP header, possibly some resource attributes. Follow the instructions of the provider of your collector. They typically don’t have instructions for R, but generic instructions about environment variables will work for the otelsdk R package. E.g. for Grafana you need something like
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_PROTOCOL="http" OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT="https://otlp-gateway-prod-eu-central-0.grafana.net/otlp" \ OTEL_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTES="service.name=<name-of-your-app>,service.namespace=<name-of-your-namespace>,deployment.environment=test" OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_HEADERS="Authorization=Basic%20<base64-encoded-token>"
See more example below.
-
Start R and your app. Telemetry data will be exported to the chosen exporter.
There are a lot of services that offer an OpenTelemetry collector for tracers, logs and metrics, many of them supporting all three of them. There are also local apps that work as a collector. We tried otelsdk with the following ones:
Follow the
documentation.
Create an API token. You’ll need to use the Grafana instrance ID as your
username, and the token as the password in HTTP Basic auth. E.g. in R do
this to get the base64 encoded token. instance-id
is a (currently
seven digit) number and a string with a glc_
prefix.
openssl::base64_encode("<instance-id>:<api-token>")
Then use this encoded token to set the Authorization
header:
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_PROTOCOL="http"
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT="https://otlp-gateway-prod-eu-central-0.grafana.net/otlp" \
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_HEADERS="Authorization=Basic%20<base64-encoded-token>"
OTEL_RESOURCE_ATTRIBUTES="service.name=<name-of-your-app,service.namespace=<name-of-your-namespace>,deployment.environment=test"
Your endpoint URL is probably different, use the one that you see on your dashboard.
If you want to export logs and/or metrics, set these environment variables, respectively:
OTEL_LOGS_EXPORTER=http
OTEL_LOG_LEVEL=debug
OTEL_METRICS_EXPORTER=http
It also makes sense to set the desired log level.
Grafana suggests running an OpenTelemetry collector on premise instead of sending telemetry data to them directly. But nevertheless you can start out without running your own collector, they call this “quick start” mode.
Create a project and a write token. Note that the URLs you need to use
are different if you are within the EU! You probably need to replace
us
with eu
in the URL if you are in the EU. Set these environment
variables:
OTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER=http
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT="https://logfire-us.pydantic.dev"
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_HEADERS="Authorization=<your-write-token>"
For logs also set OTEL_LOGS_EXPORTER
and the desired log level:
OTEL_LOGS_EXPORTER=http
OTEL_LOG_LEVEL=debug
For exporting metrics also set
OTEL_METRICS_EXPORTER=http
otel-tui
is a terminal app that supports traces, logs and metrics. It
is great for development, as you can keep all your telemetry local while
instrumenting your package or app. Follow the installation instructions
and then run the app from a terminal:
otel-tui
It listens on the default port, so the setup is very simple, set these environment variables (or a subset if you don’t want metrics or logs):
OTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER=http
OTEL_LOGS_EXPORTER=http
OTEL_LOG_LEVEL=debug
OTEL_METRICS_EXPORTER=http
otel-desktop-viewer
is similar to otel-tui
, but has a web UI. Follow
the installation instructions and start the app from a terminal:
otel-desktop-viewer
It should start a new windows or tab in your local web browser. Set the usual environment variable for your R app:
OTEL_TRACES_EXPORTER=http
If you have Docker, you can start a Jaeger container on the default port:
docker run --rm --name jaeger \
-p 16686:16686 \
-p 4317:4317 \
-p 4318:4318 \
-p 5778:5778 \
-p 9411:9411 \
jaegertracing/jaeger:2.4.0
Go to http://localhost:16686/
to view the Jaeger UI.
To run SigNoz locally with Docker, clone the repository at https://github.com/SigNoz/signoz:
git clone --depth 1 https://github.com/SigNoz/signoz
and then run Docker Compose from the deploy/docker/
subdirectory:
cd deploy/docker
docker compose up
Go to http://localhost:8080
to see the SigNoz UI.
MIT © Posit, PBC