mirror of
https://github.com/OneUptime/oneuptime
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333 lines
14 KiB
Protocol Buffer
333 lines
14 KiB
Protocol Buffer
// Copyright 2019, OpenTelemetry Authors
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//
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// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
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// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
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// You may obtain a copy of the License at
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//
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// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
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//
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// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
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// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
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// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
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// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
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// limitations under the License.
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syntax = "proto3";
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package opentelemetry.proto.trace.v1;
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import "./common.proto";
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import "./resource.proto";
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option csharp_namespace = "OpenTelemetry.Proto.Trace.V1";
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option java_multiple_files = true;
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option java_package = "io.opentelemetry.proto.trace.v1";
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option java_outer_classname = "TraceProto";
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option go_package = "go.opentelemetry.io/proto/otlp/trace/v1";
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// TracesData represents the traces data that can be stored in a persistent storage,
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// OR can be embedded by other protocols that transfer OTLP traces data but do
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// not implement the OTLP protocol.
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//
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// The main difference between this message and collector protocol is that
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// in this message there will not be any "control" or "metadata" specific to
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// OTLP protocol.
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//
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// When new fields are added into this message, the OTLP request MUST be updated
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// as well.
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message TracesData {
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// An array of ResourceSpans.
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// For data coming from a single resource this array will typically contain
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// one element. Intermediary nodes that receive data from multiple origins
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// typically batch the data before forwarding further and in that case this
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// array will contain multiple elements.
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repeated ResourceSpans resource_spans = 1;
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}
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// A collection of ScopeSpans from a Resource.
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message ResourceSpans {
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reserved 1000;
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// The resource for the spans in this message.
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// If this field is not set then no resource info is known.
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opentelemetry.proto.resource.v1.Resource resource = 1;
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// A list of ScopeSpans that originate from a resource.
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repeated ScopeSpans scope_spans = 2;
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// The Schema URL, if known. This is the identifier of the Schema that the resource data
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// is recorded in. To learn more about Schema URL see
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// https://opentelemetry.io/docs/specs/otel/schemas/#schema-url
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// This schema_url applies to the data in the "resource" field. It does not apply
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// to the data in the "scope_spans" field which have their own schema_url field.
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string schema_url = 3;
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}
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// A collection of Spans produced by an InstrumentationScope.
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message ScopeSpans {
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// The instrumentation scope information for the spans in this message.
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// Semantically when InstrumentationScope isn't set, it is equivalent with
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// an empty instrumentation scope name (unknown).
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opentelemetry.proto.common.v1.InstrumentationScope scope = 1;
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// A list of Spans that originate from an instrumentation scope.
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repeated Span spans = 2;
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// The Schema URL, if known. This is the identifier of the Schema that the span data
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// is recorded in. To learn more about Schema URL see
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// https://opentelemetry.io/docs/specs/otel/schemas/#schema-url
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// This schema_url applies to all spans and span events in the "spans" field.
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string schema_url = 3;
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}
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// A Span represents a single operation performed by a single component of the system.
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//
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// The next available field id is 17.
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message Span {
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// A unique identifier for a trace. All spans from the same trace share
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// the same `trace_id`. The ID is a 16-byte array. An ID with all zeroes OR
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// of length other than 16 bytes is considered invalid (empty string in OTLP/JSON
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// is zero-length and thus is also invalid).
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//
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// This field is required.
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bytes trace_id = 1;
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// A unique identifier for a span within a trace, assigned when the span
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// is created. The ID is an 8-byte array. An ID with all zeroes OR of length
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// other than 8 bytes is considered invalid (empty string in OTLP/JSON
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// is zero-length and thus is also invalid).
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//
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// This field is required.
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bytes span_id = 2;
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// trace_state conveys information about request position in multiple distributed tracing graphs.
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// It is a trace_state in w3c-trace-context format: https://www.w3.org/TR/trace-context/#tracestate-header
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// See also https://github.com/w3c/distributed-tracing for more details about this field.
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string trace_state = 3;
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// The `span_id` of this span's parent span. If this is a root span, then this
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// field must be empty. The ID is an 8-byte array.
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bytes parent_span_id = 4;
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// Flags, a bit field. 8 least significant bits are the trace
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// flags as defined in W3C Trace Context specification. Readers
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// MUST not assume that 24 most significant bits will be zero.
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// To read the 8-bit W3C trace flag, use `flags & SPAN_FLAGS_TRACE_FLAGS_MASK`.
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//
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// When creating span messages, if the message is logically forwarded from another source
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// with an equivalent flags fields (i.e., usually another OTLP span message), the field SHOULD
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// be copied as-is. If creating from a source that does not have an equivalent flags field
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// (such as a runtime representation of an OpenTelemetry span), the high 24 bits MUST
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// be set to zero.
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//
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// [Optional].
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//
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// See https://www.w3.org/TR/trace-context-2/#trace-flags for the flag definitions.
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fixed32 flags = 16;
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// A description of the span's operation.
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//
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// For example, the name can be a qualified method name or a file name
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// and a line number where the operation is called. A best practice is to use
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// the same display name at the same call point in an application.
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// This makes it easier to correlate spans in different traces.
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//
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// This field is semantically required to be set to non-empty string.
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// Empty value is equivalent to an unknown span name.
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//
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// This field is required.
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string name = 5;
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// SpanKind is the type of span. Can be used to specify additional relationships between spans
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// in addition to a parent/child relationship.
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enum SpanKind {
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// Unspecified. Do NOT use as default.
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// Implementations MAY assume SpanKind to be INTERNAL when receiving UNSPECIFIED.
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SPAN_KIND_UNSPECIFIED = 0;
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// Indicates that the span represents an internal operation within an application,
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// as opposed to an operation happening at the boundaries. Default value.
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SPAN_KIND_INTERNAL = 1;
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// Indicates that the span covers server-side handling of an RPC or other
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// remote network request.
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SPAN_KIND_SERVER = 2;
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// Indicates that the span describes a request to some remote service.
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SPAN_KIND_CLIENT = 3;
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// Indicates that the span describes a producer sending a message to a broker.
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// Unlike CLIENT and SERVER, there is often no direct critical path latency relationship
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// between producer and consumer spans. A PRODUCER span ends when the message was accepted
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// by the broker while the logical processing of the message might span a much longer time.
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SPAN_KIND_PRODUCER = 4;
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// Indicates that the span describes consumer receiving a message from a broker.
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// Like the PRODUCER kind, there is often no direct critical path latency relationship
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// between producer and consumer spans.
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SPAN_KIND_CONSUMER = 5;
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}
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// Distinguishes between spans generated in a particular context. For example,
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// two spans with the same name may be distinguished using `CLIENT` (caller)
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// and `SERVER` (callee) to identify queueing latency associated with the span.
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SpanKind kind = 6;
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// start_time_unix_nano is the start time of the span. On the client side, this is the time
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// kept by the local machine where the span execution starts. On the server side, this
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// is the time when the server's application handler starts running.
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// Value is UNIX Epoch time in nanoseconds since 00:00:00 UTC on 1 January 1970.
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//
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// This field is semantically required and it is expected that end_time >= start_time.
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fixed64 start_time_unix_nano = 7;
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// end_time_unix_nano is the end time of the span. On the client side, this is the time
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// kept by the local machine where the span execution ends. On the server side, this
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// is the time when the server application handler stops running.
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// Value is UNIX Epoch time in nanoseconds since 00:00:00 UTC on 1 January 1970.
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//
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// This field is semantically required and it is expected that end_time >= start_time.
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fixed64 end_time_unix_nano = 8;
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// attributes is a collection of key/value pairs. Note, global attributes
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// like server name can be set using the resource API. Examples of attributes:
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//
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// "/http/user_agent": "Mozilla/5.0 (Macintosh; Intel Mac OS X 10_14_2) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/71.0.3578.98 Safari/537.36"
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// "/http/server_latency": 300
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// "example.com/myattribute": true
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// "example.com/score": 10.239
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//
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// The OpenTelemetry API specification further restricts the allowed value types:
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// https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/blob/main/specification/common/README.md#attribute
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// Attribute keys MUST be unique (it is not allowed to have more than one
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// attribute with the same key).
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repeated opentelemetry.proto.common.v1.KeyValue attributes = 9;
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// dropped_attributes_count is the number of attributes that were discarded. Attributes
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// can be discarded because their keys are too long or because there are too many
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// attributes. If this value is 0, then no attributes were dropped.
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uint32 dropped_attributes_count = 10;
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// Event is a time-stamped annotation of the span, consisting of user-supplied
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// text description and key-value pairs.
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message Event {
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// time_unix_nano is the time the event occurred.
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fixed64 time_unix_nano = 1;
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// name of the event.
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// This field is semantically required to be set to non-empty string.
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string name = 2;
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// attributes is a collection of attribute key/value pairs on the event.
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// Attribute keys MUST be unique (it is not allowed to have more than one
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// attribute with the same key).
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repeated opentelemetry.proto.common.v1.KeyValue attributes = 3;
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// dropped_attributes_count is the number of dropped attributes. If the value is 0,
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// then no attributes were dropped.
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uint32 dropped_attributes_count = 4;
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}
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// events is a collection of Event items.
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repeated Event events = 11;
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// dropped_events_count is the number of dropped events. If the value is 0, then no
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// events were dropped.
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uint32 dropped_events_count = 12;
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// A pointer from the current span to another span in the same trace or in a
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// different trace. For example, this can be used in batching operations,
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// where a single batch handler processes multiple requests from different
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// traces or when the handler receives a request from a different project.
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message Link {
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// A unique identifier of a trace that this linked span is part of. The ID is a
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// 16-byte array.
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bytes trace_id = 1;
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// A unique identifier for the linked span. The ID is an 8-byte array.
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bytes span_id = 2;
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// The trace_state associated with the link.
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string trace_state = 3;
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// attributes is a collection of attribute key/value pairs on the link.
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// Attribute keys MUST be unique (it is not allowed to have more than one
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// attribute with the same key).
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repeated opentelemetry.proto.common.v1.KeyValue attributes = 4;
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// dropped_attributes_count is the number of dropped attributes. If the value is 0,
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// then no attributes were dropped.
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uint32 dropped_attributes_count = 5;
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// Flags, a bit field. 8 least significant bits are the trace
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// flags as defined in W3C Trace Context specification. Readers
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// MUST not assume that 24 most significant bits will be zero.
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// When creating new spans, the most-significant 24-bits MUST be
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// zero. To read the 8-bit W3C trace flag (use flags &
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// SPAN_FLAGS_TRACE_FLAGS_MASK). [Optional].
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//
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// See https://www.w3.org/TR/trace-context-2/#trace-flags for the flag definitions.
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fixed32 flags = 6;
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}
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// links is a collection of Links, which are references from this span to a span
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// in the same or different trace.
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repeated Link links = 13;
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// dropped_links_count is the number of dropped links after the maximum size was
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// enforced. If this value is 0, then no links were dropped.
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uint32 dropped_links_count = 14;
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// An optional final status for this span. Semantically when Status isn't set, it means
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// span's status code is unset, i.e. assume STATUS_CODE_UNSET (code = 0).
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Status status = 15;
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}
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// The Status type defines a logical error model that is suitable for different
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// programming environments, including REST APIs and RPC APIs.
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message Status {
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reserved 1;
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// A developer-facing human readable error message.
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string message = 2;
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// For the semantics of status codes see
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// https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification/blob/main/specification/trace/api.md#set-status
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enum StatusCode {
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// The default status.
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STATUS_CODE_UNSET = 0;
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// The Span has been validated by an Application developer or Operator to
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// have completed successfully.
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STATUS_CODE_OK = 1;
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// The Span contains an error.
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STATUS_CODE_ERROR = 2;
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};
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// The status code.
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StatusCode code = 3;
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}
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// SpanFlags represents constants used to interpret the
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// Span.flags field, which is protobuf 'fixed32' type and is to
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// be used as bit-fields. Each non-zero value defined in this enum is
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// a bit-mask. To extract the bit-field, for example, use an
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// expression like:
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//
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// (span.flags & SPAN_FLAGS_TRACE_FLAGS_MASK)
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//
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// See https://www.w3.org/TR/trace-context-2/#trace-flags for the flag definitions.
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//
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// Note that Span flags were introduced in version 1.1 of the
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// OpenTelemetry protocol. Older Span producers do not set this
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// field, consequently consumers should not rely on the absence of a
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// particular flag bit to indicate the presence of a particular feature.
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enum SpanFlags {
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// The zero value for the enum. Should not be used for comparisons.
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// Instead use bitwise "and" with the appropriate mask as shown above.
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SPAN_FLAGS_DO_NOT_USE = 0;
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// Bits 0-7 are used for trace flags.
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SPAN_FLAGS_TRACE_FLAGS_MASK = 0x000000FF;
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// Bits 8-31 are reserved for future use.
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} |