Microsoft Azure Monitor Opentelemetry Exporter Client Library for Python
Project description
Microsoft OpenTelemetry exporter for Azure Monitor
The exporter for Azure Monitor allows you to export data utilizing the OpenTelemetry SDK and send telemetry data to Azure Monitor for applications written in Python.
Source code | Package (PyPi) | API reference documentation | Product documentation | Samples | Changelog
Getting started
Install the package
Install the Microsoft OpenTelemetry exporter for Azure Monitor with pip:
pip install azure-monitor-opentelemetry-exporter --pre
Prerequisites
To use this package, you must have:
- Azure subscription - Create a free account
- Azure Monitor - How to use application insights
- OpenTelemetry SDK - OpenTelemetry SDK for Python
- Python 3.7 or later - Install Python
Instantiate the client
Interaction with Azure monitor exporter starts with an instance of the AzureMonitorTraceExporter
class for distributed tracing, AzureMonitorLogExporter
for logging and AzureMonitorMetricExporter
for metrics. You will need a connection_string to instantiate the object.
Please find the samples linked below for demonstration as to how to construct the exporter using a connection string.
Logging (experimental)
NOTE: The logging signal for the AzureMonitorLogExporter
is currently in an EXPERIMENTAL state. Possible breaking changes may ensue in the future.
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorLogExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorLogExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
Metrics
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorMetricExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorMetricExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
Tracing
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorTraceExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorTraceExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
You can also instantiate the exporter directly via the constructor. In this case, the connection string will be automatically populated from the APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING
environment variable.
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorLogExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorLogExporter()
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorMetricExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorMetricExporter()
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorTraceExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorTraceExporter()
Key concepts
Some of the key concepts for the Azure monitor exporter include:
-
OpenTelemetry: OpenTelemetry is a set of libraries used to collect and export telemetry data (metrics, logs, and traces) for analysis in order to understand your software's performance and behavior.
-
Instrumentation: The ability to call the OpenTelemetry API directly by any application is facilitated by instrumentation. A library that enables OpenTelemetry observability for another library is called an instrumentation Library.
-
Log: Log refers to capturing of logging, exception and events.
-
LogRecord: Represents a log record emitted from a supported logging library.
-
Logger: Converts a
LogRecord
into a readableLogData
, and will be pushed through the SDK to be exported. -
Logger Provider: Provides a
Logger
for the given instrumentation library. -
LogRecordProcessor: Interface to hook the log record emitting action.
-
LoggingHandler: A handler class which writes logging records in OpenTelemetry format from the standard Python
logging
library. -
AzureMonitorLogExporter: This is the class that is initialized to send logging related telemetry to Azure Monitor.
-
Metric:
Metric
refers to recording raw measurements with predefined aggregation and sets of attributes for a period in time. -
Measurement: Represents a data point recorded at a point in time.
-
Instrument: Instruments are used to report
Measurement
s. -
Meter: The
Meter
is responsible for creatingInstruments
. -
Meter Provider: Provides a
Meter
for the given instrumentation library. -
Metric Reader: An SDK implementation object that provides the common configurable aspects of the OpenTelemetry Metrics SDK such as collection, flushing and shutdown.
-
AzureMonitorMetricExporter: This is the class that is initialized to send metric related telemetry to Azure Monitor.
-
Trace: Trace refers to distributed tracing. A distributed trace is a set of events, triggered as a result of a single logical operation, consolidated across various components of an application. In particular, a Trace can be thought of as a directed acyclic graph (DAG) of Spans, where the edges between Spans are defined as parent/child relationship.
-
Span: Represents a single operation within a
Trace
. Can be nested to form a trace tree. Each trace contains a root span, which typically describes the entire operation and, optionally, one ore more sub-spans for its sub-operations. -
Tracer: Responsible for creating
Span
s. -
Tracer Provider: Provides a
Tracer
for use by the given instrumentation library. -
Span Processor: A span processor allows hooks for SDK's
Span
start and end method invocations. Follow the link for more information. -
AzureMonitorTraceExporter: This is the class that is initialized to send tracing related telemetry to Azure Monitor.
-
Sampling: Sampling is a mechanism to control the noise and overhead introduced by OpenTelemetry by reducing the number of samples of traces collected and sent to the backend.
-
ApplicationInsightsSampler: Application Insights specific sampler used for consistent sampling across Application Insights SDKs and OpenTelemetry-based SDKs sending data to Application Insights. This sampler MUST be used whenever
AzureMonitorTraceExporter
is used.
For more information about these resources, see What is Azure Monitor?.
Configuration
All configuration options can be passed through the constructors of exporters through kwargs
. Below is a list of configurable options.
connection_string
: The connection string used for your Application Insights resource.disable_offline_storage
: Boolean value to determine whether to disable storing failed telemetry records for retry. Defaults toFalse
.storage_directory
: Storage directory in which to store retry files. Defaults to<tempfile.gettempdir()>/Microsoft/AzureMonitor/opentelemetry-python-<your-instrumentation-key>
.credential
: Token credential, such as ManagedIdentityCredential or ClientSecretCredential, used for Azure Active Directory (AAD) authentication. Defaults to None. See samples for examples.
Examples
Logging (experimental)
NOTE: The logging signal for the AzureMonitorLogExporter
is currently in an EXPERIMENTAL state. Possible breaking changes may ensue in the future.
The following sections provide several code snippets covering some of the most common tasks, including:
- Exporting a log record
- Exporting correlated log record
- Exporting log record with custom properties
- Exporting an exceptions log record
Review the OpenTelemetry Logging SDK to learn how to use OpenTelemetry components to collect logs.
Export Hello World Log
"""
An example to show an application using Opentelemetry logging sdk. Logging calls to the standard Python
logging library are tracked and telemetry is exported to application insights with the AzureMonitorLogExporter.
"""
import os
import logging
from opentelemetry._logs import set_logger_provider
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs import (
LoggerProvider,
LoggingHandler,
)
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs.export import BatchLogRecordProcessor
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorLogExporter
logger_provider = LoggerProvider()
set_logger_provider(logger_provider)
exporter = AzureMonitorLogExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
logger_provider.add_log_record_processor(BatchLogRecordProcessor(exporter))
handler = LoggingHandler()
# Attach LoggingHandler to root logger
logging.getLogger().addHandler(handler)
logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.NOTSET)
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.warning("Hello World!")
# Telemetry records are flushed automatically upon application exit
# If you would like to flush records manually yourself, you can call force_flush()
logger_provider.force_flush()
Export Correlated Log
"""
An example showing how to include context correlation information in logging telemetry.
"""
import os
import logging
from opentelemetry import trace
from opentelemetry._logs import set_logger_provider
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs import (
LoggerProvider,
LoggingHandler,
)
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs.export import BatchLogRecordProcessor
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace import TracerProvider
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorLogExporter
trace.set_tracer_provider(TracerProvider())
tracer = trace.get_tracer(__name__)
logger_provider = LoggerProvider()
set_logger_provider(logger_provider)
exporter = AzureMonitorLogExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
logger_provider.add_log_record_processor(BatchLogRecordProcessor(exporter))
handler = LoggingHandler()
# Attach LoggingHandler to root logger
logging.getLogger().addHandler(handler)
logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.NOTSET)
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.info("INFO: Outside of span")
with tracer.start_as_current_span("foo"):
logger.warning("WARNING: Inside of span")
logger.error("ERROR: After span")
Export Custom Properties Log
"""
An example showing how to add custom properties to logging telemetry.
"""
import os
import logging
from opentelemetry._logs import set_logger_provider
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs import (
LoggerProvider,
LoggingHandler,
)
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs.export import BatchLogRecordProcessor
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorLogExporter
logger_provider = LoggerProvider()
set_logger_provider(logger_provider)
exporter = AzureMonitorLogExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
logger_provider.add_log_record_processor(BatchLogRecordProcessor(exporter))
handler = LoggingHandler()
# Attach LoggingHandler to root logger
logging.getLogger().addHandler(handler)
logging.getLogger().setLevel(logging.NOTSET)
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
# Custom properties
logger.debug("DEBUG: Debug with properties", extra={"debug": "true"})
Export Exceptions Log
"""
An example showing how to export exception telemetry using the AzureMonitorLogExporter.
"""
import os
import logging
from opentelemetry._logs import (
get_logger_provider,
set_logger_provider,
)
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs import (
LoggerProvider,
LoggingHandler,
)
from opentelemetry.sdk._logs.export import BatchLogRecordProcessor
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorLogExporter
set_logger_provider(LoggerProvider())
exporter = AzureMonitorLogExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
get_logger_provider().add_log_record_processor(BatchLogRecordProcessor(exporter))
# Attach LoggingHandler to namespaced logger
handler = LoggingHandler()
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.addHandler(handler)
logger.setLevel(logging.NOTSET)
# The following code will generate two pieces of exception telemetry
# that are identical in nature
try:
val = 1 / 0
print(val)
except ZeroDivisionError:
logger.exception("Error: Division by zero")
try:
val = 1 / 0
print(val)
except ZeroDivisionError:
logger.error("Error: Division by zero", stack_info=True, exc_info=True)
Metrics
The following sections provide several code snippets covering some of the most common tasks, including:
- Using different metric instruments
- Customizing outputted metrics with views
- Recording instruments with attributes
Review the OpenTelemetry Metrics SDK to learn how to use OpenTelemetry components to collect metrics.
Metric instrument usage
"""
An example to show an application using all instruments in the OpenTelemetry SDK. Metrics created
and recorded using the sdk are tracked and telemetry is exported to application insights with the
AzureMonitorMetricsExporter.
"""
import os
from typing import Iterable
from opentelemetry import metrics
from opentelemetry.metrics import CallbackOptions, Observation
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics import MeterProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics.export import PeriodicExportingMetricReader
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorMetricExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorMetricExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
reader = PeriodicExportingMetricReader(exporter, export_interval_millis=5000)
metrics.set_meter_provider(MeterProvider(metric_readers=[reader]))
# Create a namespaced meter
meter = metrics.get_meter_provider().get_meter("sample")
# Callback functions for observable instruments
def observable_counter_func(options: CallbackOptions) -> Iterable[Observation]:
yield Observation(1, {})
def observable_up_down_counter_func(
options: CallbackOptions,
) -> Iterable[Observation]:
yield Observation(-10, {})
def observable_gauge_func(options: CallbackOptions) -> Iterable[Observation]:
yield Observation(9, {})
# Counter
counter = meter.create_counter("counter")
counter.add(1)
# Async Counter
observable_counter = meter.create_observable_counter(
"observable_counter", [observable_counter_func]
)
# UpDownCounter
up_down_counter = meter.create_up_down_counter("up_down_counter")
up_down_counter.add(1)
up_down_counter.add(-5)
# Async UpDownCounter
observable_up_down_counter = meter.create_observable_up_down_counter(
"observable_up_down_counter", [observable_up_down_counter_func]
)
# Histogram
histogram = meter.create_histogram("histogram")
histogram.record(99.9)
# Async Gauge
gauge = meter.create_observable_gauge("gauge", [observable_gauge_func])
# Upon application exit, one last collection is made and telemetry records are
# flushed automatically. # If you would like to flush records manually yourself,
# you can call force_flush()
meter_provider.force_flush()
Metric custom views
"""
This example shows how to customize the metrics that are output by the SDK using Views. Metrics created
and recorded using the sdk are tracked and telemetry is exported to application insights with the
AzureMonitorMetricsExporter.
"""
import os
from opentelemetry import metrics
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics import Counter, MeterProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics.export import PeriodicExportingMetricReader
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics.view import View
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorMetricExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorMetricExporter.from_connection_string(
os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
# Create a view matching the counter instrument `my.counter`
# and configure the new name `my.counter.total` for the result metrics stream
change_metric_name_view = View(
instrument_type=Counter,
instrument_name="my.counter",
name="my.counter.total",
)
reader = PeriodicExportingMetricReader(exporter, export_interval_millis=5000)
provider = MeterProvider(
metric_readers=[
reader,
],
views=[
change_metric_name_view,
],
)
metrics.set_meter_provider(provider)
meter = metrics.get_meter_provider().get_meter("view-name-change")
my_counter = meter.create_counter("my.counter")
my_counter.add(100)
More examples with the metrics Views
SDK can be found here.
Metric record attributes
"""
An example to show an application using different attributes with instruments in the OpenTelemetry SDK.
Metrics created and recorded using the sdk are tracked and telemetry is exported to application insights
with the AzureMonitorMetricsExporter.
"""
import os
from opentelemetry import metrics
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics import MeterProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.metrics.export import PeriodicExportingMetricReader
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorMetricExporter
exporter = AzureMonitorMetricExporter.from_connection_string(
os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
reader = PeriodicExportingMetricReader(exporter, export_interval_millis=5000)
metrics.set_meter_provider(MeterProvider(metric_readers=[reader]))
attribute_set1 = {
"key1": "val1"
}
attribute_set2 = {
"key2": "val2"
}
large_attribute_set = {}
for i in range(20):
key = "key{}".format(i)
val = "val{}".format(i)
large_attribute_set[key] = val
meter = metrics.get_meter_provider().get_meter("sample")
# Counter
counter = meter.create_counter("attr1_counter")
counter.add(1, attribute_set1)
# Counter2
counter2 = meter.create_counter("attr2_counter")
counter2.add(10, attribute_set1)
counter2.add(30, attribute_set2)
# Counter3
counter3 = meter.create_counter("large_attr_counter")
counter3.add(100, attribute_set1)
counter3.add(200, large_attribute_set)
Tracing
The following sections provide several code snippets covering some of the most common tasks, including:
- Exporting a custom span
- Using an instrumentation to track a library
- Enabling sampling to limit the amount of telemetry sent
Review the OpenTelemetry Tracing SDK to learn how to use OpenTelemetry components to collect logs.
Export Hello World Trace
"""
An example to show an application using Opentelemetry tracing api and sdk. Custom dependencies are
tracked via spans and telemetry is exported to application insights with the AzureMonitorTraceExporter.
"""
import os
from opentelemetry import trace
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace import TracerProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace.export import BatchSpanProcessor
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorTraceExporter
tracer_provider = TracerProvider()
trace.set_tracer_provider(tracer_provider)
tracer = trace.get_tracer(__name__)
# This is the exporter that sends data to Application Insights
exporter = AzureMonitorTraceExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
span_processor = BatchSpanProcessor(exporter)
trace.get_tracer_provider().add_span_processor(span_processor)
with tracer.start_as_current_span("hello"):
print("Hello, World!")
# Telemetry records are flushed automatically upon application exit
# If you would like to flush records manually yourself, you can call force_flush()
tracer_provider.force_flush()
Instrumentation with requests library
OpenTelemetry also supports several instrumentations which allows to instrument with third party libraries.
For a list of instrumentations available in OpenTelemetry, visit the contrib documentation.
This example shows how to instrument with the requests library.
- Install the requests instrumentation package using pip install opentelemetry-instrumentation-requests.
"""
An example to show an application instrumented with the OpenTelemetry requests instrumentation.
Calls made with the requests library will be automatically tracked and telemetry is exported to
application insights with the AzureMonitorTraceExporter.
See more info on the requests instrumentation here:
https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-python-contrib/tree/main/instrumentation/opentelemetry-instrumentation-requests
"""
import os
import requests
from opentelemetry import trace
from opentelemetry.instrumentation.requests import RequestsInstrumentor
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace import TracerProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace.export import BatchSpanProcessor
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import AzureMonitorTraceExporter
# This line causes your calls made with the requests library to be tracked.
RequestsInstrumentor().instrument()
trace.set_tracer_provider(TracerProvider())
tracer = trace.get_tracer(__name__)
exporter = AzureMonitorTraceExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
span_processor = BatchSpanProcessor(exporter)
trace.get_tracer_provider().add_span_processor(span_processor)
# This request will be traced
response = requests.get(url="https://azure.microsoft.com/")
Enabling sampling
You can enable sampling to limit the amount of telemetry records you receive. In order to enable correct sampling in Application Insights, use the ApplicationInsightsSampler
as shown below.
"""
An example to show an application using the ApplicationInsightsSampler to enable sampling for your telemetry.
Specify a sampling rate for the sampler to limit the amount of telemetry records you receive. Custom dependencies
are tracked via spans and telemetry is exported to application insights with the AzureMonitorTraceExporter.
"""
import os
from opentelemetry import trace
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace import TracerProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace.export import BatchSpanProcessor
from azure.monitor.opentelemetry.exporter import (
ApplicationInsightsSampler,
AzureMonitorTraceExporter,
)
# Sampler expects a sample rate of between 0 and 1 inclusive
# A rate of 0.75 means approximately 75% of your telemetry will be sent
sampler = ApplicationInsightsSampler(0.75)
trace.set_tracer_provider(TracerProvider(sampler=sampler))
tracer = trace.get_tracer(__name__)
exporter = AzureMonitorTraceExporter(
connection_string=os.environ["APPLICATIONINSIGHTS_CONNECTION_STRING"]
)
span_processor = BatchSpanProcessor(exporter)
trace.get_tracer_provider().add_span_processor(span_processor)
for i in range(100):
# Approximately 25% of these spans should be sampled out
with tracer.start_as_current_span("hello"):
print("Hello, World!")
Flush/shutdown behavior
For all applications set up with OpenTelemetry SDK and Azure Monitor exporters, telemetry is flushed automatically upon application exit. Note that this does not include when application ends abruptly or crashes due to uncaught exception.
Troubleshooting
The exporter raises exceptions defined in Azure Core.
Next steps
More sample code
Please find further examples in the samples directory demonstrating common scenarios.
Additional documentation
For more extensive documentation on the Azure Monitor service, see the Azure Monitor documentation on docs.microsoft.com.
For detailed overview of OpenTelemetry, visit their overview page.
For the official OpenTelemetry Python documentation and how to enable other telemetry scenarios, visit the official OpenTelemetry website.
For more information on the Azure Monitor OpenTelemetry Distro, which is a bundle of useful, pre-assembled components (one of them being this current package) that enable telemetry scenarios with Azure Monitor, visit the README.
Contributing
This project welcomes contributions and suggestions. Most contributions require you to agree to a Contributor License Agreement (CLA) declaring that you have the right to, and actually do, grant us the rights to use your contribution. For details, visit https://cla.microsoft.com.
When you submit a pull request, a CLA-bot will automatically determine whether you need to provide a CLA and decorate the PR appropriately (e.g., label, comment). Simply follow the instructions provided by the bot. You will only need to do this once across all repos using our CLA.
This project has adopted the Microsoft Open Source Code of Conduct. For more information see the Code of Conduct FAQ or contact opencode@microsoft.com with any additional questions or comments.
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