Getting Started • API Documentation • Getting In Touch (GitHub Discussions)
The Python auto-instrumentation libraries for OpenTelemetry (per OTEP 0001)
This repository includes installable packages for each instrumented library. Libraries that produce telemetry data should only depend on opentelemetry-api
,
and defer the choice of the SDK to the application developer. Applications may
depend on opentelemetry-sdk
or another package that implements the API.
Please note that these libraries are currently in beta, and shouldn't generally be used in production environments.
Unless explicitly stated otherwise, any instrumentation here for a particular library is not developed or maintained by the authors of such library.
The
instrumentation/
directory includes OpenTelemetry instrumentation packages, which can be installed
separately as:
pip install opentelemetry-instrumentation-{integration}
To install the development versions of these packages instead, clone or fork this repo and do an editable install:
pip install -e ./instrumentation/opentelemetry-instrumentation-{integration}
Maintainers release new versions of the packages in opentelemetry-python-contrib
on a monthly cadence. See releases for all previous releases.
Contributions that enhance OTel for Python are welcome to be hosted upstream for the benefit of group collaboration. Maintainers will look for things like good documentation, good unit tests, and in general their own confidence when deciding to release a package with the stability guarantees that are implied with a 1.0
release.
To resolve this, members of the community are encouraged to commit to becoming a CODEOWNER for packages in -contrib
that they feel experienced enough to maintain. CODEOWNERS can then follow the checklist below to release -contrib
packages as 1.0 stable:
To release a package as 1.0
stable, the package:
- SHOULD have a CODEOWNER. To become one, submit an issue and explain why you meet the responsibilities found in CODEOWNERS.
- MUST have unit tests that cover all supported versions of the instrumented library.
- e.g. Instrumentation packages might use different techniques to instrument different major versions of python packages
- MUST have clear documentation for non-obvious usages of the package
- e.g. If an instrumentation package uses flags, a token as context, or parameters that are not typical of the
BaseInstrumentor
class, these are documented
- e.g. If an instrumentation package uses flags, a token as context, or parameters that are not typical of the
- After the release of
1.0
, a CODEOWNER may no longer feel like they have the bandwidth to meet the responsibilities of maintaining the package. That's not a problem at all, life happens! However, if that is the case, we ask that the CODEOWNER please raise an issue indicating that they would like to be removed as a CODEOWNER so that they don't get pinged on future PRs. Ultimately, we hope to use that issue to find a new CODEOWNER.
In our efforts to maintain optimal user experience and prevent breaking changes for transitioning into stable semantic conventions, OpenTelemetry Python is adopting the semantic convention migration plan for several instrumentations. Currently this plan is only being adopted for HTTP-related instrumentations, but will eventually cover all types. Please refer to the semconv status
column of the instrumentation README of the current status of instrumentations' semantic conventions. The possible values are experimental
, stable
and migration
referring to status of that particular semantic convention. Migration
refers to an instrumentation that currently supports the migration plan.
See CONTRIBUTING.md
We meet weekly on Thursday at 9AM PT. The meeting is subject to change depending on contributors' availability. Check the OpenTelemetry community calendar for specific dates and for the Zoom link.
Meeting notes are available as a public Google doc. For edit access, get in touch on GitHub Discussions.
Approvers (@open-telemetry/python-approvers):
- Emídio Neto, Zenvia
- Jeremy Voss, Microsoft
- Owais Lone, Splunk
- Pablo Collins, Splunk
- Sanket Mehta, Cisco
- Srikanth Chekuri, signoz.io
- Tammy Baylis, SolarWinds
Emeritus Approvers:
- Ashutosh Goel, Cisco
- Héctor Hernández, Microsoft
- Nikolay Sokolik, Oxeye
- Nikolay Sokolik, Oxeye
- Nathaniel Ruiz Nowell, AWS
Find more about the approver role in community repository.
Maintainers (@open-telemetry/python-maintainers):
- Aaron Abbott, Google
- Leighton Chen, Microsoft
- Riccardo Magliocchetti, Elastic
- Shalev Roda, Cisco
Emeritus Maintainers:
- Alex Boten, Lightstep
- Diego Hurtado, Lightstep
- Owais Lone, Splunk
- Yusuke Tsutsumi, Google
Find more about the maintainer role in community repository.