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This tutorial walks you through the steps for enabling tracing on a sample Java application installed in a container. In this scenario, the Datadog Agent is also installed in a container.
For other scenarios, including the application and Agent on a host, the application in a container and Agent on a host, the application and Agent on cloud infrastructure, and on applications written in other languages, see the other Enabling Tracing tutorials.
See Tracing Java Applications for general comprehensive tracing setup documentation for Java.
The code sample for this tutorial is on GitHub, at github.com/DataDog/apm-tutorial-java-host. To get started, clone the repository:
git clone https://github.com/DataDog/apm-tutorial-java-host.git
The repository contains a multi-service Java application pre-configured to be run within Docker containers. The sample app is a basic notes app with a REST API to add and change data. The docker-compose
YAML files are located in the docker
directory.
This tutorial uses the all-docker-compose.yaml
file, which builds containers for both the application and the Datadog Agent.
In each of the notes
and calendar
directories, there are two sets of Dockerfiles for building the applications, either with Maven or with Gradle. This tutorial uses the Maven build, but if you are more familiar with Gradle, you can use it instead with the corresponding changes to build commands.
Build the application’s container by running the following from inside the /docker
directory:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml build notes
If the build gets stuck, exit with Ctrl+C
and re-run the command.
Start the container:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml up notes
You can verify that it’s running by viewing the running containers with the docker ps
command.
Open up another terminal and send API requests to exercise the app. The notes application is a REST API that stores data in an in-memory H2 database running on the same container. Send it a few commands:
curl localhost:8080/notes
[]
curl -X POST 'localhost:8080/notes?desc=hello'
{"id":1,"description":"hello"}
curl localhost:8080/notes/1
{"id":1,"description":"hello"}
curl localhost:8080/notes
[{"id":1,"description":"hello"}]
After you’ve seen the application running, stop it so that you can enable tracing on it.
Stop the containers:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml down
Remove the containers:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml rm
Now that you have a working Java application, configure it to enable tracing.
Add the Java tracing package to your project. Because the Agent runs in a container, ensure that the Dockerfiles are configured properly, and there is no need to install anything. Open the notes/dockerfile.notes.maven
file and uncomment the line that downloads dd-java-agent
:
RUN curl -Lo dd-java-agent.jar 'https://dtdg.co/latest-java-tracer'
Within the same notes/dockerfile.notes.maven
file, comment out the ENTRYPOINT
line for running without tracing. Then uncomment the ENTRYPOINT
line, which runs the application with tracing enabled:
ENTRYPOINT ["java" , "-javaagent:../dd-java-agent.jar", "-Ddd.trace.sample.rate=1", "-jar" , "target/notes-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar"]
This automatically instruments the application with Datadog services.
Universal Service Tags identify traced services across different versions and deployment environments so that they can be correlated within Datadog, and so you can use them to search and filter. The three environment variables used for Unified Service Tagging are DD_SERVICE
, DD_ENV
, and DD_VERSION
. For applications deployed with Docker, these environment variables can be added within the Dockerfile or the docker-compose
file.
For this tutorial, the all-docker-compose.yaml
file already has these environment variables defined:
environment:
- DD_SERVICE=notes
- DD_ENV=dev
- DD_VERSION=0.0.1
You can also see that Docker labels for the same Universal Service Tags service
, env
, and version
values are set in the Dockerfile. This allows you also to get Docker metrics once your application is running.
labels:
- com.datadoghq.tags.service="notes"
- com.datadoghq.tags.env="dev"
- com.datadoghq.tags.version="0.0.1"
Add the Datadog Agent in the services section of your all-docker-compose.yaml
file to add the Agent to your build:
Uncomment the Agent configuration, and specify your own Datadog API key and site:
datadog-agent:
container_name: datadog-agent
image: "gcr.io/datadoghq/agent:latest"
pid: host
environment:
- DD_API_KEY=<DD_API_KEY_HERE>
- DD_SITE=datadoghq.com # Default. Change to eu.datadoghq.com, us3.datadoghq.com, us5.datadoghq.com as appropriate for your org
- DD_APM_ENABLED=true
- DD_APM_NON_LOCAL_TRAFFIC=true
volumes:
- /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
- /proc/:/host/proc/:ro
- /sys/fs/cgroup:/host/sys/fs/cgroup:ro
Uncomment the depends_on
fields for datadog-agent
in the notes
container.
Observe that in the notes
service section, the DD_AGENT_HOST
environment variable is set to the hostname of the Agent container. Your notes
container section looks like this:
notes:
container_name: notes
restart: always
build:
context: ../
dockerfile: notes/dockerfile.notes.maven
ports:
- 8080:8080
labels:
- com.datadoghq.tags.service="notes"
- com.datadoghq.tags.env="dev"
- com.datadoghq.tags.version="0.0.1"
environment:
- DD_SERVICE=notes
- DD_ENV=dev
- DD_VERSION=0.0.1
- DD_AGENT_HOST=datadog-agent
# - CALENDAR_HOST=calendar
depends_on:
# - calendar
- datadog-agent
You’ll configure the calendar
sections and variables later in this tutorial.
Now that the Tracing Library is installed, restart your application and start receiving traces. Run the following commands:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml build notes
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml up notes
You can tell the Agent is working by observing continuous output in the terminal, or by opening the Events Explorer in Datadog and seeing the start event for the Agent:
With the application running, send some curl requests to it:
curl localhost:8080/notes
[]
curl -X POST 'localhost:8080/notes?desc=hello'
{"id":1,"description":"hello"}
curl localhost:8080/notes/1
{"id":1,"description":"hello"}
curl localhost:8080/notes
[{"id":1,"description":"hello"}]
Wait a few moments, and go to APM > Traces in Datadog, where you can see a list of traces corresponding to your API calls:
The h2
is the embedded in-memory database for this tutorial, and notes
is the Spring Boot application. The traces list shows all the spans, when they started, what resource was tracked with the span, and how long it took.
If you don’t see traces after several minutes, clear any filter in the Traces Search field (sometimes it filters on an environment variable such as ENV
that you aren’t using).
On the Traces page, click on a POST /notes
trace to see a flame graph that shows how long each span took and what other spans occurred before a span completed. The bar at the top of the graph is the span you selected on the previous screen (in this case, the initial entry point into the notes application).
The width of a bar indicates how long it took to complete. A bar at a lower depth represents a span that completes during the lifetime of a bar at a higher depth.
The flame graph for a POST
trace looks something like this:
A GET /notes
trace looks something like this:
The Java tracing library uses Java’s built-in agent and monitoring support. The flag -javaagent:../dd-java-agent.jar
in the Dockerfile tells the JVM where to find the Java tracing library so it can run as a Java Agent. Learn more about Java Agents at https://www.baeldung.com/java-instrumentation.
The dd.trace.sample.rate
flag sets the sample rate for this application. The ENTRYPOINT command in the Dockerfile sets its value to 1
, which means that 100% of all requests to the notes
service are sent to the Datadog backend for analysis and display. For a low-volume test application, this is fine. Do not do this in production or in any high-volume environment, because this results in a very large volume of data. Instead, sample some of your requests. Pick a value between 0 and 1. For example, -Ddd.trace.sample.rate=0.1
sends traces for 10% of your requests to Datadog. Read more about tracing configuration settings and sampling mechanisms.
Notice that the sampling rate flag in the command appears before the -jar
flag. That’s because this is a parameter for the Java Virtual Machine, not your application. Make sure that when you add the Java Agent to your application, you specify the flag in the right location.
Automatic instrumentation is convenient, but sometimes you want more fine-grained spans. Datadog’s Java DD Trace API allows you to specify spans within your code using annotations or code.
The following steps walk you through adding annotations to the code to trace some sample methods.
Open /notes/src/main/java/com/datadog/example/notes/NotesHelper.java
. This example already contains commented-out code that demonstrates the different ways to set up custom tracing on the code.
Uncomment the lines that import libraries to support manual tracing:
import datadog.trace.api.Trace;
import datadog.trace.api.DDTags;
import io.opentracing.Scope;
import io.opentracing.Span;
import io.opentracing.Tracer;
import io.opentracing.tag.Tags;
import io.opentracing.util.GlobalTracer;
import java.io.PrintWriter;
import java.io.StringWriter
Uncomment the lines that manually trace the two public processes. These demonstrate the use of @Trace
annotations to specify aspects such as operationName
and resourceName
in a trace:
@Trace(operationName = "traceMethod1", resourceName = "NotesHelper.doLongRunningProcess")
// ...
@Trace(operationName = "traceMethod2", resourceName = "NotesHelper.anotherProcess")
You can also create a separate span for a specific code block in the application. Within the span, add service and resource name tags and error handling tags. These tags result in a flame graph showing the span and metrics in Datadog visualizations. Uncomment the lines that manually trace the private method:
Tracer tracer = GlobalTracer.get();
// Tags can be set when creating the span
Span span = tracer.buildSpan("manualSpan1")
.withTag(DDTags.SERVICE_NAME, "NotesHelper")
.withTag(DDTags.RESOURCE_NAME, "privateMethod1")
.start();
try (Scope scope = tracer.activateSpan(span)) {
// Tags can also be set after creation
span.setTag("postCreationTag", 1);
Thread.sleep(30);
Log.info("Hello from the custom privateMethod1");
And also the lines that set tags on errors:
} catch (Exception e) {
// Set error on span
span.setTag(Tags.ERROR, true);
span.setTag(DDTags.ERROR_MSG, e.getMessage());
span.setTag(DDTags.ERROR_TYPE, e.getClass().getName());
final StringWriter errorString = new StringWriter();
e.printStackTrace(new PrintWriter(errorString));
span.setTag(DDTags.ERROR_STACK, errorString.toString());
Log.info(errorString.toString());
} finally {
span.finish();
}
Update your Maven build by opening notes/pom.xml
and uncommenting the lines configuring dependencies for manual tracing. The dd-trace-api
library is used for the @Trace
annotations, and opentracing-util
and opentracing-api
are used for manual span creation.
Rebuild the containers:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml build notes
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml up notes
Resend some HTTP requests, specifically some GET
requests.
On the Trace Explorer, click on one of the new GET
requests, and see a flame graph like this:
Note the higher level of detail in the stack trace now that the getAll
function has custom tracing.
The privateMethod
around which you created a manual span now shows up as a separate block from the other calls and is highlighted by a different color. The other methods where you used the @Trace
annotation show under the same service and color as the GET
request, which is the notes
application. Custom instrumentation is valuable when there are key parts of the code that need to be highlighted and monitored.
For more information, read Custom Instrumentation.
Tracing a single application is a great start, but the real value in tracing is seeing how requests flow through your services. This is called distributed tracing.
The sample project includes a second application called calendar
that returns a random date whenever it is invoked. The POST
endpoint in the Notes application has a second query parameter named add_date
. When it is set to y
, Notes calls the calendar application to get a date to add to the note.
Configure the calendar app for tracing by adding dd-java-agent
to the startup command in the Dockerfile, like you previously did for the notes app. Open calendar/Dockerfile.calendar.maven
and see that it is already downloading dd-java-agent
:
RUN curl -Lo dd-java-agent.jar 'https://dtdg.co/latest-java-tracer'
Within the same calendar/dockerfile.calendar.maven
file, comment out the ENTRYPOINT
line for running without tracing. Then uncomment the ENTRYPOINT
line, which runs the application with tracing enabled:
ENTRYPOINT ["java" , "-javaagent:../dd-java-agent.jar", "-Ddd.trace.sample.rate=1", "-jar" , "target/calendar-0.0.1-SNAPSHOT.jar"]
Open docker/all-docker-compose.yaml
and uncomment the environment variables for the calendar
service to set up the Agent host and Unified Service Tags for the app and for Docker:
calendar:
container_name: calendar
restart: always
build:
context: ../
dockerfile: calendar/dockerfile.calendar.maven
labels:
- com.datadoghq.tags.service="calendar"
- com.datadoghq.tags.env="dev"
- com.datadoghq.tags.version="0.0.1"
environment:
- DD_SERVICE=calendar
- DD_ENV=dev
- DD_VERSION=0.0.1
- DD_AGENT_HOST=datadog-agent
ports:
- 9090:9090
depends_on:
- datadog-agent
In the notes
service section, uncomment the CALENDAR_HOST
environment variable and the calendar
entry in depends_on
to make the needed connections between the two apps:
notes:
...
environment:
- DD_SERVICE=notes
- DD_ENV=dev
- DD_VERSION=0.0.1
- DD_AGENT_HOST=datadog-agent
- CALENDAR_HOST=calendar
depends_on:
- calendar
- datadog-agent
Build the multi-service application by restarting the containers. First, stop all running containers:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml down
Then run the following commands to start them:
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml build
docker-compose -f all-docker-compose.yaml up
After all the containers are up, send a POST request with the add_date
parameter:
curl -X POST 'localhost:8080/notes?desc=hello_again&add_date=y'
{"id":1,"description":"hello_again with date 2022-11-06"}
In the Trace Explorer, click this latest trace to see a distributed trace between the two services:
Note that you didn’t change anything in the notes
application. Datadog automatically instruments both the okHttp
library used to make the HTTP call from notes
to calendar
, and the Jetty library used to listen for HTTP requests in notes
and calendar
. This allows the trace information to be passed from one application to the other, capturing a distributed trace.
If you’re not receiving traces as expected, set up debug mode for the Java tracer. Read Enable debug mode to find out more.
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