Back to Skills

instrument-distributed-tracing

pjt222
Updated 2 days ago
8 views
17
2
17
View on GitHub
Testinggeneral

About

This skill helps developers instrument applications with OpenTelemetry for distributed tracing. It covers both auto and manual instrumentation, context propagation, and integration with backends like Jaeger or Tempo. Use it to debug latency issues, understand request flows across microservices, and correlate traces with logs and metrics.

Quick Install

Claude Code

Recommended
Primary
npx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code
Plugin CommandAlternative
/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac
Git CloneAlternative
git clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/instrument-distributed-tracing

Copy and paste this command in Claude Code to install this skill

Documentation

Instrument Distributed Tracing

Wire OpenTelemetry. Track requests cross microservices. Find slow spots.

When Use

  • Debug latency cross many services
  • Follow request flow, see service deps
  • Spot slow DB queries, slow API calls inside transaction
  • Tie traces to logs and metrics for root cause
  • Measure end-to-end latency: user req to response
  • Migrate old tracing (Zipkin, Jaeger) to OpenTelemetry
  • Prove SLO compliance via latency percentiles

Inputs

  • Required: List of services to instrument (languages, frameworks)
  • Required: Backend choice (Jaeger, Tempo, Zipkin, vendor SaaS)
  • Optional: Existing instrumentation libs (OpenTracing, Zipkin)
  • Optional: Sampling strategy (percent, rate limit)
  • Optional: Custom span attrs for business metadata

Steps

See Extended Examples for complete configuration files and templates.

Step 1: Stand Up Backend

Deploy Jaeger or Grafana Tempo. Receive, store traces.

Option A: Jaeger all-in-one (dev/test):

# docker-compose.yml
version: '3.8'
services:
  jaeger:
    image: jaegertracing/all-in-one:1.51
    ports:
      - "5775:5775/udp"   # Zipkin compact thrift
      - "6831:6831/udp"   # Jaeger compact thrift
      - "6832:6832/udp"   # Jaeger binary thrift
      - "5778:5778"       # Serve configs
      - "16686:16686"     # Jaeger UI
      - "14268:14268"     # Jaeger HTTP thrift
      - "14250:14250"     # Jaeger GRPC
      - "9411:9411"       # Zipkin compatible endpoint
    environment:
      - COLLECTOR_ZIPKIN_HOST_PORT=:9411
      - COLLECTOR_OTLP_ENABLED=true
    restart: unless-stopped

Option B: Grafana Tempo (prod, scales):

# docker-compose.yml
version: '3.8'
services:
  tempo:
    image: grafana/tempo:2.3.0
    command: ["-config.file=/etc/tempo.yaml"]
    volumes:
      - ./tempo.yaml:/etc/tempo.yaml
      - tempo-data:/tmp/tempo
    ports:
      - "3200:3200"   # Tempo HTTP
      - "4317:4317"   # OTLP gRPC
      - "4318:4318"   # OTLP HTTP
      - "9411:9411"   # Zipkin
    restart: unless-stopped

volumes:
  tempo-data:

Tempo config (tempo.yaml):

server:
  http_listen_port: 3200

distributor:
  receivers:
    jaeger:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

For prod with S3 storage:

storage:
  trace:
    backend: s3
    s3:
      bucket: tempo-traces
      endpoint: s3.amazonaws.com
      region: us-east-1
    wal:
      path: /tmp/tempo/wal
    pool:
      max_workers: 100
      queue_depth: 10000

Got: Backend live. Ready for traces over OTLP. Jaeger UI or Grafana shows "no traces" first.

If fail:

  • Ports in use? netstat -tulpn | grep -E '(4317|16686|3200)'
  • Container logs: docker logs jaeger or docker logs tempo
  • Test OTLP endpoint: curl http://localhost:4318/v1/traces -v
  • For Tempo: check config syntax with tempo -config.file=/etc/tempo.yaml -verify-config

Step 2: Instrument Apps (Auto)

Use OpenTelemetry auto-instrumentation. Common frameworks. Minimal code change.

Python with Flask:

pip install opentelemetry-distro opentelemetry-exporter-otlp
opentelemetry-bootstrap -a install
# app.py
from flask import Flask
from opentelemetry import trace
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace import TracerProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace.export import BatchSpanProcessor
from opentelemetry.exporter.otlp.proto.grpc.trace_exporter import OTLPSpanExporter
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Go with Gin framework:

go get go.opentelemetry.io/otel
go get go.opentelemetry.io/otel/exporters/otlp/otlptrace/otlptracegrpc
go get go.opentelemetry.io/otel/sdk/trace
go get go.opentelemetry.io/contrib/instrumentation/github.com/gin-gonic/gin/otelgin
package main

import (
    "context"
    "github.com/gin-gonic/gin"
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel"
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Node.js with Express:

npm install @opentelemetry/api \
            @opentelemetry/sdk-node \
            @opentelemetry/auto-instrumentations-node \
            @opentelemetry/exporter-trace-otlp-grpc
// tracing.js
const { NodeSDK } = require('@opentelemetry/sdk-node');
const { OTLPTraceExporter } = require('@opentelemetry/exporter-trace-otlp-grpc');
const { getNodeAutoInstrumentations } = require('@opentelemetry/auto-instrumentations-node');
const { Resource } = require('@opentelemetry/resources');
const { SemanticResourceAttributes } = require('@opentelemetry/semantic-conventions');
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Got: Traces from instrumented services show in Jaeger UI or Grafana. HTTP requests auto-create spans.

If fail:

  • Exporter endpoint reachable from app?
  • Env vars set: OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT=http://tempo:4317
  • Turn on debug logs: OTEL_LOG_LEVEL=debug (Python), OTEL_LOG_LEVEL=DEBUG (Node.js)
  • Test with simple span — verify export pipe
  • Check for version conflicts across OTel packages

Step 3: Add Manual Instrumentation

Custom spans for business logic, DB queries, external calls.

Python manual spans:

from opentelemetry import trace

tracer = trace.get_tracer(__name__)

def process_order(order_id):
    # Create a span for the entire operation
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Go manual spans:

import (
    "context"
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel"
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel/attribute"
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel/codes"
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel/trace"
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Span attrs best practice:

  • Use semantic conventions: http.method, http.status_code, db.system, db.statement
  • Business context: user.id, order.id, product.category
  • Resource IDs: instance.id, region, availability_zone
  • Record errors: span.RecordError(err) + span.SetStatus(codes.Error, message)
  • Events for milestones: span.AddEvent("cache_miss")

Got: Custom spans in trace view. Parent-child right. Attrs visible in span details. Errors highlighted.

If fail:

  • Context propagation: parent span context passed to child?
  • Span names descriptive, follow naming conventions?
  • Spans ended? (defer span.End() in Go, with blocks in Python)
  • Attr types: strings, ints, bools, floats only
  • Semantic conventions: use standard attr names where applicable

Step 4: Wire Context Propagation

Trace context must flow cross service boundaries, async ops.

HTTP headers propagation (W3C Trace Context):

# Client side (Python with requests)
import requests
from opentelemetry import trace
from opentelemetry.propagate import inject

tracer = trace.get_tracer(__name__)
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
// Server side (Go with Gin)
import (
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel"
    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel/propagation"
)

# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Message queue propagation (Kafka):

# Producer
from opentelemetry.propagate import inject
from kafka import KafkaProducer

producer = KafkaProducer(bootstrap_servers=['kafka:9092'])

# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)
# Consumer
from opentelemetry.propagate import extract

def process_message(msg):
    # Extract trace context from Kafka headers
    headers = {k: v.decode('utf-8') for k, v in msg.headers}
    ctx = extract(headers)

    # Continue the trace
    with tracer.start_as_current_span("process_order_event", context=ctx):
        order_id = json.loads(msg.value)['order_id']
        handle_order(order_id)

Async ops (Python asyncio):

import asyncio
from opentelemetry import trace, context

async def async_operation():
    # Capture current context
    token = context.attach(context.get_current())
    try:
        with tracer.start_as_current_span("async_database_query"):
            await asyncio.sleep(0.1)  # Simulated async work
            return "result"
    finally:
        context.detach(token)

Got: Traces span many services. Trace IDs consistent cross boundaries. Parent-child preserved.

If fail:

  • W3C Trace Context propagator configured? otel.propagation.set_global_textmap(TraceContextTextMapPropagator())
  • Headers passed in HTTP requests?
  • Kafka: headers supported by broker version (v0.11+)?
  • Debug: log traceparent header value
  • Use trace viz to spot broken links

Step 5: Set Sampling Strategy

Sample to cut volume and cost. Keep visibility.

Sampling strategies:

from opentelemetry.sdk.trace import TracerProvider
from opentelemetry.sdk.trace.sampling import (
    ParentBased,
    TraceIdRatioBased,
    StaticSampler,
    Decision
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Tail-based sampling with Tempo:

In tempo.yaml:

overrides:
  defaults:
    metrics_generator:
      processors: [service-graphs, span-metrics]
      storage:
        path: /tmp/tempo/generator/wal
        remote_write:
          - url: http://prometheus:9090/api/v1/write
            send_exemplars: true

    # Tail sampling (requires tempo-query)
    ingestion_rate_limit_bytes: 5000000
    ingestion_burst_size_bytes: 10000000

Use Grafana Tempo's TraceQL for dynamic sampling:

# Sample traces with errors
{ status = error }

# Sample slow traces (>1s)
{ duration > 1s }

# Sample specific services
{ resource.service.name = "checkout-service" }

Got: Trace volume cut to target percent. Error traces always sampled. Sampling decision in trace metadata.

If fail:

  • Sampler applied before tracer provider init?
  • Sampling decision attr in exported spans?
  • Tail sampling: enough buffering? (ingestion_burst_size_bytes)
  • Watch dropped traces: otel_traces_dropped_total metric
  • Test with synthetic high-volume traffic to validate rate

Step 6: Tie Traces to Metrics and Logs

Link traces, metrics, logs. Unified observability.

Add trace IDs to logs (Python):

import logging
from opentelemetry import trace

# Custom log formatter with trace context
class TraceFormatter(logging.Formatter):
    def format(self, record):
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Generate metrics from traces (Tempo):

# tempo.yaml
metrics_generator:
  registry:
    external_labels:
      cluster: production
  storage:
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete configuration)

Makes Prometheus metrics:

  • traces_service_graph_request_total - request count between services
  • traces_span_metrics_duration_seconds - span duration histogram
  • traces_spanmetrics_calls_total - span call counts

Query traces from metrics (Grafana):

Add exemplar support to Prometheus datasource in Grafana:

datasources:
  - name: Prometheus
    type: prometheus
    url: http://prometheus:9090
    jsonData:
      exemplarTraceIdDestinations:
        - name: trace_id
          datasourceName: Tempo

In Grafana dashboard, turn on exemplars:

{
  "fieldConfig": {
    "defaults": {
      "custom": {
        "showExemplars": true
      }
    }
  }
}

Got: Click metric exemplar opens trace. Logs show trace IDs. Traces link to logs. Unified debugging cross signals.

If fail:

  • Exemplar support on in Prometheus (v2.26+)?
  • Trace ID format matches (32-char hex)?
  • Metrics generator on in Tempo config?
  • Remote write endpoint reachable from Tempo?
  • Test exemplar queries: histogram_quantile(0.95, rate(http_request_duration_seconds_bucket[5m])) and on() exemplar

Checks

  • Backend receives spans from all instrumented services
  • Traces show right parent-child cross services
  • Span attrs include semantic conventions + business context
  • Context propagates cross HTTP and message queues
  • Sampling cuts volume to target percent
  • Error traces always sampled (if error-aware sampling)
  • Trace IDs in app logs, right format
  • Grafana shows traces linked from metrics via exemplars
  • Log panels have data links to trace viewer
  • Trace retention matches storage policy

Pitfalls

  • Context not propagated: Forgot to pass context downstream → broken traces. Pass context explicit.
  • Spans never ended: Missing defer span.End() (Go) or with blocks (Python) → open spans, memory leaks.
  • Over-instrumentation: Span for every function bloats traces. Focus on service boundaries, DB calls, external APIs.
  • Missing error recording: Skip span.RecordError() → lose debug info. Always record errors in spans.
  • High cardinality attrs: Unbounded values (user IDs, request bodies) as span attrs → storage pain. Sample or aggregate.
  • Wrong span kind: CLIENT vs SERVER vs INTERNAL mixed up → wrong service graph. Follow semantic conventions.
  • Sampling before context: Sampling must respect parent context. Use ParentBased sampler.

See Also

  • correlate-observability-signals - Unified debugging across metrics, logs, traces by trace ID
  • setup-prometheus-monitoring - Metrics from traces via Tempo generator
  • configure-log-aggregation - Trace IDs in logs for correlation
  • build-grafana-dashboards - Viz trace-derived metrics and exemplars

GitHub Repository

pjt222/agent-almanac
Path: i18n/caveman/skills/instrument-distributed-tracing
0
agentsagentskillsai-assisted-developmentclaude-codeskillsteams

Related Skills

evaluating-llms-harness

Testing

This Claude Skill runs the lm-evaluation-harness to benchmark LLMs across 60+ standardized academic tasks like MMLU and GSM8K. It's designed for developers to compare model quality, track training progress, or report academic results. The tool supports various backends including HuggingFace and vLLM models.

View skill

cloudflare-cron-triggers

Testing

This skill provides comprehensive knowledge for implementing Cloudflare Cron Triggers to schedule Workers using cron expressions. It covers setting up periodic tasks, maintenance jobs, and automated workflows while handling common issues like invalid cron expressions and timezone problems. Developers can use it for configuring scheduled handlers, testing cron triggers, and integrating with Workflows and Green Compute.

View skill

webapp-testing

Testing

This Claude Skill provides a Playwright-based toolkit for testing local web applications through Python scripts. It enables frontend verification, UI debugging, screenshot capture, and log viewing while managing server lifecycles. Use it for browser automation tasks but run scripts directly rather than reading their source code to avoid context pollution.

View skill

finishing-a-development-branch

Testing

This skill helps developers complete finished work by verifying tests pass and then presenting structured integration options. It guides the workflow for merging, creating PRs, or cleaning up branches after implementation is done. Use it when your code is ready and tested to systematically finalize the development process.

View skill