opentelemetry_semantic_conventions::attribute

Constant SERVICE_INSTANCE_ID

source
pub const SERVICE_INSTANCE_ID: &str = "service.instance.id";
Expand description

The string ID of the service instance.

§Notes

MUST be unique for each instance of the same service.namespace,service.name pair (in other words service.namespace,service.name,service.instance.id triplet MUST be globally unique). The ID helps to distinguish instances of the same service that exist at the same time (e.g. instances of a horizontally scaled service).

Implementations, such as SDKs, are recommended to generate a random Version 1 or Version 4 RFC 4122 UUID, but are free to use an inherent unique ID as the source of this value if stability is desirable. In that case, the ID SHOULD be used as source of a UUID Version 5 and SHOULD use the following UUID as the namespace: 4d63009a-8d0f-11ee-aad7-4c796ed8e320.

UUIDs are typically recommended, as only an opaque value for the purposes of identifying a service instance is needed. Similar to what can be seen in the man page for the /etc/machine-id file, the underlying data, such as pod name and namespace should be treated as confidential, being the user’s choice to expose it or not via another resource attribute.

For applications running behind an application server (like unicorn), we do not recommend using one identifier for all processes participating in the application. Instead, it’s recommended each division (e.g. a worker thread in unicorn) to have its own instance.id.

It’s not recommended for a Collector to set service.instance.id if it can’t unambiguously determine the service instance that is generating that telemetry. For instance, creating an UUID based on pod.name will likely be wrong, as the Collector might not know from which container within that pod the telemetry originated. However, Collectors can set the service.instance.id if they can unambiguously determine the service instance for that telemetry. This is typically the case for scraping receivers, as they know the target address and port.

§Examples

  • "627cc493-f310-47de-96bd-71410b7dec09"