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Archival Notice

❗Notice: This project has been archived as is and is no longer actively maintained.

Rather than developing a Go specific OpenTelemetry exporter New Relic is now offering native OTLP ingest.

The current recommended approaches for sending OpenTelemetry data to the New Relic is to configure your OpenTelemetry data source to send data to the native OpenTelemetry Protocol (OTLP) data ingestion endpoint. OTLP is an open source gRPC based protocol for sending telemetry data. The protocol is vendor agnostic and open source. Applications can export data directly to New Relic via OTLP, or first to the OpenTelemetry Collector and then on to New Relic via OTLP.

For more details please see:


New Relic Go OpenTelemetry exporter GoDoc

The "github.com/newrelic/opentelemetry-exporter-go/newrelic" package provides an exporter for sending OpenTelemetry data to New Relic. Currently, traces and the latest metric instruments (as of v0.19 of Open Telemetry for Go) are supported.

Getting Started

Go OpenTelemetry

OpenTelemetry is a set of vendor-neutral tools, APIs, SDKs, and an optional collector service for capturing distributed traces and metrics from your application. New Relic’s Go OpenTelemetry Exporter makes it easy for you to export your captured data to your New Relic account.

To help you get started, this guide shows you how to set up a tiny Go application to send spans and metrics to New Relic. If you have an application that already uses an existing framework like gin or beego, it’s worth your time to go through the steps below, and then check out the many auto-instrumentation options in the opentelemetry-go-contrib repository.

Get Started

Here’s what you need to get started exporting OpenTelemetry spans and metrics to New Relic:

  • Make sure you have signed up for a New Relic account.
  • Obtain an Insights Event Insert API Key to send spans and metrics to New Relic. (In that guide, you only need to proceed as far as obtaining a new key, the rest of the steps are optional.)

At this point, you have a couple of alternatives:

  • If you just want to see it working quickly, we have a tiny sample application set up for you right here, already set up to export data to your New Relic account. Once you have it checked out, skip to Running the sample application in this document.
  • If you’re starting from scratch, review the Go OpenTelemetry Getting Started Guide. This excellent guide will walk you through creating a tiny sample application that generates spans and metrics, and outputs text to your terminal. Then modify your sample application to send data to New Relic using the instructions below.

Lastly, view your data in the New Relic One UI. Very satisfying!

Modify the OpenTelemetry sample application

Here’s what to do to switch out the text-based exporter defined in the Go OpenTelemetry SIG’s Getting Started Guide with the New Relic OpenTelemetry Exporter for Go.

There are three steps to get it reporting to New Relic:

  1. replace an import statement, and add some imports
  2. instantiate a newrelic exporter with some configuration options
  3. set the span.kind for a better UI experience in New Relic

Full source of this modified sample application is available in examples/simple/main.go.

  1. Replace the exporter import clause. Switch this:

    "go.opentelemetry.io/otel/exporters/stdout"

    ...with this:

    "github.com/newrelic/opentelemetry-exporter-go/newrelic"

    You'll also need to add some imports, if they're missing:

    "os"
    "fmt"
    "github.com/newrelic/newrelic-telemetry-sdk-go/telemetry"
    
  2. Rather than instantiate a stdout exporter, instantiate a newrelic exporter. Replace this:

     exporter, err := stdout.NewExporter(
         stdout.WithPrettyPrint(),
     )
     if err != nil {
         log.Fatalf("failed to initialize stdout export pipeline: %v", err)
     }
     ctx := context.Background()

    ...with this:

     apiKey, ok := os.LookupEnv("NEW_RELIC_API_KEY")
     if !ok {
     	fmt.Println("Missing NEW_RELIC_API_KEY required for New Relic OpenTelemetry Exporter")
     	os.Exit(1)
     }
    
     exporter, err := newrelic.NewExporter(
     	"Simple OpenTelemetry Service",
     	apiKey,
     	telemetry.ConfigBasicErrorLogger(os.Stderr),
     	telemetry.ConfigBasicDebugLogger(os.Stderr),
     	telemetry.ConfigBasicAuditLogger(os.Stderr),
     )
     if err != nil {
     	fmt.Printf("Failed to instantiate New Relic OpenTelemetry exporter: %v\n", err)
     	os.Exit(1)
     }
    
     ctx := context.Background()
     defer exporter.Shutdown(ctx)

    There are four things to notice above:

    • The configuration reads the Insights Insert Key you obtained earlier from an environment variable called NEW_RELIC_API_KEY. Keep this key safe from others, since it’s both identification and authentication in one handy token.

    • This exporter uses Simple OpenTelemetry Service as its service name. This is the name you will see in the New Relic One UI.

    • The configuration turns on all the logging it can for the purposes of this demo. To have a more silent exporter with lower overhead, remove those three lines.

    • Once we have the context (ctx), we defer the Shutdown function so the exporter has a chance to flush any accumulated data to the New Relic Metrics and Traces endpoints.

  3. This example generates a parent span and a child span. For the parent, set the kind of span to "server" to get the best experience in the New Relic UI.

    Change:

    		ctx, span = tracer.Start(ctx, "operation")
    

    ...to:

    		ctx, span = tracer.Start(ctx, "operation",
    			trace.WithSpanKind(trace.SpanKindServer))
    

You’re now set! If you’re not using go mod, you’ll need to download the exporter using the go get command:

go get github.com/newrelic/opentelemetry-exporter-go

Running the sample application

To see it in action, just use go run with the Insights Insert API Key set in the environment:

NEW_RELIC_API_KEY=NRII-REPLACE_THIS_KEY run main.go

Note that the key above isn’t a valid key -- replace it with your own.

Run that line a couple of times to send some data into New Relic.

View your data in the New Relic One UI

To see span data

Go to the New Relic One UI in your web browser, click the magnifying glass in the upper right corner and type your service name, which is Simple OpenTelemetry Service if you didn't change it from the example. New Relic searches through everything your user has permissions to see and will show you a link to the application. If you’re using a web framework, you’ll see a Summary overview containing response time, throughput, and errors. To see just the spans, click the “Distributed Tracing” header on the left.

Image of Span Data in New Relic One

To see metric data

Go to the New Relic One UI in your web browser, click the "Query your data" link in the upper right corner, select your account, and then try this query: SELECT * FROM Metric where entity.name like 'Simple OpenTelemetry Service'

Image of Span Data in New Relic One

For more tips on how to find and query your data in New Relic, see Find trace/span data.

For general querying information, see:

This exporter is built on alpha software

This exporter is built with the alpha release of OpenTelemetry Go client. Due to the rapid development of OpenTelemetry, this exporter does not guarantee compatibility with future releases of the OpenTelemetry APIs. Additionally, this exporter may introduce changes that are not backwards compatible without a major version increment. We will strive to ensure backwards compatibility when a stable version of the OpenTelemetry Go client is released.

Support

Should you need assistance with New Relic products, you are in good hands with several support channels.

If the issue has been confirmed as a bug or is a feature request, file a GitHub issue.

Support Channels

Privacy

At New Relic we take your privacy and the security of your information seriously, and are committed to protecting your information. We must emphasize the importance of not sharing personal data in public forums, and ask all users to scrub logs and diagnostic information for sensitive information, whether personal, proprietary, or otherwise.

We define “Personal Data” as any information relating to an identified or identifiable individual, including, for example, your name, phone number, post code or zip code, Device ID, IP address, and email address.

For more information, review New Relic’s General Data Privacy Notice.

Contribute

We encourage your contributions to improve opentelemetry-exporter-go! Keep in mind that when you submit your pull request, you'll need to sign the CLA via the click-through using CLA-Assistant. You only have to sign the CLA one time per project.

If you have any questions, or to execute our corporate CLA (which is required if your contribution is on behalf of a company), drop us an email at [email protected].

A note about vulnerabilities

As noted in our security policy, New Relic is committed to the privacy and security of our customers and their data. We believe that providing coordinated disclosure by security researchers and engaging with the security community are important means to achieve our security goals.

If you believe you have found a security vulnerability in this project or any of New Relic's products or websites, we welcome and greatly appreciate you reporting it to New Relic through HackerOne.

If you would like to contribute to this project, review these guidelines.

To all contributors, we thank you! Without your contribution, this project would not be what it is today. We also host a community project page dedicated to Project Name.

License

opentelemetry-exporter-go is licensed under the Apache 2.0 License.

Limitations

The New Relic Telemetry APIs are rate limited. Please reference the documentation for New Relic Metrics API and New Relic Trace API requirements and limits on the specifics of the rate limits.