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Cloud-Native Observability with OpenTelemetry

You're reading from   Cloud-Native Observability with OpenTelemetry Learn to gain visibility into systems by combining tracing, metrics, and logging with OpenTelemetry

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801077705
Length 386 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Alex Boten Alex Boten
Author Profile Icon Alex Boten
Alex Boten
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: The Basics
2. Chapter 1: The History and Concepts of Observability FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: OpenTelemetry Signals – Traces, Metrics, and Logs 4. Chapter 3: Auto-Instrumentation 5. Section 2: Instrumenting an Application
6. Chapter 4: Distributed Tracing – Tracing Code Execution 7. Chapter 5: Metrics – Recording Measurements 8. Chapter 6: Logging – Capturing Events 9. Chapter 7: Instrumentation Libraries 10. Section 3: Using Telemetry Data
11. Chapter 8: OpenTelemetry Collector 12. Chapter 9: Deploying the Collector 13. Chapter 10: Configuring Backends 14. Chapter 11: Diagnosing Problems 15. Chapter 12: Sampling 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Technical requirements

At the time of writing, OpenTelemetry for Python supports Python 3.6+. All Python examples in this book will use Python 3.8, which can be downloaded and installed by following the instructions at https://docs.python.org/3/using/index.html. The following command can verify which version of Python is installed. It's possible for multiple versions to be installed simultaneously on a single system, which is why both python and python3 are shown here:

$ python --version
$ python3 --version

It is recommended to use a virtual environment to run the examples in this book (https://docs.python.org/3/library/venv.html). A virtual environment in Python allows you to install packages in isolation from the rest of the system, meaning that if anything goes wrong, you can always delete the virtual environment and start a fresh one. The following commands will create a new virtual environment in a folder called cloud_native_observability:

$ mkdir cloud_native_observability...
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