Welcome to OpenTelemetry Java repository!
Before you start - see OpenTelemetry general contributing requirements and recommendations.
If you want to add new features or change behavior, please make sure your changes follow the OpenTelemetry Specification. Otherwise file an issue or submit a PR to the specification repo first.
Make sure to review the projects license and sign the CNCF CLA. A signed CLA will be enforced by an automatic check once you submit a PR, but you can also sign it after opening your PR.
Java 11 or higher is required to build the projects in this repository. The built artifacts can be used on Java 8 or higher.
Continuous integration builds the project, runs the tests, and runs multiple types of static analysis.
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Note: Currently, to run the full suite of tests, you'll need to be running a docker daemon. The tests that require docker are disabled if docker is not present. If you wish to run them, you must run a local docker daemon.
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Clone the repository
git clone https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-java.git
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Run the following commands to build, run tests and most static analysis, and check formatting:
./gradlew build
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If you are a Windows user, use the alternate command mentioned below to run tests and check formatting:
gradlew.bat
Before submitting a PR, you should make sure the style checks and unit tests pass. You can run these
with the check
task.
$ ./gradlew check
Note: this gradle task will potentially generate changes to files in the docs/apidiffs/current_vs_latest
directory. Please make sure to include any changes to these files in your pull request.
After you submit a PR, it will be reviewed by the project maintainers and approvers. Not all maintainers need to review a particular PR, but merging to the base branch is authorized to restricted members (administrators).
We follow the Google Java Style Guide. Our build will fail if source code is not formatted according to that style. To fix any style failures the above checks show, automatically apply the formatting with:
$ ./gradlew spotlessApply
To verify code style manually run the following command, which uses google-java-format library:
./gradlew spotlessCheck
- This project uses semantic versioning. Except for major versions, a user should be able to update their dependency version on this project and have nothing break. This means we do not make breaking changes to the API (e.g., remove a public method) or to the ABI (e.g., change return type from void to non-void).
- Avoid exposing publicly any class/method/variable that don't need to be public.
- By default, all arguments/members are treated as non-null. Every argument/member that can be
null
must be annotated with@Nullable
. - The project aims to provide a consistent experience across all the public APIs. It is important to ensure consistency (same look and feel) across different public packages.
- Use
final
for public classes everywhere it is possible, this ensures that these classes cannot be extended when the API does not intend to offer that functionality. - In general, we use the following ordering of class members:
- static fields (final before non-final)
- non-static fields (final before non-final)
- constructors
- static methods
- instance methods
- inner classes
- Adding
toString()
overrides on classes is encouraged, but we only usetoString()
to provide debugging assistance. The implementations of alltoString()
methods should be considered to be unstable unless explicitly documented otherwise.
If you notice any practice being applied in the project consistently that isn't listed here, please consider a pull request to add it.
To completely delegate code style formatting to the machine,
you can add git pre-commit hook.
We provide an example script in buildscripts/pre-commit
file.
Just copy or symlink it into .git/hooks
folder.
As additional convenience for IntelliJ Idea users, we provide .editorconfig
file.
Idea will automatically use it to adjust its code formatting settings.
It does not support all required rules, so you still have to run spotlessApply
from time to time.
- All public classes and their public and protected methods MUST have javadoc. It MUST be complete (all params documented etc.) Everything else (package-protected classes, private) MAY have javadoc, at the code writer's whim. It does not have to be complete, and reviewers are not allowed to require or disallow it.
- Each API element should have a
@since
tag specifying the minor version when it was released (or the next minor version). - There MUST be NO javadoc errors.
- See section 7.3.1 in the guide for exceptions to the Javadoc requirement.
- Reviewers may request documentation for any element that doesn't require Javadoc, though the style of documentation is up to the author.
- Try to do the least amount of change when modifying existing documentation. Don't change the style unless you have a good reason.
- We do not use
@author
tags in our javadoc. - Our javadoc is available via [javadoc.io}(https://javadoc.io/doc/io.opentelemetry/opentelemetry-api)
- Use AutoValue, when possible, for any new value classes. Remember to add package-private constructors to all AutoValue classes to prevent classes in other packages from extending them.
- Unit tests target Java 8, so language features such as lambda and streams can be used in tests.
The OTLP proto dependency version is defined here. To bump the version,
- Find the latest release version here
- Download the zip source code archive
- Run
shasum -a 256 ~/path/to/downloaded.zip
to compute its checksum - Update
protoVersion
andprotoChecksum
in the build file with the new version and checksum