The documentation you are viewing is for Dapr v1.10 which is an older version of Dapr. For up-to-date documentation, see the latest version.
How-To: Set up Jaeger for distributed tracing
Dapr supports the Zipkin protocol. Since Jaeger is compatible with Zipkin, the Zipkin protocol can be used to communication with Jaeger.
Configure self hosted mode
Setup
The simplest way to start Jaeger is to use the pre-built all-in-one Jaeger image published to DockerHub:
docker run -d --name jaeger \
-e COLLECTOR_ZIPKIN_HOST_PORT=:9412 \
-p 16686:16686 \
-p 9412:9412 \
jaegertracing/all-in-one:1.22
Next, create the following YAML files locally:
- config.yaml: Note that because we are using the Zipkin protocol
to talk to Jaeger, we specify the
zipkin
section of tracing configuration set theendpointAddress
to address of the Jaeger instance.
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Configuration
metadata:
name: tracing
namespace: default
spec:
tracing:
samplingRate: "1"
zipkin:
endpointAddress: "http://localhost:9412/api/v2/spans"
To launch the application referring to the new YAML file, you can use
--config
option:
dapr run --app-id mynode --app-port 3000 node app.js --config config.yaml
Viewing Traces
To view traces, in your browser go to http://localhost:16686 to see the Jaeger UI.
Configure Kubernetes
The following steps shows you how to configure Dapr to send distributed tracing data to Jaeger running as a container in your Kubernetes cluster, how to view them.
Setup
First create the following YAML file to install Jaeger, file name is jaeger-operator.yaml
Development and test
By default, the allInOne Jaeger image uses memory as the backend storage and it is not recommended to use this in a production environment.
apiVersion: jaegertracing.io/v1
kind: "Jaeger"
metadata:
name: jaeger
spec:
strategy: allInOne
ingress:
enabled: false
allInOne:
image: jaegertracing/all-in-one:1.22
options:
query:
base-path: /jaeger
Production
Jaeger uses Elasticsearch as the backend storage, and you can create a secret in k8s cluster to access Elasticsearch server with access control.
kubectl create secret generic jaeger-secret --from-literal=ES_PASSWORD='xxx' --from-literal=ES_USERNAME='xxx' -n ${NAMESPACE}
apiVersion: jaegertracing.io/v1
kind: "Jaeger"
metadata:
name: jaeger
spec:
strategy: production
query:
options:
log-level: info
query:
base-path: /jaeger
collector:
maxReplicas: 5
resources:
limits:
cpu: 500m
memory: 516Mi
storage:
type: elasticsearch
esIndexCleaner:
enabled: false ## turn the job deployment on and off
numberOfDays: 7 ## number of days to wait before deleting a record
schedule: "55 23 * * *" ## cron expression for it to run
image: jaegertracing/jaeger-es-index-cleaner ## image of the job
secretName: jaeger-secret
options:
es:
server-urls: http://elasticsearch:9200
The pictures are as follows, include Elasticsearch and Grafana tracing data:
Now, use the above YAML file to install Jaeger
# Install Jaeger
helm repo add jaegertracing https://jaegertracing.github.io/helm-charts
helm install jaeger-operator jaegertracing/jaeger-operator
kubectl apply -f jaeger-operator.yaml
# Wait for Jaeger to be up and running
kubectl wait deploy --selector app.kubernetes.io/name=jaeger --for=condition=available
Next, create the following YAML file locally:
- tracing.yaml
apiVersion: dapr.io/v1alpha1
kind: Configuration
metadata:
name: tracing
namespace: default
spec:
tracing:
samplingRate: "1"
zipkin:
endpointAddress: "http://jaeger-collector.default.svc.cluster.local:9411/api/v2/spans"
Finally, deploy the the Dapr component and configuration files:
kubectl apply -f tracing.yaml
In order to enable this configuration for your Dapr sidecar, add the following annotation to your pod spec template:
annotations:
dapr.io/config: "tracing"
That’s it! Your Dapr sidecar is now configured for use with Jaeger.
Viewing Tracing Data
To view traces, connect to the Jaeger Service and open the UI:
kubectl port-forward svc/jaeger-query 16686
In your browser, go to http://localhost:16686
and you will see the Jaeger UI.
References
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