[Dynatrace
] integration for applications instrumented with [OpenTelemetry
].
[OpenTelemetry
] is a collection of tools, APIs, and SDKs used to instrument,
generate, collect, and export telemetry data (metrics, logs, and traces) for
analysis in order to understand your software's performance and behavior. This
crate provides additional propagators and exporters for sending telemetry data
to [Dynatrace
].
This exporter only supports the ingestion of metric data. For trace data, use
[opentelemetry-otlp
] as described in the
[Dynatrace documentation for Rust]. This exporter is based on the OpenTelemetry
Metrics SDK for Rust, which is currently in an alpha state and neither
considered stable nor complete as of this writing. As such, this exporter is
not intended for production use until the underlying OpenTelemetry Metrics API
and SDK are stable. See [open-telemetry/opentelemetry-rust
] for the current
state of the OpenTelemetry SDK for Rust.
The examples directory contains an advanced example showing the ingestion of trace data and metric data together.
For optimal performance, a batch exporter is used. You can enable the rt-tokio
feature flag to use the [tokio
] runtime, or enable the rt-async-std
feature
flag to use the [async-std
] runtime to have a batch exporter configured for
you automatically.
The HTTP client that this exporter will use can be overridden with feature
flags. By default the reqwest-client
feature flag is enabled which will use
the [reqwest
] http client.
reqwest-client
(enabled by default): use the [reqwest
] http client to send metric data.reqwest-tls
(enabled by default): use the [reqwest
] http client with [rustls
] to enable TLS support.reqwest-blocking-client
: use the [reqwest
] blocking http client to send metric data.isahc-client
: use the [isahc
] http client to send metric data.surf-client
: use the [surf
] http client to send metric data.You can also configure your own http client implementation using the HttpClient
trait.
WebAssembly support can be enabled with the wasm
feature flag.