This document briefly describes context, which refers to state, and to context propagation, which refers to passing state information to child operations. For distributed tracing, the trace ID and the ID of the span being processed must be passed to child operations.
Child operations create a span and set the following fields:
- Span ID: A unique identifier for the child operation. If the same operation is executed multiple times, then there are multiple spans for that operation, each with a unique identifier.
- Trace ID: The unique identifier of the end-to-end operation in which this particular overall operation took place. The value of this field is provided by the parent.
- Parent span ID: The unique identifier of parent's span.
The value of this field is provided by the parent.
For root spans, this ID is
null
.
The values of the trace ID, span ID, and parent span ID fields let a distributed tracing system correctly link spans together to form a trace. For example, Cloud Trace stores spans in a repository, and it uses these ID fields to identify which spans compose a trace.
Context might include other state information that is useful for distributed tracing. For example, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) standard includes information about whether the parent span was sampled.
Protocols for context propagation
The following sections describe how specific request protocols propagate context.
HTTP requests
For HTTP requests, context propagation is typically accomplished through
HTTP headers such as the traceparent
and tracestate
headers, which were
standardized by W3C.
Google Cloud services that support trace context propagation typically support
both the traceparent
and the legacy X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header.
When possible, we recommend that you use the
traceparent
header in your applications. Your
application might need to use the legacy X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header or it
might need to support receiving trace context in a different format.
If you have an application that only supports the X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header, then we recommend that you update your application to support, and
prioritize, the traceparent
header. Your application can continue to use the
X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header as a fallback solution.
The following table summarizes some significant differences between the two headers:
Attribute | traceparent header |
X-Cloud-Trace-Context header |
---|---|---|
Separators | hyphens (-) |
forward slash (/) and semicolon (;) |
Span ID representation |
Hexadecimal | Decimal |
Legacy X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header
The X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header that is used by Google Cloud predates the
W3C specification.
For backwards compatibility, some Google Cloud services continue to accept,
generate, and propagate the X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header. However, it is
likely that these systems also support the traceparent
header.
The X-Cloud-Trace-Context
header has the following format:
X-Cloud-Trace-Context: TRACE_ID/SPAN_ID;o=OPTIONS
The fields of header are defined as follows:
TRACE_ID
is a 32-character hexadecimal value representing a 128-bit number.SPAN_ID
is a 64-bit decimal representation of the unsigned span ID.OPTIONS
supports0
(parent not sampled) and1
(parent was sampled).
gRPC requests
For gRPC requests, context propagation is accomplished using
gRPC metadata, which is implemented on top of HTTP headers.
gRPC applications might use the traceparent
header or a
metadata context key called grpc-trace-bin
.
For components that you own, we recommend that you use the traceparent
header.
Context propagation for Google Cloud services
Google Cloud services might act as initiators or intermediaries in request processing. For example, the following services are known to participate in processing requests:
- Apigee
- App Engine
- Cloud Endpoints
- Cloud Run functions
- Cloud Load Balancing
- Cloud Run
- Cloud Scheduler
- Cloud Tasks
- Pub/Sub
Support for trace context initiation and propagation is dependent on the particular Google Cloud service. To request that a Google Cloud service add support for context propagation, use the Google Issue Tracker.
Context propagation in your applications
Some instrumentation libraries, such as OpenTelemetry,
automatically propagate a context
object that contains the data necessary
for tracing. If you use these types of libraries, then the spans
generated by your application are properly configured. For a list of
OpenTelemetry libraries that support tracing, see
Language APIs & SDKs. For an instrumentation
example, see Generate traces and metrics with Go.
If you rely on an open-source library, then determine whether context propagation is available and whether configuration is required.
When there isn't a suitable instrumentation library, you must ensure that your application propagates the trace context to child operations.
What's next
Learn about Trace sampling.
OpenTelemetry resources: