brave.context.log4j2.ThreadContextScopeDecorator Java Examples
The following examples show how to use
brave.context.log4j2.ThreadContextScopeDecorator.
You can vote up the ones you like or vote down the ones you don't like,
and go to the original project or source file by following the links above each example. You may check out the related API usage on the sidebar.
Example #1
Source File: TracingConfiguration.java From java-tutorial with Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 International | 5 votes |
/** Controls aspects of tracing such as the service name that shows up in the UI */ @Bean Tracing tracing(@Value("${zipkin.service:brave-webmvc-example}") String serviceName) { return Tracing.newBuilder() .localServiceName(serviceName) .propagationFactory(ExtraFieldPropagation.newFactory(B3Propagation.FACTORY, "user-name")) .currentTraceContext(ThreadLocalCurrentTraceContext.newBuilder() .addScopeDecorator(ThreadContextScopeDecorator.create()) // puts trace IDs into logs .build() ) .spanReporter(spanReporter()).build(); }
Example #2
Source File: EndToEndBenchmarks.java From brave with Apache License 2.0 | 5 votes |
public TracedCorrelated() { super(Tracing.newBuilder() .currentTraceContext(ThreadLocalCurrentTraceContext.newBuilder() // intentionally added twice to test overhead of multiple correlations .addScopeDecorator(ThreadContextScopeDecorator.get()) .addScopeDecorator(ThreadContextScopeDecorator.get()) .build()) .addSpanHandler(new SpanHandler() { // intentionally not NOOP to ensure spans report }) .build()); }
Example #3
Source File: TracingConfiguration.java From brave-webmvc-example with MIT License | 4 votes |
/** Allows log patterns to use {@code %{traceId}} {@code %{spanId}} and {@code %{userName}} */ @Bean ScopeDecorator correlationScopeDecorator() { return ThreadContextScopeDecorator.newBuilder() .add(SingleCorrelationField.create(USER_NAME)).build(); }