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Metrics and attributes collected by the Splunk OTel Java agent πŸ”—

The agent of the Splunk Distribution of OpenTelemetry Java collects the following application metrics data and attributes in addition to all that the upstream OpenTelemetry agent collects. To learn about the different metric types, see Metric types.

Caution

OpenTelemetry Java Instrumentation 2.x contains a set of breaking changes, introduced as part of recent OpenTelemetry HTTP semantic convention updates. To migrate, see Migration guide for OpenTelemetry Java 2.x metrics.

Application metrics πŸ”—

The agent of the Splunk Distribution of OpenTelemetry Java collects the following application metrics.

Default metric dimensions πŸ”—

The following dimensions are automatically added to all metrics exported by the agent:

Dimension

Description

deployment.environment

Value of the deployment.environment resource attribute, if present.

runtime

Value of the process.runtime.name resource attribute, for example OpenJDK Runtime Environment.

process.pid

The Java process identifier (PID).

container.id

Identifier of the container, if applicable.

host.name

Name of the host.

service

Value of the service.name resource attribute.

Supported libraries πŸ”—

The agent collects the following metrics through the following libraries:

Library/Framework

Instrumentation

Supported versions

JVM metrics

jvm-metrics-splunk

Java runtimes version 8 and higher

Apache DBCP2 connection pool metrics

commons-dbcp2-splunk

Version 2.0 and higher

c3p0 connection pool metrics

c3p0-splunk

Version 0.9.5 and higher

HikariCP connection pool metrics

hikaricp-splunk

Version 3.0 and higher

Oracle Universal Connection Pool metrics (UCP)

oracle-ucp-splunk

Version 11.2.0.4 and higher

Tomcat JDBC connection pool metrics

tomcat-jdbc-splunk

Version 8.5 and higher

Vibur DBCP connection pool metrics

vibur-dbcp-splunk

Version 20.0 and higher

JVM metrics πŸ”—

The Splunk OTel Java agent collects the following Java Virtual Machine (JVM) metrics when metric collection is activated.

ClassLoader metrics πŸ”—

The agent collects the following ClassLoader metrics:

Metric

Type

Description

jvm.class.count

UpDown counter

Number of loaded classes.

jvm.class.unloaded

Counter

Total number of unloaded classes since the process started.

Garbage collection metrics πŸ”—

The agent collects the following garbage collection (GC) metrics:

Metric

Type

Description

jvm.gc.duration{jvm.gc.name=<concurrent gcs>}

Histogram

Time spent in concurrent phase, in milliseconds.

jvm.memory.allocated

Counter

Increase in the size of the young heap memory pool after 1 garbage collection and before the next.

Memory metrics πŸ”—

The agent collects the following memory metrics:

Metric

Type

Description

jvm.memory.allocated

Counter

Total number of bytes allocated by JVM threads since the previous data point was emitted. Use the rate per second rollup.

jvm.buffer.count

UpDown counter

An estimate of the number of buffers in the pool.

jvm.buffer.memory.usage

UpDown counter

An estimate of the memory that the JVM is using for this buffer pool, in bytes.

jvm.buffer.memory.limit

UpDown counter

An estimate of the total capacity of the buffers in this pool, in bytes.

jvm.memory.committed

UpDown counter

Amount of memory available to the JVM, in bytes.

jvm.memory.limit

UpDown counter

Maximum amount of memory available for memory management, in bytes.

jvm.memory.used

UpDown counter

Amount of used memory, in bytes.

Thread metrics πŸ”—

The agent collects the following thread metrics:

Metric

Type

Description

jvm.thread.count

UpDown counter

Number of live threads, including daemon and nondaemon threads.

Connection pool metrics πŸ”—

The Splunk Distribution of OpenTelemetry Java instruments several Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) connection pool implementations:

  • Apache DBCP2

  • c3p0

  • HikariCP

  • Oracle Universal Connection Pool (UCP)

  • Tomcat JDBC

  • Vibur DBCP

Each of the connection pools reports a subset of the following metrics:

Metric

Type

Description

db.client.connections.usage[state=used]

Gauge

Number of open connections that are in use.

db.client.connections.usage[state=idle]

Gauge

Number of open connections that are idle.

db.client.connections.idle.max

Gauge

Maximum number of idle open connections allowed.

db.client.connections.idle.min

Gauge

Minimum number of idle open connections allowed.

db.client.connections.max

Gauge

Maximum number of open connections allowed.

db.client.connections.pending_requests

Gauge

Number of threads that are waiting for an open connection.

db.client.connections.timeouts

Counter

Number of connection timeouts that have happened since the application started.

db.client.connections.create_time

Histogram

Time it took to create a new connection, in milliseconds.

db.client.connections.wait_time

Histogram

Time it took to get an open connection from the pool, in milliseconds.

db.client.connections.use_time

Histogram

Time between borrowing a connection and returning it to the pool, in milliseconds.

WebEngine attributes πŸ”—

The Splunk Distribution of OpenTelemetry Java captures data about the application server and adds the following attributes to SERVER spans:

Span attribute

Description

webengine.name

Name of the applications server. For example, tomcat.

webengine.version

Version of the application server.

For a list of supported application servers, see the Supported libraries and frameworks.

New metric names πŸ”—

The following table shows the metrics produced by default by OpenTelemetry Java 2.0 and higher, together with their legacy equivalent from version 1.x.

OTel Java 2.0 metric

Legacy metric (1.x)

db.client.connections.create_time (Histogram, ms)

db.pool.connections.create_time

db.client.connections.idle.max

db.pool.connections.idle.max

db.client.connections.idle.min

db.pool.connections.idle.min

db.client.connections.max

db.pool.connections.max

db.client.connections.pending_requests

db.pool.connections.pending_threads

db.client.connections.timeouts

db.pool.connections.timeouts

db.client.connections.usage[state=idle]

db.pool.connections.idle

db.client.connections.usage[state=used]

db.pool.connections.active

db.client.connections.use_time (Histogram, ms)

db.pool.connections.use_time

db.client.connections.wait_time (Histogram, ms)

db.pool.connections.wait_time

jvm.buffer.count

runtime.jvm.buffer.count

jvm.buffer.memory.limit

runtime.jvm.buffer.total.capacity

jvm.buffer.memory.usage

runtime.jvm.buffer.memory.used

jvm.class.count

runtime.jvm.classes.loaded

jvm.class.unloaded

runtime.jvm.classes.unloaded

jvm.gc.duration{jvm.gc.name=<concurrent gcs>} (Histogram)
jvm.gc.action

runtime.jvm.gc.concurrent.phase.time

jvm.gc.duration{jvm.gc.name!=<concurrent gcs>}
jvm.gc.action

runtime.jvm.gc.pause

jvm.memory.allocated*

runtime.jvm.gc.memory.allocated
process.runtime.jvm.memory.allocated

jvm.memory.committed

runtime.jvm.memory.committed

jvm.memory.limit

runtime.jvm.memory.max

jvm.memory.limit{jvm.memory.pool.name=<long lived pools>}

runtime.jvm.gc.max.data.size

jvm.memory.used

runtime.jvm.memory.used

jvm.memory.used_after_last_gc{jvm.memory.pool.name=<long lived pools>}

runtime.jvm.gc.live.data.size

jvm.thread.count

runtime.jvm.threads.daemon
runtime.jvm.threads.live

* This is a Splunk-specific metric and it’s not present in the upstream semantic conventions.

Note

The previous table contains metrics generated by default. Additional metrics might be emitted by supported metrics instrumentation, for example when instrumenting application servers.

For more information on the HTTP semantic convention changes, see HTTP semantic convention stability migration guide on GitHub.

Deactivate metrics export πŸ”—

To turn off logs export to Splunk Observability Cloud, set the OTEL_METRICS_EXPORTER environment variable or the otel.metrics.exporter system property to none.

This page was last updated on Dec 11, 2024.