Semantic Conventions for Exceptions
Status: Experimental
This document defines semantic conventions for recording application exceptions.
Recording an Exception
An exception SHOULD be recorded as an Event
on the span during which it occurred.
The name of the event MUST be "exception"
.
A typical template for an auto-instrumentation implementing this semantic convention
using an API-provided recordException
method
could look like this (pseudo-Java):
Span span = myTracer.startSpan(/*...*/);
try {
// Code that does the actual work which the Span represents
} catch (Throwable e) {
span.recordException(e, Attributes.of("exception.escaped", true));
throw e;
} finally {
span.end();
}
Attributes
The table below indicates which attributes should be added to the Event
and
their types.
Attribute | Type | Description | Examples | Required |
---|---|---|---|---|
exception.type |
string | The type of the exception (its fully-qualified class name, if applicable). The dynamic type of the exception should be preferred over the static type in languages that support it. | java.net.ConnectException ; OSError |
See below |
exception.message |
string | The exception message. | Division by zero ; Can't convert 'int' object to str implicitly |
See below |
exception.stacktrace |
string | A stacktrace as a string in the natural representation for the language runtime. The representation is to be determined and documented by each language SIG. | Exception in thread "main" java.lang.RuntimeException: Test exception\n at com.example.GenerateTrace.methodB(GenerateTrace.java:13)\n at com.example.GenerateTrace.methodA(GenerateTrace.java:9)\n at com.example.GenerateTrace.main(GenerateTrace.java:5) |
No |
exception.escaped |
boolean | SHOULD be set to true if the exception event is recorded at a point where it is known that the exception is escaping the scope of the span. [1] | No |
[1]: An exception is considered to have escaped (or left) the scope of a span,
if that span is ended while the exception is still logically “in flight”.
This may be actually “in flight” in some languages (e.g. if the exception
is passed to a Context manager’s __exit__
method in Python) but will
usually be caught at the point of recording the exception in most languages.
It is usually not possible to determine at the point where an exception is thrown whether it will escape the scope of a span. However, it is trivial to know that an exception will escape, if one checks for an active exception just before ending the span, as done in the example above.
It follows that an exception may still escape the scope of the span
even if the exception.escaped
attribute was not set or set to false,
since the event might have been recorded at a time where it was not
clear whether the exception will escape.
Additional attribute requirements: At least one of the following sets of attributes is required:
exception.type
exception.message
Stacktrace Representation
The table below, adapted from Google Cloud, includes possible representations of stacktraces in various languages. The table is not meant to be a recommendation for any particular language, although SIGs are free to adopt them if they see fit.
Language | Format |
---|---|
C# | the return value of Exception.ToString() |
Go | the return value of runtime.Stack |
Java | the contents of Throwable.printStackTrace() |
Javascript | the return value of error.stack as returned by V8 |
Python | the return value of traceback.format_exc() |
Ruby | the return value of Exception.full_message |
Backends can use the language specified methodology for generating a stacktrace combined with platform information from the telemetry sdk resource in order to extract more fine grained information from a stacktrace, if necessary.