Spring Cloud Sleuth
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Spring Cloud Sleuth
Adrian Cole, Spencer Gibb, Marcin Grzejszczak, Dave Syer
Table of Contents
1. Introduction
1.1. Terminology
1.2. Purpose
1.2.1. Distributed tracing with Zipkin
1.2.2. Visualizing errors
1.2.3. Live examples
1.2.4. Log correlation
JSON Logback with Logstash
1.2.5. Propagating Span Context
Baggage vs. Span Tags
1.3. Adding to the project
1.3.1. Only Sleuth (log correlation)
1.3.2. Sleuth with Zipkin via HTTP
1.3.3. Sleuth with Zipkin via RabbitMQ or Kafka
2. Additional resources
3. Features
4. Sampling
5. Instrumentation
6. Span lifecycle
6.1. Creating and closing spans
6.2. Continuing spans
6.3. Creating spans with an explicit parent
7. Naming spans
7.1. @SpanName annotation
7.2. toString() method
8. Managing spans with annotations
8.1. Rationale
8.2. Creating new spans
8.3. Continuing spans
8.4. More advanced tag setting
8.4.1. Custom extractor
8.4.2. Resolving expressions for value
8.4.3. Using toString method
9. Customizations
9.1. Spring Integration
9.2. HTTP
9.3. Example
9.4. TraceFilter
9.5. Custom SA tag in Zipkin
9.6. Custom service name
9.7. Customization of reported spans
9.8. Host locator
10. Sending spans to Zipkin
11. Span Data as Messages
11.1. Zipkin Consumer
11.2. Custom Consumer
12. Metrics
13. Integrations
13.1. Runnable and Callable
13.2. Hystrix
13.2.1. Custom Concurrency Strategy
13.2.2. Manual Command setting
13.3. RxJava
13.4. HTTP integration
13.4.1. HTTP Filter
13.4.2. HandlerInterceptor
13.4.3. Async Servlet support
13.5. HTTP client integration
13.5.1. Synchronous Rest Template
13.5.2. Asynchronous Rest Template
Multiple Asynchronous Rest Templates
13.5.3. Traverson
13.6. Feign
13.7. Asynchronous communication
13.7.1. @Async annotated methods
13.7.2. @Scheduled annotated methods
13.7.3. Executor, ExecutorService and ScheduledExecutorService
Customization of Executors
13.8. Messaging
13.9. Zuul
13.10. Spring Cloud Function
14. Running examples