Status: Stable
Table of Contents
This document defines the stability guarantees offered by the OpenTelemetry clients, along with the rules and procedures for meeting those guarantees.
In this document, the terms "OpenTelemetry" and "language implementations" both specifically refer to the OpenTelemetry clients. These terms do not refer to the specification or the Collector in this document.
Each language implementation MUST take these versioning and stability requirements, and produce a language-specific document which details how these requirements will be met.
This document MUST be placed in the root of each repo and named VERSIONING
or VERSIONING.md
.
Versioning and stability procedures are designed to meet the following goals.
Ensure that application owners stay up to date with the latest release of the SDK. We want all users to stay up to date with the latest version of the OpenTelemetry SDK. We do not want to create hard breaks in support, of any kind, which leave users stranded on older versions. It MUST always be possible to upgrade to the latest minor version of the OpenTelemetry SDK, without creating compilation or runtime errors.
Never create a dependency conflict between packages which rely on different versions of OpenTelemetry. Avoid breaking all stable public APIs. Backwards compatibility is a strict requirement. Instrumentation APIs cannot create a version conflict, ever. Otherwise, the OpenTelemetry API cannot be embedded in widely shared libraries, such as web frameworks. Code written against older versions of the API MUST work with all newer versions of the API. Transitive dependencies of the API cannot create a version conflict. The OpenTelemetry API cannot depend on a particular package if there is any chance that any library or application may require a different, incompatible version of that package. A library that imports the OpenTelemetry API should never become incompatible with other libraries due to a version conflict in one of OpenTelemetry's dependencies. Theoretically, APIs can be deprecated and eventually removed, but this is a process measured in years and we have no plans to do so.
Allow for multiple levels of package stability within the same release of an OpenTelemetry component. Provide maintainers a clear process for developing new signals in Development status alongside stable signals. Different packages within the same release may have different levels of stability. This means that an implementation wishing to release stable tracing today MUST ensure that in-development metrics are factored out in such a way that breaking changes to metrics API do not destabilize the trace API packages.
The development of each signal follows a lifecycle: development, stable, deprecated, removed.
The infographic below shows an example of the lifecycle of an API component.
Signals start in Development status as defined by OTEP 0232. While signals are in development, breaking changes and performance issues MAY occur. Components SHOULD NOT be expected to be feature-complete. In some cases, the signal in Development MAY be discarded and removed entirely. Long-term dependencies SHOULD NOT be taken against signals in Development.
OpenTelemetry clients MUST be designed in a manner that allows signals in Development to be created without breaking the stability guarantees of existing signals.
OpenTelemetry clients MUST NOT be designed in a manner that breaks existing users when a signal transitions from Development to Stable. This would punish users of the release candidate, and hinder adoption.
Terms which denote stability, such as "development", MUST NOT be used as part of a directory or import name. Package version numbers MAY include a suffix, such as -alpha, -beta, -rc, or -development, to differentiate packages in different statuses.
Note that "Development" status was previously called "Experimental" in this repository. Any uses of "Experimental" should be treated same as "Development".
Once a signal in Development has gone through rigorous testing, it MAY transition to Stable. Long-term dependencies MAY now be taken against this signal.
All signal components MAY become stable together, or MAY transition to stability component-by-component. The API MUST become stable before the other components.
Once a signal component is marked as stable, the following rules MUST apply until the end of that signal’s existence.
Backward-incompatible changes to API packages MUST NOT be made unless the major version number is incremented. All existing API calls MUST continue to compile and function against all future minor versions of the same major version.
Languages which ship binary artifacts SHOULD offer ABI compatibility for API packages.
Public portions of SDK packages MUST remain backwards compatible. There are two categories of public features: plugin interfaces and constructors. A plugin interface is an extension point provided by the SDK which is intended to be implemented by end users in order to customize SDK behaviors. Examples of plugins interfaces include SpanProcessor, Exporter, and Sampler. Examples of constructors include configuration objects, environment variables, and SDK builders.
Languages which ship binary artifacts SHOULD offer ABI compatibility for SDK packages.
An existing API/SDK call MAY be extended without incrementing the major version number if the particular language allows to do it in a backward-compatible manner.
To add a new parameter to an existing API/SDK call depending on the language several approaches are possible:
-
Add a new optional parameter to existing methods. This may not be the right approach for languages where ABI stability is part of our guarantees since it likely breaks the ABI.
-
Add a method overload that allows passing a different set of parameters, that include the new parameter. This is likely the preferred approach for languages where method overloads are possible.
Similarly, existing SDK plugin interfaces MAY be extended with new methods without incrementing the major version number if the particular language allows to do it in a backward-compatible manner (e.g. by providing default implementations). Hereby, backwards-compatible means that end user's code that implements the plugin interfaces MUST continue to be possible to use with newer versions of the SDK without making changes to the end user's code. For languages that commonly share code via binary artifacts, e.g. Java, backwards-compatible means that end user's code that implements plugin interfaces MUST continue to be possible to use with newer minor or patch versions without recompiling the end user's code.
If this backwards compatible addition of methods to interfaces is not possible for a language, the language maintainers MAY still implement the addition using backwards-compatible workarounds without incrementing the major version. For example, a possible workaround might be to add a new interface instead of extending the existing one and accept the new interface in addition to the old one in every place.
There may be other ways to extend existing API/SDKs in non-breaking manner. Language maintainers SHOULD choose the idiomatic way for their language.
Plugins, instrumentation, and other contrib packages SHOULD be kept up to date and compatible with the latest versions of the API, SDK, and Semantic Conventions. If a release of the API, SDK, or Semantic Conventions contains changes which are relevant to a contrib package, that package SHOULD be updated and released in a timely fashion. (See limitations on instrumentation stability in Telemetry Stability.) The goal is to ensure users can update to the latest version of OpenTelemetry, and not be held back by the plugins that they depend on.
Public portions of contrib packages (constructors, configuration, interfaces) SHOULD remain backwards compatible.
Languages which ship binary artifacts SHOULD offer ABI compatibility for contrib packages.
Exception: Contrib packages MAY break stability when a required downstream dependency breaks stability. For example, a database integration may break stability if the required database client breaks stability. However, it is strongly RECOMMENDED that older contrib packages remain stable. A new, incompatible version of an integration SHOULD be released as a separate contrib package, rather than break the existing contrib package.
Warning There is a moratorium on relying on schema transformations for telemetry stability.
Semantic conventions define a contract between the signals that instrumentation will provide and analysis tools that consumes the instrumentation (e.g. dashboards, alerts, queries, etc.).
Changes to telemetry produced by OpenTelemetry instrumentation SHOULD avoid breaking analysis tools, such as dashboards and alerts. To achieve this, while allowing the evolution of telemetry and semantic conventions, OpenTelemetry relies on the concept of Telemetry Schemas.
Semantic Conventions defines breaking changes as those that would break the common usage of tooling written against the telemetry it produces. That is, the portions of telemetry where specialized tooling (alerts, dashboards, e.g.) interact are expected to remain stable for that tooling after schema transformations are applied. These also assume no user interventions in the default configuration, e.g. Samplers, Views, etc.
Semantic Conventions defines the set of fields in the OTLP data model:
- Resource
- attribute keys. (The key section of attributes key value pairs)
- InstrumentationScope
- Attribute keys
- provided to get a tracer
- provided to get a meter
- Attribute values that are defined in a list of well-known values.
- Attribute keys
- Trace
- The following data on span:
- The span name
- The span kind
- The attribute keys provided to the span
- Whether these attributes must be provided at span start time, due to sampling concerns.
- The attribute values provided to the span that are defined in a list of well-known values.
- The following data provided on span events
- The event name
- The attribute keys provided for the event
- The attribute values provided for the event that are defined in a list of well-known values.
- The following data on span:
- Metrics
- The following portions of a Metric
(passed when constructing an instrument):
- The name of the metric (defaults to instrument name).
- The kind of metric data (Gauge, Sum, Histogram, ExponentialHistogram)
- For
Counter
andUpDownCounter
instruments, it is acceptable to change between asynchronous and synchronous instruments, as this preserves the metric kind.
- For
- The unit of the metric (defaults to instrument unit).
- The attribute keys on any
*DataPoint
.- These are provided in the API when recording a measurement, for both synchronous and asynchronous instruments.
- These exist on
NumberDataPoint
,HistogramDataPoint
,ExponentialHistogramDataPoint
andSummaryDataPoint
.
- The attribute values on any
*DataPoint
that are defined in a list of well-known values.
- The following portions of a Metric
(passed when constructing an instrument):
- Log Records
- The attribute keys provided on the LogRecord
- The attribute values provided on the LogRecord that are defined in a list of well-known values.
- For log records that are Log Events
- The following data provided to emit event:
- The event name (the value of the
event.name
attribute)
- The event name (the value of the
- The following data provided to emit event:
Things not listed in the above are not expected to remain stable via semantic convention and are allowed (or expected) to change. A few examples:
- The values of attributes
- An exception are existing values in lists of well-known values. However, new values can be added to such lists. Consumers should expect unknown values.
- The links attached to a span
- The recorded measurement type (float or integer) of a metric is not enforced and allowed to change.
- The description of a metric instrument.
- The values being recorded by an instrument.
The list of telemetry fields which are covered by stability guarantees MAY be extended.
Changes to semantic conventions in this specification are allowed, provided that the changes can be described by schema files. The following changes can be currently described and are allowed:
- Renaming of span, metric, log and resource attributes.
- Renaming of metrics.
- Renaming of span events.
All such changes MUST be described in the OpenTelemetry Schema File Format and published in this repository. For details see how OpenTelemetry Schemas are published.
See the Telemetry Stability document for details on how instrumentations can use schemas to change the instrumentation they produce.
Exception: Some resource attributes are embedded in various locations of the
Specification, e.g. the service.*
attributes which are required by SDKs to be
produced and have corresponding environment variables defined in general SDK configuration. These resource
attributes MUST NOT be ever changed. They are considered a hard-coded part of
this specification.
In addition to the 3 types of changes described above there are certain types that are always allowed. Such changes do not need to be described (and are not described) by schema files. Here is the list of such changes:
- Adding new attributes to the existing semantic conventions for resources, spans, span events or log records.
- Adding new attributes to existing metrics that do not "break apart" existing timeseries, such that alert thresholds would break / need to change.
- Adding semantic conventions for new types of resources, spans, span events, metrics or log records.
Any other changes to semantic conventions are currently prohibited. Other types of changes MAY be introduced in the future versions of this specification. This is only allowed if OpenTelemetry introduces a new schema file format that is capable of describing such changes.
For stability of telemetry produced by instrumentation see the Telemetry Stability document.
Signals MAY eventually be replaced. When this happens, they are marked as deprecated.
Signals MUST NOT be marked as deprecated unless the replacement is stable. Deprecated code MUST abide by the same support guarantees as stable code.
Support is ended by the removal of a signal from the release. The release MUST make a major version bump when this happens.
Note that we currently have no plans for creating a major version of OpenTelemetry past v1.0.
For clarity, it is still possible to create new, backwards incompatible versions of existing signals without actually moving to v2.0 and breaking support.
For example, imagine we develop a new, better tracing API - let's call it AwesomeTrace. We will never mutate the current tracing API into AwesomeTrace. Instead, AwesomeTrace would be added as an entirely new signal which coexists and interoperates with the current tracing signal. This would make adding AwesomeTrace a minor version bump, not v2.0. v2.0 would mark the end of support for current tracing, not the addition of AwesomeTrace. And we don't want to ever end that support, if we can help it.
This is not actually a theoretical example. OpenTelemetry already supports two tracing APIs: OpenTelemetry and OpenTracing. We invented a new tracing API, but continue to support the old one.
OpenTelemetry clients MUST follow Semantic Versioning 2.0.0, with the following clarifications.
OpenTelemetry clients have four components: API, SDK, Semantic Conventions, and Contrib.
For the purposes of versioning, all code within a component MUST treated as if it were part of a single package, and versioned with the same version number, except for Contrib, which may be a collection of packages versioned separately.
- All stable API packages MUST version together, across all signals. Stable signals MUST NOT have separate version numbers. There is one version number that applies to all signals that are included in the API release that is labeled with that particular version number.
- SDK packages for all signals MUST version together, across all signals. Signals MUST NOT have separate version numbers. There is one version number that applies to all signals that are included in the SDK release that is labeled with that particular version number.
- Semantic Conventions are a single package with a single version number.
- Each contrib package MAY have it's own version number.
- The API, SDK, Semantic Conventions, and contrib components have independent version numbers.
For example, the latest version of
opentelemetry-python-api
MAY be at v1.2.3 while the latest version ofopentelemetry-python-sdk
is at v2.3.1. - Different language implementations have independent version numbers.
For example, it is fine to have
opentelemetry-python-api
at v1.2.8 whenopentelemetry-java-api
is at v1.3.2. - Language implementations have version numbers which are independent of the specification they implement.
For example, it is fine for v1.8.2 of
opentelemetry-python-api
to implement v1.1.1 of the specification.
Exception: in some languages, package managers may react poorly to unstable packages having a version higher than 0.X. In these cases, signals in Development MAY version independently from stable signals, in order to retain a 0.X version number. When a signal becomes stable, the version MUST be bumped to match the other stable signals in the release.
Major version bumps MUST occur when there is a breaking change to a stable interface or a deprecated signal is removed. Major version bumps SHOULD NOT occur for changes which do not result in a drop in support of some form.
Most changes to OpenTelemetry clients result in a minor version bump.
- New backward-compatible functionality added to any component.
- Breaking changes to internal SDK components.
- Breaking changes to in-development signals.
- New signals in Development are added.
- Signals in Development become stable.
- Stable signals are deprecated.
Patch versions make no changes which would require recompilation or potentially break application code. The following are examples of patch fixes.
- Bug fixes which don't require minor version bump per rules above.
- Security fixes.
- Documentation.
Currently, the OpenTelemetry project does NOT have plans to backport bug and security fixes to prior minor versions of the SDK. Security and bug fixes MAY only be applied to the latest minor version. We are committed to making it feasible for end users to stay up to date with the latest version of the OpenTelemetry SDK.
Each language implementation SHOULD define how the removal of a supported language/runtime version affects its versioning. As a rule of thumb, it SHOULD follow the conventions in the given ecosystem.
Major versions of the API MUST be supported for a minimum of three years after the release of the next major API version. API support is defined as follows.
-
API stability, as defined above, MUST be maintained.
-
A version of the SDK which supports the latest minor version of the last major version of the API will continue to be maintained during LTS. Bug and security fixes MUST be backported. Additional feature development is NOT RECOMMENDED.
-
Contrib packages available when the API is versioned MUST continue to be maintained for the duration of LTS. Bug and security fixes will be backported. Additional feature development is NOT RECOMMENDED.
SDK stability, as defined above, will be maintained for a minimum of one year after the release of the next major SDK version.
Contrib stability, as defined above, will be maintained for a minimum of one year after the release of the next major version of a contrib package.
The term “OpenTelemetry GA” refers to the point at which OpenTracing and OpenCensus will be fully deprecated. The minimum requirements for declaring GA are as followed.
- A stable version of both tracing and metrics MUST be released in at least four languages.
- CI/CD, performance, and integration tests MUST be implemented for these languages.