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OTLP Ingest in the Agent is a way to send telemetry data directly from applications instrumented with OpenTelemetry SDKs to Datadog Agent. Since versions 6.32.0 and 7.32.0, the Datadog Agent can ingest OTLP traces and OTLP metrics through gRPC or HTTP. Since versions 6.48.0 and 7.48.0, the Datadog Agent can ingest OTLP logs through gRPC or HTTP.
OTLP Ingest in the Agent allows you to use observability features in the Datadog Agent. Data from applications instrumented with OpenTelemetry SDK cannot be used in some Datadog proprietary products, such as Application Security Management, Continuous Profiler, and Ingestion Rules. OpenTelemetry Runtime Metrics are supported for some languages.
To get started, you first instrument your application with OpenTelemetry SDKs. Then, export the telemetry data in OTLP format to the Datadog Agent. Configuring this varies depending on the kind of infrastructure your service is deployed on, as described on the page below. Although the aim is to be compatible with the latest OTLP version, the OTLP Ingest in the Agent is not compatible with all OTLP versions. The versions of OTLP that are compatible with the Datadog Agent are those that are also supported by the OTLP receiver in the OpenTelemetry Collector. To verify the exact versions supported, check the go.opentelemetry.io/collector
version in the Agent go.mod
file.
Read the OpenTelemetry instrumentation documentation to understand how to point your instrumentation to the Agent. The receiver
section described below follows the OpenTelemetry Collector OTLP receiver configuration schema.
OTLP ingestion is off by default, and you can turn it on by updating your datadog.yaml
file configuration or by setting environment variables. The following datadog.yaml
configurations enable endpoints on the default ports.
0.0.0.0
as the endpoint address for convenience. This allows connections from any network interface. For enhanced security, especially in local deployments, consider using localhost
instead.For gRPC, default port 4317:
otlp_config:
receiver:
protocols:
grpc:
endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4317
For HTTP, default port 4318:
otlp_config:
receiver:
protocols:
http:
endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4318
Alternatively, configure the endpoints by providing the port through the environment variables:
localhost:4317
): DD_OTLP_CONFIG_RECEIVER_PROTOCOLS_GRPC_ENDPOINT
localhost:4318
): DD_OTLP_CONFIG_RECEIVER_PROTOCOLS_HTTP_ENDPOINT
These must be passed to both the core Agent and trace Agent processes. If running in a containerized environment, use 0.0.0.0
instead of localhost
to ensure the server is available on non-local interfaces.
Configure either gRPC or HTTP for this feature. Here is an example application that shows configuration for both.
OTLP logs ingestion on the Datadog Agent is disabled by default so that you don’t have unexpected logs product usage that may impact billing. To enable OTLP logs ingestion:
Explicitly enable log collection as a whole by following Host Agent Log collection setup:
logs_enabled: true
Set otlp_config.logs.enabled
to true:
otlp_config:
logs:
enabled: true
Follow the Datadog Docker Agent setup.
For the Datadog Agent container, set the following endpoint environment variables and expose the corresponding port:
DD_OTLP_CONFIG_RECEIVER_PROTOCOLS_GRPC_ENDPOINT
to 0.0.0.0:4317
and expose port 4317
.DD_OTLP_CONFIG_RECEIVER_PROTOCOLS_HTTP_ENDPOINT
to 0.0.0.0:4318
and expose port 4318
.If you want to enable OTLP logs ingestion, set the following endpoint environment variables in the Datadog Agent container:
DD_LOGS_ENABLED
to true.DD_OTLP_CONFIG_LOGS_ENABLED
to true.Follow the Kubernetes Agent setup.
Configure the following environment variables in both the trace Agent container and the core Agent container:
For gRPC:
name: DD_OTLP_CONFIG_RECEIVER_PROTOCOLS_GRPC_ENDPOINT # enables gRPC receiver on port 4317
value: "0.0.0.0:4317"
For HTTP:
name: DD_OTLP_CONFIG_RECEIVER_PROTOCOLS_HTTP_ENDPOINT # enables HTTP receiver on port 4318
value: "0.0.0.0:4318"
Map the container ports 4317 or 4318 to the host port for the core Agent container:
For gRPC:
ports:
- containerPort: 4317
hostPort: 4317
name: traceportgrpc
protocol: TCP
For HTTP
ports:
- containerPort: 4318
hostPort: 4318
name: traceporthttp
protocol: TCP
If you want to enable OTLP logs ingestion, set the following endpoint environment variables in the core Agent container:
Enable log collection with your DaemonSet:
name: DD_LOGS_ENABLED
value: "true"
And enable OTLP logs ingestion:
name: DD_OTLP_CONFIG_LOGS_ENABLED
value: "true"
Follow the Kubernetes Agent setup.
Enable the OTLP endpoints in the Agent by editing the datadog.otlp
section of the values.yaml
file:
For gRPC:
otlp:
receiver:
protocols:
grpc:
endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4317
enabled: true
For HTTP:
otlp:
receiver:
protocols:
http:
endpoint: 0.0.0.0:4318
enabled: true
This enables each protocol in the default port (4317
for OTLP/gRPC and 4318
for OTLP/HTTP).
Follow the Kubernetes Agent setup.
Enable the preferred protocol:
For gRPC:
--set "datadog.otlp.receiver.protocols.grpc.enabled=true"
For HTTP:
--set "datadog.otlp.receiver.protocols.http.enabled=true"
This enables each protocol in the default port (4317
for OTLP/gRPC and 4318
for OTLP/HTTP).
For detailed instructions on using OpenTelemetry with AWS Lambda and Datadog, including:
See the Serverless documentation for AWS Lambda and OpenTelemetry.
There are many other environment variables and settings supported in the Datadog Agent. To get an overview of them all, see the configuration template.
For the application container, set OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT
environment variable to point to the Datadog Agent container. For example:
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT=http://<datadog-agent>:4318
Both containers must be defined in the same bridge network, which is handled automatically if you use Docker Compose. Otherwise, follow the Docker example in Tracing Docker Applications to set up a bridge network with the correct ports.
In the application deployment file, configure the endpoint that the OpenTelemetry client sends traces to with the OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT
environment variable.
For gRPC:
env:
- name: HOST_IP
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
fieldPath: status.hostIP
- name: OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT
value: "http://$(HOST_IP):4317" # sends to gRPC receiver on port 4317
For HTTP:
env:
- name: HOST_IP
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
fieldPath: status.hostIP
- name: OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT
value: "http://$(HOST_IP):4318" # sends to HTTP receiver on port 4318
Note: To enrich container tags for custom metrics, set the appropriate resource attributes in the application code where your OTLP metrics are generated. For example, set the container.id
resource attribute to the pod’s UID.
/v1/traces
path, while others use the root path /
.