The Python special interest group (SIG) meets regularly. See the OpenTelemetry community repo for information on this and other language SIGs.
See the public meeting notes for a summary description of past meetings. To request edit access, join the meeting or get in touch on Slack.
See to the community membership document on how to become a Member, Approver and Maintainer.
If you are looking for someone to help you find a starting point and be a resource for your first contribution, join our Slack and find a buddy!
- Join Slack and join our chat room.
- Post in the room with an introduction to yourself, what area you are interested in (check issues marked "Help Wanted"), and say you are looking for a buddy. We will match you with someone who has experience in that area.
Your OpenTelemetry buddy is your resource to talk to directly on all aspects of contributing to OpenTelemetry: providing context, reviewing PRs, and helping those get merged. Buddies will not be available 24/7, but is committed to responding during their normal contribution hours.
To quickly get up and running, you can use the scripts/eachdist.py
tool that
ships with this project. First create a virtualenv and activate it.
Then run python scripts/eachdist.py develop
to install all required packages
as well as the project's packages themselves (in --editable
mode).
You can then run scripts/eachdist.py test
to test everything or
scripts/eachdist.py lint
to lint everything (fixing anything that is auto-fixable).
Additionally, this project uses tox
to automate some aspects
of development, including testing against multiple Python versions.
You can run:
tox
to run all existing tox commands, including unit tests for all packages under multiple Python versionstox -e py37-test-flask
to e.g. run the Flask tests under a specific Python versiontox -e lint
to run lint checks on all code
See
tox.ini
for more detail on available tox commands.
Performance progression of benchmarks for packages distributed by OpenTelemetry Python can be viewed as a graph of throughput vs commit history. From the linked page, you can download a JSON file with the performance results.
Running the tox
tests also runs the performance tests if any are available. Benchmarking tests are done with pytest-benchmark
and they output a table with results to the console.
To write benchmarks, simply use the pytest benchmark fixture like the following:
def test_simple_start_span(benchmark):
def benchmark_start_as_current_span(span_name, attribute_num):
span = tracer.start_span(
span_name,
attributes={"count": attribute_num},
)
span.end()
benchmark(benchmark_start_as_current_span, "benchmarkedSpan", 42)
Make sure the test file is under the tests/performance/benchmarks/
folder of
the package it is benchmarking and further has a path that corresponds to the
file in the package it is testing. Make sure that the file name begins with
test_benchmark_
. (e.g. sdk-extension/opentelemetry-sdk-extension-aws/tests/performance/benchmarks/trace/propagation/test_benchmark_aws_xray_format.py
)
Everyone is welcome to contribute code to opentelemetry-python-contrib
via GitHub
pull requests (PRs).
To create a new PR, fork the project in GitHub and clone the upstream repo:
$ git clone https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-python-contrib.git
Add your fork as an origin:
$ git remote add fork https://github.com/YOUR_GITHUB_USERNAME/opentelemetry-python-contrib.git
Run tests:
# make sure you have all supported versions of Python installed
$ pip install tox # only first time.
$ tox # execute in the root of the repository
Check out a new branch, make modifications and push the branch to your fork:
$ git checkout -b feature
# edit files
$ git commit
$ git push fork feature
Open a pull request against the main opentelemetry-python-contrib
repo.
- If the PR is not ready for review, please put
[WIP]
in the title, tag it aswork-in-progress
, or mark it asdraft
. - Make sure CLA is signed and CI is clear.
A PR is considered to be ready to merge when:
- It has received two approvals from Approvers / Maintainers (at different companies).
- Major feedbacks are resolved.
- It has been open for review for at least one working day. This gives people reasonable time to review.
- Trivial change (typo, cosmetic, doc, etc.) doesn't have to wait for one day.
- Urgent fix can take exception as long as it has been actively communicated.
- A changelog entry is added to the corresponding changelog for the code base, if there is any impact on behavior. e.g. doc entries are not required, but small bug entries are.
Any Approver / Maintainer can merge the PR once it is ready to merge.
As with other OpenTelemetry clients, opentelemetry-python follows the opentelemetry-specification.
It's especially valuable to read through the library guidelines.
OpenTelemetry is an evolving specification, one where the desires and use cases are clear, but the method to satisfy those uses cases are not.
As such, contributions should provide functionality and behavior that conforms to the specification, but the interface and structure is flexible.
It is preferable to have contributions follow the idioms of the language rather than conform to specific API names or argument patterns in the spec.
For a deeper discussion, see: open-telemetry/opentelemetry-specification#165
- docstrings should adhere to the Google Python Style Guide as specified with the napolean extension extension in Sphinx.