This article was originally published on The New Stack.
Learning how to best use OpenTelemetry for observability can be a daunting task. While it’s a relatively new project, it’s growing fast and has already become the open standard for how to collect and export telemetry.
And there are so many ways to use OpenTelemetry, including:
- Developers instrumenting their applications with OTel community SDKs
- Library authors adding instrumentation to automatically emit OTel signals
- Platform teams building telemetry pipelines with the OTel Collector
- Observability vendors building OTel-compatible SDKs and OTLP (OpenTelemetry protocol) endpoints to embrace data flexibility and reduce vendor lock-in
With so much activity going on in OpenTelemetry — it’s now the second-biggest project in the Cloud Native Computing Foundation (CNCF) — it’s no surprise that keeping up to date can sometimes feel like a full-time job.
I sat down with several OpenTelemetry experts for a fun, summer-themed panel discussion on driving observability success.
- Hazel Weakly: fellow at the Nivenly Foundation
- Juraci Paixão Kröhling: co-founder at OllyGarden, OTel Governance Committee Member
- Iris Dyrmishi: senior observability engineer at Miro, CNCF Ambassador
- Hanson Ho: Android architect at Embrace, OpenTelemetry contributor and opentelemetry-android approver