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Datadog Client Libraries for Go

This repository contains Go packages for the client-side components of the Datadog product suite for Application Performance Monitoring, Continuous Profiling and Application Security Monitoring of Go applications.

  • Datadog Application Performance Monitoring (APM): Trace requests as they flow across web servers, databases and microservices so that developers have great visiblity into bottlenecks and troublesome requests. The package gopkg.in/DataDog/dd-trace-go.v1/ddtrace/tracer allows you to trace any piece of your Go code, and commonly used Go libraries can be automatically traced thanks to our out-of-the-box integrations which can be found in the package gopkg.in/DataDog/dd-trace-go.v1/ddtrace/contrib.

  • Datadog Go Continuous Profiler: Continuously profile your Go apps to find CPU, memory, and synchronization bottlenecks, broken down by function name, and line number, to significantly reduce end-user latency and infrastructure costs. The package gopkg.in/DataDog/dd-trace-go.v1/profiler allows you to periodically collect and send Go profiles to the Datadog API.

  • Datadog Application Security Management (ASM) provides in-app monitoring and protection against application-level attacks that aim to exploit code-level vulnerabilities, such as a Server-Side-Request-Forgery (SSRF), a SQL injection (SQLi), or Reflected Cross-Site-Scripting (XSS). ASM identifies services exposed to application attacks and leverages in-app security rules to detect and protect against threats in your application environment. ASM is not a standalone Go package and is transparently integrated into the APM tracer. You can simply enable it with DD_APPSEC_ENABLED=true.

Installing

This module contains many packages, but most users should probably install the two packages below:

go get gopkg.in/DataDog/dd-trace-go.v1/ddtrace/tracer
go get gopkg.in/DataDog/dd-trace-go.v1/profiler

Additionally there are many contrib packages that can be installed to automatically instrument and trace commonly used Go libraries such as net/http, gorilla/mux or database/sql:

go get gopkg.in/DataDog/dd-trace-go.v1/contrib/gorilla/mux

If you installed more packages than you intended, you can use go mod tidy to remove any unused packages.

Documentation

Support Policy

Datadog APM for Go is built upon dependencies defined in specific versions of the host operating system, Go releases, and the Datadog Agent/API. For Go the two latest releases are GA supported and the version before that is in Maintenance. We do make efforts to support older releases, but generally these releases are considered Legacy. This library only officially supports first class ports of Go.

Level Support provided
General Availability (GA) Full implementation of all features. Full support for new features, bug & security fixes.
Maintenance Full implementation of existing features. May receive new features. Support for bug & security fixes only.
Legacy Legacy implementation. May have limited function, but no maintenance provided. Not guaranteed to compile the latest version of dd-trace-go. Contact our customer support team for special requests.

Supported Versions

Go Version Support level
1.22 GA
1.21 GA
1.20 Maintenance
1.19 Legacy
  • Datadog's Trace Agent >= 5.21.1

Package Versioning

A Minor version change will be released whenever a new version of Go is released. At that time the newest version of Go is added to GA, the second oldest supported version moved to Maintenance and the oldest previously supported version dropped to Legacy. For example: For a dd-trace-go version 1.37.*

Go Version Support
1.18 GA
1.17 GA
1.16 Maintenance

Then after Go 1.19 is released there will be a new dd-trace-go version 1.38.0 with support:

Go Version Support
1.19 GA
1.18 GA
1.17 Maintenance
1.16 Legacy

Contributing

Before considering contributions to the project, please take a moment to read our brief contribution guidelines.

Testing

Tests can be run locally using the Go toolset. The grpc.v12 integration will fail (and this is normal), because it covers for deprecated methods. In the CI environment we vendor this version of the library inside the integration. Under normal circumstances this is not something that we want to do, because users using this integration might be running versions different from the vendored one, creating hard to debug conflicts.

To run integration tests locally, you should set the INTEGRATION environment variable. The dependencies of the integration tests are best run via Docker. To get an idea about the versions and the set-up take a look at our docker-compose config.

The best way to run the entire test suite is using the test.sh script. You'll need Docker and docker-compose installed. If this is your first time running the tests, you should run ./test.sh -t to install any missing test tools/dependencies. Run ./test.sh --all to run all of the integration tests through the docker-compose environment. Run ./test.sh --help for more options.

If you're only interested in the tests for a specific integration it can be useful to spin up just the required containers via docker-compose. For example if you're running tests that need the mysql database container to be up:

docker compose -f docker-compose.yaml -p dd-trace-go up -d mysql