Skip to content

DataDog/dd-trace-cpp

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Datadog C++ Tracing Library

codecov

#include <datadog/span_config.h>
#include <datadog/tracer.h>
#include <datadog/tracer_config.h>

#include <chrono>
#include <iostream>
#include <thread>

int main() {
    namespace dd = datadog::tracing;

    dd::TracerConfig config;
    config.service = "my-service";

    const auto validated_config = dd::finalize_config(config);
    if (!validated_config) {
        std::cerr << validated_config.error() << '\n';
        return 1;
    }

    dd::Tracer tracer{*validated_config};
    dd::SpanConfig options;

    options.name = "parent";
    dd::Span parent = tracer.create_span(options);

    std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::seconds(1));

    options.name = "child";
    dd::Span child = parent.create_child(options);
    child.set_tag("foo", "bar");

    std::this_thread::sleep_for(std::chrono::seconds(2));
}

See the examples directory for more extensive usage examples.

Platform Support

The library has been tested and is compatible on the following CPU architecture, OS and compiler combinations:

  • x86_64 and arm64 Linux with GCC 11.4.
  • x86_64 and arm64 Linux with Clang 14.
  • x86_64 Windows with MSVC 2022.
  • arm64 macOS with Apple Clang 15.

Building and Installation

Requirements

dd-trace-cpp requires a supported C++17 compiler.

A recent version of CMake is required (3.24), which might not be in your system's package manager. bin/install-cmake is an installer for a recent CMake.

Building

Build this library from source using CMake.

git clone 'https://github.com/datadog/dd-trace-cpp'
cd dd-trace-cpp
cmake -B build .
cmake --build build -j

By default CMake will generate both static and shared libraries. To build either on of them use either BUILD_SHARED_LIBS or BUILD_STATIC_LIBS. Example:

cmake -B build -DBUILD_SHARED_LIBS=1 .

Installation

Installation places a shared library and public headers into the appropriate system directories (/usr/local/[...]), or to a specified installation prefix.

cmake --install

# Here is how to install dd-trace-cpp into `.install/` within the source
# repository.
# cmake --install build --prefix=.install

Optional: Linking to the shared library

In case you decided to build the shared library:

When building an executable that uses dd-trace-cpp, specify the path to the installed headers using an appropriate -I option. If the library was installed into the default system directories, then the -I option is not needed.

c++ -I/path/to/dd-trace-cpp/.install/include -c -o my_app.o my_app.cpp

When linking an executable that uses dd-trace-cpp, specify linkage to the built library using the -ldd_trace_cpp option and an appropriate -L option. If the library was installed into the default system directories, then the -L options is not needed. The -ldd_trace_cpp option is always needed.

c++ -o my_app my_app.o -L/path/to/dd-trace-cpp/.install/lib -ldd_trace_cpp

Test

Pass -DDD_TRACE_BUILD_TESTING=1 to cmake to include the unit tests in the build.

The resulting unit test executable is test/tests within the build directory.

cmake -Bbuild -DDD_TRACE_BUILD_TESTING=1 ..
cmake --build build -j
./build/test/tests

Alternatively, bin/test is provided for convenience.

Code coverage reports are available here.

Contributing

See the contributing guidelines and the maintainer docs for information on the overall structure of the repository.