HTTP

HTTP Attributes

This document defines semantic convention attributes in the HTTP namespace.

Attributes:

KeyStabilityValue TypeDescriptionExample Values
http.connection.stateDevelopmentstringState of the HTTP connection in the HTTP connection pool.active; idle
http.request.body.sizeDevelopmentintThe size of the request payload body in bytes. This is the number of bytes transferred excluding headers and is often, but not always, present as the Content-Length header. For requests using transport encoding, this should be the compressed size.3495
http.request.header.<key>Stablestring[]HTTP request headers, <key> being the normalized HTTP Header name (lowercase), the value being the header values. [1]["application/json"]; ["1.2.3.4", "1.2.3.5"]
http.request.methodStablestringHTTP request method. [2]GET; POST; HEAD
http.request.method_originalStablestringOriginal HTTP method sent by the client in the request line.GeT; ACL; foo
http.request.resend_countStableintThe ordinal number of request resending attempt (for any reason, including redirects). [3]3
http.request.sizeDevelopmentintThe total size of the request in bytes. This should be the total number of bytes sent over the wire, including the request line (HTTP/1.1), framing (HTTP/2 and HTTP/3), headers, and request body if any.1437
http.response.body.sizeDevelopmentintThe size of the response payload body in bytes. This is the number of bytes transferred excluding headers and is often, but not always, present as the Content-Length header. For requests using transport encoding, this should be the compressed size.3495
http.response.header.<key>Stablestring[]HTTP response headers, <key> being the normalized HTTP Header name (lowercase), the value being the header values. [4]["application/json"]; ["abc", "def"]
http.response.sizeDevelopmentintThe total size of the response in bytes. This should be the total number of bytes sent over the wire, including the status line (HTTP/1.1), framing (HTTP/2 and HTTP/3), headers, and response body and trailers if any.1437
http.response.status_codeStableintHTTP response status code.200
http.routeStablestringThe matched route template for the request. This MUST be low-cardinality and include all static path segments, with dynamic path segments represented with placeholders. [5]/users/:userID?; my-controller/my-action/{id?}

[1] http.request.header.<key>: Instrumentations SHOULD require an explicit configuration of which headers are to be captured. Including all request headers can be a security risk - explicit configuration helps avoid leaking sensitive information.

The User-Agent header is already captured in the user_agent.original attribute. Users MAY explicitly configure instrumentations to capture them even though it is not recommended.

The attribute value MUST consist of either multiple header values as an array of strings or a single-item array containing a possibly comma-concatenated string, depending on the way the HTTP library provides access to headers.

Examples:

  • A header Content-Type: application/json SHOULD be recorded as the http.request.header.content-type attribute with value ["application/json"].
  • A header X-Forwarded-For: 1.2.3.4, 1.2.3.5 SHOULD be recorded as the http.request.header.x-forwarded-for attribute with value ["1.2.3.4", "1.2.3.5"] or ["1.2.3.4, 1.2.3.5"] depending on the HTTP library.

[2] http.request.method: HTTP request method value SHOULD be “known” to the instrumentation. By default, this convention defines “known” methods as the ones listed in RFC9110, the PATCH method defined in RFC5789 and the QUERY method defined in httpbis-safe-method-w-body.

If the HTTP request method is not known to instrumentation, it MUST set the http.request.method attribute to _OTHER.

If the HTTP instrumentation could end up converting valid HTTP request methods to _OTHER, then it MUST provide a way to override the list of known HTTP methods. If this override is done via environment variable, then the environment variable MUST be named OTEL_INSTRUMENTATION_HTTP_KNOWN_METHODS and support a comma-separated list of case-sensitive known HTTP methods (this list MUST be a full override of the default known method, it is not a list of known methods in addition to the defaults).

HTTP method names are case-sensitive and http.request.method attribute value MUST match a known HTTP method name exactly. Instrumentations for specific web frameworks that consider HTTP methods to be case insensitive, SHOULD populate a canonical equivalent. Tracing instrumentations that do so, MUST also set http.request.method_original to the original value.

[3] http.request.resend_count: The resend count SHOULD be updated each time an HTTP request gets resent by the client, regardless of what was the cause of the resending (e.g. redirection, authorization failure, 503 Server Unavailable, network issues, or any other).

[4] http.response.header.<key>: Instrumentations SHOULD require an explicit configuration of which headers are to be captured. Including all response headers can be a security risk - explicit configuration helps avoid leaking sensitive information.

Users MAY explicitly configure instrumentations to capture them even though it is not recommended.

The attribute value MUST consist of either multiple header values as an array of strings or a single-item array containing a possibly comma-concatenated string, depending on the way the HTTP library provides access to headers.

Examples:

  • A header Content-Type: application/json header SHOULD be recorded as the http.request.response.content-type attribute with value ["application/json"].
  • A header My-custom-header: abc, def header SHOULD be recorded as the http.response.header.my-custom-header attribute with value ["abc", "def"] or ["abc, def"] depending on the HTTP library.

[5] http.route: MUST NOT be populated when this is not supported by the HTTP server framework as the route attribute should have low-cardinality and the URI path can NOT substitute it. SHOULD include the application root if there is one.

A static path segment is a part of the route template with a fixed, low-cardinality value. This includes literal strings like /users/ and placeholders that are constrained to a finite, predefined set of values, e.g. {controller} or {action}.

A dynamic path segment is a placeholder for a value that can have high cardinality and is not constrained to a predefined list like static path segments.

Instrumentations SHOULD use routing information provided by the corresponding web framework. They SHOULD pick the most precise source of routing information and MAY support custom route formatting. Instrumentations SHOULD document the format and the API used to obtain the route string.


http.connection.state has the following list of well-known values. If one of them applies, then the respective value MUST be used; otherwise, a custom value MAY be used.

ValueDescriptionStability
activeactive state.Development
idleidle state.Development

http.request.method has the following list of well-known values. If one of them applies, then the respective value MUST be used; otherwise, a custom value MAY be used.

ValueDescriptionStability
_OTHERAny HTTP method that the instrumentation has no prior knowledge of.Stable
CONNECTCONNECT method.Stable
DELETEDELETE method.Stable
GETGET method.Stable
HEADHEAD method.Stable
OPTIONSOPTIONS method.Stable
PATCHPATCH method.Stable
POSTPOST method.Stable
PUTPUT method.Stable
QUERYQUERY method.Development
TRACETRACE method.Stable

Deprecated HTTP Attributes

Describes deprecated HTTP attributes.

Attributes:

KeyStabilityValue TypeDescriptionExample Values
http.client_ipDeprecated
Replaced by client.address.
stringDeprecated, use client.address instead.83.164.160.102
http.flavorDeprecated
Split into network.protocol.name and network.protocol.version
stringDeprecated, use network.protocol.name and network.protocol.version instead.1.0; 1.1; 2.0
http.hostDeprecated
Replaced by one of server.address, client.address or http.request.header.host, depending on the usage.
stringDeprecated, use one of server.address, client.address or http.request.header.host instead, depending on the usage.www.example.org
http.methodDeprecated
Replaced by http.request.method.
stringDeprecated, use http.request.method instead.GET; POST; HEAD
http.request_content_lengthDeprecated
Replaced by http.request.header.content-length.
intDeprecated, use http.request.header.content-length instead.3495
http.request_content_length_uncompressedDeprecated
Replaced by http.request.body.size.
intDeprecated, use http.request.body.size instead.5493
http.response_content_lengthDeprecated
Replaced by http.response.header.content-length.
intDeprecated, use http.response.header.content-length instead.3495
http.response_content_length_uncompressedDeprecated
Replaced by http.response.body.size.
intDeprecated, use http.response.body.size instead.5493
http.schemeDeprecated
Replaced by url.scheme.
stringDeprecated, use url.scheme instead.http; https
http.server_nameDeprecated
Replaced by server.address.
stringDeprecated, use server.address instead.example.com
http.status_codeDeprecated
Replaced by http.response.status_code.
intDeprecated, use http.response.status_code instead.200
http.targetDeprecated
Split to url.path and url.query.
stringDeprecated, use url.path and url.query instead./search?q=OpenTelemetry#SemConv
http.urlDeprecated
Replaced by url.full.
stringDeprecated, use url.full instead.https://www.foo.bar/search?q=OpenTelemetry#SemConv
http.user_agentDeprecated
Replaced by user_agent.original.
stringDeprecated, use user_agent.original instead.CERN-LineMode/2.15 libwww/2.17b3; Mozilla/5.0 (iPhone; CPU iPhone OS 14_7_1 like Mac OS X) AppleWebKit/605.1.15 (KHTML, like Gecko) Version/14.1.2 Mobile/15E148 Safari/604.1

http.flavor has the following list of well-known values. If one of them applies, then the respective value MUST be used; otherwise, a custom value MAY be used.

ValueDescriptionStability
1.0HTTP/1.0Development
1.1HTTP/1.1Development
2.0HTTP/2Development
3.0HTTP/3Development
QUICQUIC protocol.Development
SPDYSPDY protocol.Development