As a service owner, you can use distributed tracing to instrument your services to gather insights into your service architecture. You can use the Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform for monitoring, network profiling, and troubleshooting the interaction between components in modern, cloud-native, microservices-based applications.
With the distributed tracing platform, you can perform the following functions:
Monitor distributed transactions
Optimize performance and latency
Perform root cause analysis
You can use the distributed tracing platform in combination with the Red Hat build of OpenTelemetry.
This release of the Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform includes the Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform (Tempo) and the deprecated Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform (Jaeger).
This release fixes CVE-2023-39326.
The Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform (Tempo) is provided through the Tempo Operator.
There are currently known issues:
Currently, when used with the Tempo Operator, the Jaeger UI only displays services that have sent traces in the last 15 minutes. For services that did not send traces in the last 15 minutes, traces are still stored but not displayed in the Jaeger UI. (TRACING-3139)
Currently, the distributed tracing platform (Tempo) fails on the IBM Z (s390x
) architecture. (TRACING-3545)
The Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform (Jaeger) is provided through the Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform Operator.
Jaeger does not use FIPS validated cryptographic modules. |
Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform (Jaeger) 3.1.1 is supported for use with the OpenShift Elasticsearch Operator 5.6, 5.7, and 5.8.
In the Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform 3.1.1, Jaeger and support for Elasticsearch remain deprecated, and both are planned to be removed in a future release. Red Hat will provide critical and above CVE bug fixes and support for these components during the current release lifecycle, but these components will no longer receive feature enhancements.
In the Red Hat OpenShift distributed tracing platform 3.1.1, Tempo provided by the Tempo Operator and the OpenTelemetry Collector provided by the Red Hat build of OpenTelemetry are the preferred Operators for distributed tracing collection and storage. The OpenTelemetry and Tempo distributed tracing stack is to be adopted by all users because this will be the stack that will be enhanced going forward.
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Red Hat is committed to replacing problematic language in our code, documentation, and web properties. We are beginning with these four terms: master, slave, blacklist, and whitelist. Because of the enormity of this endeavor, these changes will be implemented gradually over several upcoming releases. For more details, see our CTO Chris Wright’s message.