New Relic's Java agent provides several options for custom instrumentation. One of those options is adding the Java agent API's @Trace
, @TraceLambda
or @TraceByReturnType
annotations to your application code. This document describes how to use annotations.
중요
To use annotations, you must modify the source code. If you can't or don't want to modify your source code, see Custom instrumentation for other instrumentation options.
Annotations are enabled by default
By default, the configuration setting enable_custom_tracing
is set to true
in the Java agent, which is the setting required for @Trace annotations to function.
This setting is not included in the newrelic.yml
by default. If you want to disable annotations, set enable_custom_tracing: false
(prefaced with two spaces) in the common
section of your newrelic.yml
.
@Trace
Annotating a method with @Trace
tells the Java agent that measurements should be taken for that method.
To add a method call as a custom trace add @Trace
annotations to your method. Make sure that newrelic-api.jar
appears in your classpath as it contains all these annotations.
import com.newrelic.api.agent.Trace;
...
@Trace public void run() { // background task }
Create a new transaction
If transactions do not appear and you want to start a new transaction, include dispatcher=true
with the @Trace
annotation:
@Trace (dispatcher=true)public void run() { // background task}
Add detail to your transactions
If your transaction traces show large blocks of uninstrumented time and you want to include some more methods within the trace, you can use the @Trace
annotation without parameters:
@Traceprotected void methodWithinTransaction() { // work}
Convert a transaction to a web request
To make a background task report as a web browser transaction with a Java agent API call: In the method annotated with @Trace(dispatcher=true)
, call:
NewRelic.setRequestAndResponse(Request request, Response response)
The arguments are implementations of the Request
and Response
interfaces in newrelic-api.jar
.
중요
Even if your Request
and Response
objects already are present, you still need to add this API call.
Define your own @Trace annotation class
If you define your own @Trace
annotation class, there is no dependency on the newrelic-api.jar
. To define the class:
package com.test;
@Target(ElementType.METHOD)@Retention(RetentionPolicy.RUNTIME)
public @interface Trace { public static final String NULL = ""; String metricName() default NULL; boolean dispatcher() default false; String tracerFactoryName() default NULL;}
Then, configure the agent to use this annotation in the common
section of the newrelic.yml
:
class_transformer: trace_annotation_class_name: com.test.Trace
Properties for @Trace
The @Trace
annotation supports the following properties.
@TraceLambda
This feature is disabled by default and must be explicitly enabled (e.g. -Dnewrelic.config.instrumentation.trace_lambda.enabled=true
) for the annotations to take effect. The equivalent environment variable is NEW_RELIC_INSTRUMENTATION_TRACE_LAMBDA_ENABLED
.
If your transaction traces show large blocks of uninstrumented time and you want to include lambda expressions within the trace, you can use the @TraceLambda
annotation without parameters:
import com.newrelic.api.agent.TraceLambda;
@TraceLambdaclass ClassContainingLambdaExpressions() { // work}
Lambda expressions become static methods of the containing class after compilation. By default, static methods within classes marked with the @TraceLambda
annotation matching the annotations pattern will be marked with the @Trace
annotation.
Properties for @TraceLambda
The @TraceLambda
annotation supports the following properties.
@TraceByReturnType
To include methods with a particular return type within the trace, you can use the @TraceByReturnType
annotation to mark a class passing the return types as a property. Methods in annotated classes that match one of the specified return types will be marked with the @Trace
annotation.
@TraceByReturnType(traceReturnTypes={Integer.class, String.class})class ClassContainingMethods() { // ...}
Properties for @TraceByReturnType
The @TraceByReturnType
annotation supports the following properties.
Performance considerations
When the Java agent is present in the JVM, it will inject code on the annotated methods. The performance hit is negligible in heavyweight operations, such as database or webservice calls, but is noticeable in methods that are called frequently, such as an accessor called thousands of times a second.
주의
Do not instrument all of your methods, as this can lead to decreased performance and to a metric grouping issue.
More API functions
For more about the Java agent API and its functionality, see the Java agent API introduction.