Accessing CloudEvent traces¶
Depending on the request tracing tool that you have installed on your Knative Eventing cluster, see the corresponding section for details about how to visualize and trace your requests.
Before you begin¶
You must have a Knative cluster running with the Eventing component installed. Learn more.
Configuring tracing¶
With the exception of importers, the Knative Eventing tracing is configured through the
config-tracing ConfigMap in the knative-eventing namespace.
Most importers do not use the ConfigMap and instead, use a static 1% sampling rate.
You can use the config-tracing ConfigMap to configure the following Eventing components:
- Brokers
- Triggers
- InMemoryChannel
- ApiServerSource
- PingSource
- GitlabSource
- KafkaSource
- PrometheusSource
Example:
The following example config-tracing ConfigMap samples 10% of all CloudEvents:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: config-tracing
namespace: knative-eventing
data:
backend: "zipkin"
zipkin-endpoint: "http://zipkin.istio-system.svc.cluster.local:9411/api/v2/spans"
sample-rate: "0.1"
Configuration options¶
You can configure your config-tracing with following options:
-
backend: Valid values arezipkinornone. The default isnone. -
zipkin-endpoint: Specifies the URL to the zipkin collector where you want to send the traces. Must be set if backend is set tozipkin. -
sample-rate: Specifies the sampling rate. Valid values are decimals from0to1(interpreted as a float64), which indicate the probability that any given request is sampled. An example value is0.5, which gives each request a 50% sampling probablity. -
debug: Enables debugging. Valid values aretrueorfalse. Defaults tofalsewhen not specified. Set totrueto enable debug mode, which forces thesample-rateto1.0and sends all spans to the server.
Viewing your config-tracing ConfigMap¶
To view your current configuration:
kubectl -n knative-eventing get configmap config-tracing -oyaml
Editing and deploying your config-tracing ConfigMap¶
To edit and then immediately deploy changes to your ConfigMap, run the following command:
kubectl -n knative-eventing edit configmap config-tracing
Accessing traces in Eventing¶
To access the traces, you use either the Zipkin or Jaeger tool. Details about using these tools to access traces are provided in the Knative Serving observability section:
Example¶
The following demonstrates how to trace requests in Knative Eventing with Zipkin, using the TestBrokerTracing End-to-End test.
For this example, assume the following details:
- Everything happens in the
includes-incoming-trace-id-2qsznnamespace. - The Broker is named
br. - There are two Triggers that are associated with the Broker:
transformer- Filters to only allow events whose type istransformer. Sends the event to the Kubernetes Servicetransformer, which will reply with an identical event, except the replied event's type will belogger.logger- Filters to only allow events whose type islogger. Sends the event to the Kubernetes Servicelogger.
- An event is sent to the Broker with the type
transformer, by the Pod namedsender.
Given this scenario, the expected path and behavior of an event is as follows:
senderPod sends the request to the Broker.- Go to the Broker's ingress Pod.
- Go to the
imc-dispatcherChannel (imc stands for InMemoryChannel). - Go to both Triggers.
- Go to the Broker's filter Pod for the Trigger
logger. The Trigger's filter ignores this event. - Go to the Broker's filter Pod for the Trigger
transformer. The filter does pass, so it goes to the Kubernetes Service pointed at, also namedtransformer.transformerPod replies with the modified event.- Go to an InMemory dispatcher.
- Go to the Broker's ingress Pod.
- Go to the InMemory dispatcher.
- Go to both Triggers.
- Go to the Broker's filter Pod for the Trigger
transformer. The Trigger's filter ignores the event. - Go to the Broker's filter Pod for the Trigger
logger. The filter passes.- Go to the
loggerPod. There is no reply.
- Go to the
- Go to the Broker's filter Pod for the Trigger
- Go to the Broker's filter Pod for the Trigger
This is a screenshot of the trace view in Zipkin. All the red letters have been added to the screenshot and correspond to the expectations earlier in this section:

This is the same screenshot without the annotations.

If you are interested, here is the raw JSON of the trace.