3.5 KiB
Collector Feature Gates
This package provides a mechanism that allows operators to enable and disable experimental or transitional features at deployment time. These flags should be able to govern the behavior of the application starting as early as possible and should be available to every component such that decisions may be made based on flags at the component level.
Usage
Feature gates must be defined and registered with the global registry in
an init()
function. This makes the Gate
available to be configured and
queried with the defined Stage
default value.
A Gate
can have a list of associated issues that allow users to refer to
the issue and report any additional problems or understand the context of the Gate
.
Once a Gate
has been marked as Stable
, it must have a RemovalVersion
set.
var myFeatureGate = featuregate.GlobalRegistry().MustRegister(
"namespaced.uniqueIdentifier",
featuregate.Stable,
featuregate.WithRegisterFromVersion("v0.65.0")
featuregate.WithRegisterDescription("A brief description of what the gate controls"),
featuregate.WithRegisterReferenceURL("https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-collector/issues/6167"),
featuregate.WithRegisterToVersion("v0.70.0"))
The status of the gate may later be checked by interrogating the global feature gate registry:
if myFeatureGate.IsEnabled() {
setupNewFeature()
}
Note that querying the registry takes a read lock and accesses a map, so it should be done once and the result cached for local use if repeated checks are required. Avoid querying the registry in a loop.
Controlling Gates
Feature gates can be enabled or disabled via the CLI, with the
--feature-gates
flag. When using the CLI flag, gate
identifiers must be presented as a comma-delimited list. Gate identifiers
prefixed with -
will disable the gate and prefixing with +
or with no
prefix will enable the gate.
otelcol --config=config.yaml --feature-gates=gate1,-gate2,+gate3
This will enable gate1
and gate3
and disable gate2
.
Feature Lifecycle
Features controlled by a Gate
should follow a three-stage lifecycle,
modeled after the system used by Kubernetes:
- An
alpha
stage where the feature is disabled by default and must be enabled through aGate
. - A
beta
stage where the feature has been well tested and is enabled by default but can be disabled through aGate
. - A generally available or
stable
stage where the feature is permanently enabled. At this stage the gate should no longer be explicitly used. Disabling the gate will produce an error and explicitly enabling will produce a warning log. - A
stable
feature gate will be removed in the version specified by itsToVersion
value.
Features that prove unworkable in the alpha
stage may be discontinued
without proceeding to the beta
stage. Instead, they will proceed to the
deprecated
stage, which will feature is permanently disabled. A feature gate will
be removed once it has been deprecated
for at least 2 releases of the collector.
Features that make it to the beta
stage are intended to reach general availability but may still be discontinued.
If, after wider use, it is determined that the gate should be discontinued it will be reverted to the alpha
stage
for 2 releases and then proceed to the deprecated
stage. If instead it is ready for general availability it will
proceed to the stable
stage.