-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 850
New issue
Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.
By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.
Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account
W3C Baggage Propagator should not percent-encode metadata #6771
Comments
Its true that the java implementation does percent encoding and percent decoding of baggage metadata entries such that the round trip encode / decode is lossless:
It seems like there's some ongoing discussion in w3c/baggage#138 as to whether or not requiring percent encoding is a good ideas. Let's wait for a clear signal before we decide to do anything in If w3c decides to continue with the "no encoding" approach, we'll need to decide how / if to make the change given that some users may have come to depend on it. |
Ha, well, that discussion actually was triggered by this finding. :-) (Note that the person posting there is also me). But: The current discussion at the W3C working group you posted is about whether or not the spec should mandate to percent-encode the value of the baggage entry. As I said, neither the W3C spec nor the OTel spec mandating any part of the metadata (properties in W3c lingo). So I think this issue here can be fixed without waiting for anything from W3C side. |
Fixing here only for the W3C to change would expose our users to unnecessary churn. |
Context
The W3C working group for distributed tracing is aiming to move the W3C baggage specification from candidate recommendation stage to an actual recommendation. As part of this, we were reviewing existing implementations of the specification and check them for compliance.
Note: There is a difference between the W3C baggage spec and the OTel baggage spec in that the W3C spec supports a set of additional properties on baggage entries (the actual baggage key-value pairs). OTel calls this concept metadata but treats all metadata on a baggage entry as one opaque string.
Describe the bug
The opentelemetry-java implementation applies percent encoding to the metadata of baggage entries. This potentially breaks compatibility with other participants in the same distributed transaction. The W3C Baggage Propagator should not percent-encode metadata, but instead do no processing at all on it.
Here is a more in-depth explanation why that encoding is problematic and might break other implementations of the W3C baggage spec. Consider the following baggage header:
An implementation that is compliant with the W3C spec would parse this into one baggage entry (with key
SomeKey
, valueSomeValue
) with one metadata property with key-value shape (keyValueProp
and valuePropVal
).If the Java OTel SDK receives this baggage header and then propagates it downstream, it will change the header content as follows (more precisely, this is the string after one
extract
&inject
roundtrip):(This is even tested for in this test case: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-java/blob/main/api/all/src/test/java/io/opentelemetry/api/baggage/propagation/W3CBaggagePropagatorTest.java#L442-L461)
That is, the inner whitespace and the equals sign in the property have been percent-encoded.
Now, when this header value is receive by an implementation that is compliant with the W3C baggage spec, it would be parsed as follows: One baggage entry (same as above) with one property which no longer has key-value shape but is now a flag-like property
ValueProp%20%09%20%3D%20%09%20PropVal
. That is, the key-value metadata property has become a single string.Please note that neither the W3C spec nor the OTel spec mandate to percent-encode properties/metadata. In fact the OTel spec explictly says
I read this as "do not touch this string at all".
In its current form, the W3C spec mandates to percent-encode baggage entry values, but metadata properties are separate from that.
Steps to reproduce
The test mentioned above reproduces the behavior.
Additionally, I ported the W3C baggage spec test test suite from Python over to Java to verify the Java OTel SDK implementation. The result is here in case you are interested: https://github.com/basti1302/opentelemetry-java/blob/w3c-baggage-issue-138-audit-otel-java-sdk/api/all/src/test/java/io/opentelemetry/api/baggage/propagation/W3cSpecTest.java
What did you expect to see?
Baggage metadata should not be percent-encoded.
What did you see instead?
Baggage metadata being percent-encoded after one
extract
andinject
round trip.What version and what artifacts are you using?
The current
main
branch of this repo. (commit eb53fe3)Additional context
In contrast to the behavior in Java, the JS OTel SDK does not process metadata at all.
See this test: https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-js/blob/main/packages/opentelemetry-core/test/baggage/W3CBaggagePropagator.test.ts#L40-L62
@dyladan (who maintains opentelemetry-js and also participates in the W3C working group) commented that the decision for treating metadata as one opaque string within the OTel spec was deliberately designed because at that time it was not completely clear how baggage properties would evolve in the W3C spec. Unfortunately, percent-encoding defeats that purpose.
There is also a corresponding issue in the W3C baggage repository: w3c/baggage#138
The text was updated successfully, but these errors were encountered: