ClickStack uses the OpenTelemetry standard for collecting telemetry data (logs and
traces). Traces are auto-generated with automatic instrumentation, so manual
instrumentation isn’t required to get value out of tracing.
This guide integrates:
Getting started
Install ClickStack OpenTelemetry instrumentation package
Use the following command to install the ClickStack OpenTelemetry package.
pip install hyperdx-opentelemetry
Install the OpenTelemetry automatic instrumentation libraries for the packages used by your Python application. We recommend that you use the
opentelemetry-bootstrap tool that comes with the OpenTelemetry Python SDK to scan your application packages and generate the list of available libraries.
opentelemetry-bootstrap -a install
Afterwards you’ll need to configure the following environment variables in your shell to ship telemetry to ClickStack via the OpenTelemetry collector:
Managed ClickStack
ClickStack Open Source
OTEL_SERVICE_NAME='<NAME_OF_YOUR_APP_OR_SERVICE>' \
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT=http://localhost:4318
export HYPERDX_API_KEY='<YOUR_INGESTION_API_KEY>' \
OTEL_SERVICE_NAME='<NAME_OF_YOUR_APP_OR_SERVICE>' \
OTEL_EXPORTER_OTLP_ENDPOINT=http://localhost:4318
The OTEL_SERVICE_NAME environment variable is used to identify your service in the HyperDX app, it can be any name you want.
Run the application with OpenTelemetry Python agent
Now you can run the application with the OpenTelemetry Python agent (opentelemetry-instrument).
opentelemetry-instrument python app.py
If you’re using Gunicorn, uWSGI or uvicorn
In this case, the OpenTelemetry Python agent will require additional changes to work.
To configure OpenTelemetry for application servers using the pre-fork web server mode, make sure to call the configure_opentelemetry method within the post-fork hook.
from hyperdx.opentelemetry import configure_opentelemetry
def post_fork(server, worker):
configure_opentelemetry()
from hyperdx.opentelemetry import configure_opentelemetry
from uwsgidecorators import postfork
@postfork
def init_tracing():
configure_opentelemetry()
OpenTelemetry currently doesn’t work with uvicorn run using the --reload
flag or with multi-workers (--workers). We recommend disabling those flags while testing, or using Gunicorn.
Advanced configuration
Network capture
By enabling network capture features, developers gain the capability to debug
HTTP request headers and body payloads effectively. This can be accomplished
simply by setting HYPERDX_ENABLE_ADVANCED_NETWORK_CAPTURE flag to 1.
export HYPERDX_ENABLE_ADVANCED_NETWORK_CAPTURE=1
Troubleshooting
Logs not appearing due to log level
By default, OpenTelemetry logging handler uses logging.NOTSET level which
defaults to WARNING level. You can specify the logging level when you create a
logger:
import logging
logger = logging.getLogger(__name__)
logger.setLevel(logging.DEBUG)
Exporting to the console
The OpenTelemetry Python SDK usually displays errors in the console when they
occur. However, if you don’t encounter any errors but notice that your data is
not appearing in HyperDX as expected, you have the option to enable debug mode.
When debug mode is activated, all telemetries will be printed to the console,
allowing you to verify if your application is properly instrumented with the
expected data.
Read more about Python OpenTelemetry instrumentation here:
https://opentelemetry.io/docs/instrumentation/python/manual/ Last modified on June 8, 2026