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8 changes: 2 additions & 6 deletions docs/reference/getting-started.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -67,15 +67,11 @@ esClient.close();

Your Elasticsearch endpoint can be found on the **My deployment** page of your deployment:

:::{image} images/es-endpoint.jpg
:alt: Finding Elasticsearch endpoint
:::
![Finding Elasticsearch endpoint](images/es-endpoint.jpg)

You can generate an API key on the **Management** page under Security.

:::{image} images/create-api-key.png
:alt: Create API key
:::
![Create API key](images/create-api-key.png)

For other connection options, refer to the [Connecting](setup/connecting.md) section.

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18 changes: 6 additions & 12 deletions docs/reference/setup/opentelemetry.md
Original file line number Diff line number Diff line change
Expand Up @@ -9,24 +9,18 @@ You can use [OpenTelemetry](https://opentelemetry.io/) to monitor the performanc

The native instrumentation in the Java API Client follows the [OpenTelemetry Semantic Conventions for {{es}}](https://opentelemetry.io/docs/specs/semconv/database/elasticsearch/). In particular, the instrumentation in the client covers the logical layer of {{es}} requests. A single span per request is created that is processed by the service through the Java API Client. The following image shows a trace that records the handling of three different {{es}} requests: an `index`, `get` and a search `request`:

:::{image} ../images/otel-waterfall-instrumented-without-http.jpg
:alt: Distributed trace with {{es}} spans
:class: screenshot
:::
% TO DO: Use `:class: screenshot`
![Distributed trace with {{es}} spans](../images/otel-waterfall-instrumented-without-http.jpg)

Usually, OpenTelemetry agents and auto-instrumentation modules come with instrumentation support for HTTP-level communication. In this case, in addition to the logical {{es}} client requests, spans will be captured for the physical HTTP requests emitted by the client. The following image shows a trace with both, {{es}} spans (in blue) and the corresponding HTTP-level spans (in red):

:::{image} ../images/otel-waterfall-instrumented.jpg
:alt: Distributed trace with {{es}} and HTTP spans
:class: screenshot
:::
% TO DO: Use `:class: screenshot`
![Distributed trace with {{es}} and HTTP spans](../images/otel-waterfall-instrumented.jpg)

Advanced Java API Client behavior such as nodes round-robin and request retries are revealed through the combination of logical {{es}} spans and the physical HTTP spans. The following example shows an `index` request in a scenario with two {{es}} nodes:

:::{image} ../images/otel-waterfall-retries.jpg
:alt: Distributed trace with request retries
:class: screenshot
:::
% TO DO: Use `:class: screenshot`
![Distributed trace with request retries](../images/otel-waterfall-retries.jpg)

The first node is unavailable and results in an HTTP error, while the retry to the second node succeeds. Both HTTP requests are subsumed by the logical {{es}} request span (in blue).

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