These attributes may be used to describe the receiver of a network exchange/packet. These should be used when there is no client/server relationship between the two sides, or when that relationship is unknown. This covers low-level network interactions (e.g. packet tracing) where you don’t know if there was a connection or which side initiated it. This also covers unidirectional UDP flows and peer-to-peer communication where the “user-facing” surface of the protocol / API doesn’t expose a clear notion of client and server.
Attribute | Type | Description | Examples | Stability |
---|---|---|---|---|
destination.address | string | Destination address - domain name if available without reverse DNS lookup; otherwise, IP address or Unix domain socket name. [1] | destination.example.com ; 10.1.2.80 ; /tmp/my.sock | |
destination.port | int | Destination port number | 3389 ; 2888 |
[1]: When observed from the source side, and when communicating through an intermediary, destination.address
SHOULD represent the destination address behind any intermediaries, for example proxies, if it’s available.
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