The prometheus input plugin gathers metrics from HTTP servers exposing metrics
in Prometheus format.
Configuration
# Read metrics from one or many prometheus clients
[[inputs.prometheus]]
## An array of urls to scrape metrics from.
urls = ["http://localhost:9100/metrics"]
## Metric version controls the mapping from Prometheus metrics into Telegraf metrics.
## See "Metric Format Configuration" in plugins/inputs/prometheus/README.md for details.
## Valid options: 1, 2
# metric_version = 1
## Url tag name (tag containing scrapped url. optional, default is "url")
# url_tag = "url"
## Whether the timestamp of the scraped metrics will be ignored.
## If set to true, the gather time will be used.
# ignore_timestamp = false
## An array of Kubernetes services to scrape metrics from.
# kubernetes_services = ["http://my-service-dns.my-namespace:9100/metrics"]
## Kubernetes config file to create client from.
# kube_config = "/path/to/kubernetes.config"
## Scrape Kubernetes pods for the following prometheus annotations:
## - prometheus.io/scrape: Enable scraping for this pod
## - prometheus.io/scheme: If the metrics endpoint is secured then you will need to
## set this to 'https' & most likely set the tls config.
## - prometheus.io/path: If the metrics path is not /metrics, define it with this annotation.
## - prometheus.io/port: If port is not 9102 use this annotation
# monitor_kubernetes_pods = true
## Get the list of pods to scrape with either the scope of
## - cluster: the kubernetes watch api (default, no need to specify)
## - node: the local cadvisor api; for scalability. Note that the config node_ip or the environment variable NODE_IP must be set to the host IP.
# pod_scrape_scope = "cluster"
## Only for node scrape scope: node IP of the node that telegraf is running on.
## Either this config or the environment variable NODE_IP must be set.
# node_ip = "10.180.1.1"
## Only for node scrape scope: interval in seconds for how often to get updated pod list for scraping.
## Default is 60 seconds.
# pod_scrape_interval = 60
## Restricts Kubernetes monitoring to a single namespace
## ex: monitor_kubernetes_pods_namespace = "default"
# monitor_kubernetes_pods_namespace = ""
# label selector to target pods which have the label
# kubernetes_label_selector = "env=dev,app=nginx"
# field selector to target pods
# eg. To scrape pods on a specific node
# kubernetes_field_selector = "spec.nodeName=$HOSTNAME"
# cache refresh interval to set the interval for re-sync of pods list.
# Default is 60 minutes.
# cache_refresh_interval = 60
## Scrape Services available in Consul Catalog
# [inputs.prometheus.consul]
# enabled = true
# agent = "http://localhost:8500"
# query_interval = "5m"
# [[inputs.prometheus.consul.query]]
# name = "a service name"
# tag = "a service tag"
# url = 'http://{{if ne .ServiceAddress ""}}{{.ServiceAddress}}{{else}}{{.Address}}{{end}}:{{.ServicePort}}/{{with .ServiceMeta.metrics_path}}{{.}}{{else}}metrics{{end}}'
# [inputs.prometheus.consul.query.tags]
# host = "{{.Node}}"
## Use bearer token for authorization. ('bearer_token' takes priority)
# bearer_token = "/path/to/bearer/token"
## OR
# bearer_token_string = "abc_123"
## HTTP Basic Authentication username and password. ('bearer_token' and
## 'bearer_token_string' take priority)
# username = ""
# password = ""
## Specify timeout duration for slower prometheus clients (default is 3s)
# response_timeout = "3s"
## Optional TLS Config
# tls_ca = /path/to/cafile
# tls_cert = /path/to/certfile
# tls_key = /path/to/keyfile
## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = false
urls
can contain a unix socket as well. If a different path is required
(default is /metrics
for both http[s] and unix) for a unix socket, add path
as a query parameter as follows:
unix:///var/run/prometheus.sock?path=/custom/metrics
The metric_version
setting controls how telegraf translates prometheus format
metrics to telegraf metrics. There are two options.
With metric_version = 1
, the prometheus metric name becomes the telegraf
metric name. Prometheus labels become telegraf tags. Prometheus values become
telegraf field values. The fields have generic keys based on the type of the
prometheus metric. This option produces metrics that are dense (not
sparse). Denseness is a useful property for some outputs, including those that
are more efficient with row-oriented data.
metric_version = 2
differs in a few ways. The prometheus metric name becomes a
telegraf field key. Metrics hold more than one value and the field keys aren't
generic. The resulting metrics are sparse, but for some outputs they may be
easier to process or query, including those that are more efficient with
column-oriented data. The telegraf metric name is the same for all metrics in
the input instance. It can be set with the name_override
setting and defaults
to "prometheus". To have multiple metric names, you can use multiple instances
of the plugin, each with its own name_override
.
metric_version = 2
uses the same histogram format as the histogram
aggregator
The Example Outputs sections shows examples for both options.
When using this plugin along with the prometheus_client output, use the same
option in both to ensure metrics are round-tripped without modification.
Kubernetes Service Discovery
URLs listed in the kubernetes_services
parameter will be expanded by looking
up all A records assigned to the hostname as described in Kubernetes DNS
service discovery.
This method can be used to locate all Kubernetes headless services.
Kubernetes scraping
Enabling this option will allow the plugin to scrape for prometheus annotation
on Kubernetes pods. Currently, you can run this plugin in your kubernetes
cluster, or we use the kubeconfig file to determine where to monitor. Currently
the following annotation are supported:
prometheus.io/scrape
Enable scraping for this pod.
prometheus.io/scheme
If the metrics endpoint is secured then you will need to set this to https
& most likely set the tls config. (default 'http')
prometheus.io/path
Override the path for the metrics endpoint on the service. (default '/metrics')
prometheus.io/port
Used to override the port. (default 9102)
Using the monitor_kubernetes_pods_namespace
option allows you to limit which
pods you are scraping.
Using pod_scrape_scope = "node"
allows more scalable scraping for pods which
will scrape pods only in the node that telegraf is running. It will fetch the
pod list locally from the node's kubelet. This will require running Telegraf in
every node of the cluster. Note that either node_ip
must be specified in the
config or the environment variable NODE_IP
must be set to the host IP. ThisThe
latter can be done in the yaml of the pod running telegraf:
env:
- name: NODE_IP
valueFrom:
fieldRef:
fieldPath: status.hostIP
If using node level scrape scope, pod_scrape_interval
specifies how often (in
seconds) the pod list for scraping should updated. If not specified, the default
is 60 seconds.
The pod running telegraf will need to have the proper rbac configuration in
order to be allowed to call the k8s api to discover and watch pods in the
cluster. A typical configuration will create a service account, a cluster role
with the appropriate rules and a cluster role binding to tie the cluster role to
the service account. Example of configuration for cluster level discovery:
---
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRole
metadata:
name: telegraf-k8s-role-{{.Release.Name}}
rules:
- apiGroups: [""]
resources:
- nodes
- nodes/proxy
- services
- endpoints
- pods
verbs: ["get", "list", "watch"]
---
# Rolebinding for namespace to cluster-admin
apiVersion: rbac.authorization.k8s.io/v1
kind: ClusterRoleBinding
metadata:
name: telegraf-k8s-role-{{.Release.Name}}
roleRef:
apiGroup: rbac.authorization.k8s.io
kind: ClusterRole
name: telegraf-k8s-role-{{.Release.Name}}
subjects:
- kind: ServiceAccount
name: telegraf-k8s-{{ .Release.Name }}
namespace: {{ .Release.Namespace }}
---
apiVersion: v1
kind: ServiceAccount
metadata:
name: telegraf-k8s-{{ .Release.Name }}
Consul Service Discovery
Enabling this option and configuring consul agent
url will allow the plugin to
query consul catalog for available services. Using query_interval
the plugin
will periodically query the consul catalog for services with name
and tag
and refresh the list of scraped urls. It can use the information from the
catalog to build the scraped url and additional tags from a template.
Multiple consul queries can be configured, each for different service.
The following example fields can be used in url or tag templates:
- Node
- Address
- NodeMeta
- ServicePort
- ServiceAddress
- ServiceTags
- ServiceMeta
For full list of available fields and their type see struct CatalogService in
https://github.com/hashicorp/consul/blob/master/api/catalog.go
Bearer Token
If set, the file specified by the bearer_token
parameter will be read on
each interval and its contents will be appended to the Bearer string in the
Authorization header.
Usage for Caddy HTTP server
Steps to monitor Caddy with Telegraf's Prometheus input plugin:
[[inputs.prometheus]]
# ## An array of urls to scrape metrics from.
urls = ["http://localhost:2019/metrics"]
This is the default URL where Caddy will send data.
For more details, please read the Caddy Prometheus documentation.
Metrics
Measurement names are based on the Metric Family and tags are created for each
label. The value is added to a field named based on the metric type.
All metrics receive the url
tag indicating the related URL specified in the
Telegraf configuration. If using Kubernetes service discovery the address
tag is also added indicating the discovered ip address.
Example Output
Source
# HELP go_gc_duration_seconds A summary of the GC invocation durations.
# TYPE go_gc_duration_seconds summary
go_gc_duration_seconds{quantile="0"} 7.4545e-05
go_gc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.25"} 7.6999e-05
go_gc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.5"} 0.000277935
go_gc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.75"} 0.000706591
go_gc_duration_seconds{quantile="1"} 0.000706591
go_gc_duration_seconds_sum 0.00113607
go_gc_duration_seconds_count 4
# HELP go_goroutines Number of goroutines that currently exist.
# TYPE go_goroutines gauge
go_goroutines 15
# HELP cpu_usage_user Telegraf collected metric
# TYPE cpu_usage_user gauge
cpu_usage_user{cpu="cpu0"} 1.4112903225816156
cpu_usage_user{cpu="cpu1"} 0.702106318955865
cpu_usage_user{cpu="cpu2"} 2.0161290322588776
cpu_usage_user{cpu="cpu3"} 1.5045135406226022
Output
go_gc_duration_seconds,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics 1=0.001336611,count=14,sum=0.004527551,0=0.000057965,0.25=0.000083812,0.5=0.000286537,0.75=0.000365303 1505776733000000000
go_goroutines,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics gauge=21 1505776695000000000
cpu_usage_user,cpu=cpu0,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics gauge=1.513622603430151 1505776751000000000
cpu_usage_user,cpu=cpu1,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics gauge=5.829145728641773 1505776751000000000
cpu_usage_user,cpu=cpu2,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics gauge=2.119071644805144 1505776751000000000
cpu_usage_user,cpu=cpu3,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics gauge=1.5228426395944945 1505776751000000000
Output (when metric_version = 2)
prometheus,quantile=1,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_gc_duration_seconds=0.005574303 1556075100000000000
prometheus,quantile=0.75,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_gc_duration_seconds=0.0001046 1556075100000000000
prometheus,quantile=0.5,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_gc_duration_seconds=0.0000719 1556075100000000000
prometheus,quantile=0.25,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_gc_duration_seconds=0.0000579 1556075100000000000
prometheus,quantile=0,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_gc_duration_seconds=0.0000349 1556075100000000000
prometheus,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_gc_duration_seconds_count=324,go_gc_duration_seconds_sum=0.091340353 1556075100000000000
prometheus,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics go_goroutines=15 1556075100000000000
prometheus,cpu=cpu0,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics cpu_usage_user=1.513622603430151 1505776751000000000
prometheus,cpu=cpu1,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics cpu_usage_user=5.829145728641773 1505776751000000000
prometheus,cpu=cpu2,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics cpu_usage_user=2.119071644805144 1505776751000000000
prometheus,cpu=cpu3,url=http://example.org:9273/metrics cpu_usage_user=1.5228426395944945 1505776751000000000