HAProxy monitoring with Netdata
HAProxy
is a free, very fast and reliable solution offering high availability, load
balancing, and proxying for TCP and HTTP-based applications.
This module will monitor one or more HAProxy
instances, depending on your configuration.
Requirements
HAProxy
v2.0+ (or 1.9r1+ for Enterprise users) with enabled PROMEX addon. PROMEX is not built by default with
HAProxy
. It is provided as an extra component for
everyone who wants to use it.
Charts
Current implementation collects
only backend metrics.
Backend
- Sessions
- Current number of active sessions in
sessions
- Sessions rate in
sessions/s
- Responses
- Average response time for last 1024 successful connections in
milliseconds
- HTTP responses by code class in
responses/s
- Queue
- Average queue time for last 1024 successful connections in
milliseconds
- Current number of queued requests in
requests
- Network
- Network traffic in
bytes/s
Configuration
Edit the go.d/haproxy.conf
configuration file using edit-config
from the
Netdata config directory, which is typically at /etc/netdata
.
cd /etc/netdata # Replace this path with your Netdata config directory
sudo ./edit-config go.d/haproxy.conf
Needs only url
to server's /metrics
endpoint. Here is an example for 2 servers:
jobs:
- name: local
url: http://127.0.0.1:8404/metrics
- name: remote
url: http://203.0.113.10:8404/metrics
For all available options please see
module configuration file.
Troubleshooting
To troubleshoot issues with the haproxy
collector, run the go.d.plugin
with the debug option enabled. The output
should give you clues as to why the collector isn't working.
- First, navigate to your plugins' directory, usually at
/usr/libexec/netdata/plugins.d/
. If that's not the case on
your system, open netdata.conf
and look for the setting plugins directory
. Once you're in the plugin's directory,
switch to the netdata
user.
cd /usr/libexec/netdata/plugins.d/
sudo -u netdata -s
- You can now run the
go.d.plugin
to debug the collector:
./go.d.plugin -d -m haproxy