RabbitMQ monitoring with Netdata
RabbitMQ
is the open source message broker.
This module monitors RabbitMQ
performance and health metrics.
It collects data using following endpoints:
/api/overview
/api/node/{node_name}
/api/vhosts
Metrics
All metrics have "rabbitmq." prefix.
Metric |
Scope |
Dimensions |
Units |
queued_messages |
global |
ready, unacknowledged |
messages |
message_rates |
global |
ack, publish, publish_in, publish_out, confirm, deliver, deliver_no_ack, get, get_no_ack, deliver_get, redeliver, return_unroutable |
messages/s |
global_counts |
global |
channels, consumers, connections, queues, exchanges |
counts |
file_descriptors |
global |
used |
descriptors |
sockets |
global |
used |
descriptors |
processes |
global |
used |
processes |
erlang_run_queue |
global |
length |
processes |
memory |
global |
used |
MiB |
disk_space |
global |
free |
MiB |
disk_space |
global |
free |
GiB |
vhost_messages |
vhost |
ack, confirm, deliver, get, get_no_ack, publish, redeliver, return_unroutable |
messages |
Configuration
Edit the go.d/rabbitmq.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/rabbitmq.conf
Here is an example for 2 servers:
jobs:
- name: local
url: http://localhost:15672
- name: remote
url: http://203.0.113.10:15672
For all available options, see the
module configuration file.
Troubleshooting
To troubleshoot issues with the rabbitmq
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.
-
Navigate to the plugins.d
directory, usually at /usr/libexec/netdata/plugins.d/
. If that's not the case on
your system, open netdata.conf
and look for the plugins
setting under [directories]
.
cd /usr/libexec/netdata/plugins.d/
-
Switch to the netdata
user.
sudo -u netdata -s
-
Run the go.d.plugin
to debug the collector:
./go.d.plugin -d -m rabbitmq