retreival.Target contains a mutex. It was copied in the Targets()
call. This potentially can wreak a lot of havoc.
It might even have caused the issues reported as #2266 and #2262 .
Right now the /alerts page of Prometheus sorts alerts by severity
(firing, pending, inactive). Once multiple alerts have the same
severity, their order seems to correlate to how they are placed in the
configuration files, but not always. Looking at the code, we make use of
sort.Sort(), which is documented not to provide a stable sort. The
Less() function also only takes the alert state into account.
This change extends the Less() function to provide a lexicographic order
on both the alert state and the name. This means I can finally find the
alerts I'm looking for without using my browser's search feature.
We are writing federation responses streaming. So after
the first byte we wrote, the status header is fixed. We cannot
return an HTTP error for intermediate error but should just abort
and log instead.
Adds also the moment.js library, which is a dependency of it.
Following conventions in the web/ui directory, I am not including the original
sources or LICENSE files.
If an existing request is aborted due to a new request, ignore the completion of the initial request.
Example:
1. Chrome dev tools: enable 5 second network latency
2. Execute query
3. A second later, execute the query again
4. Currently, the spinner will hide, and the stats will immediately display, as if the request had completed. Instead, the spinner and stats should wait until the 2nd execution finishes.
* Add fuzzy search to /graph textarea
We have a few thousands different metrics and looking up some of them
can be quite annoying with the simple string matching.
This patch adds a fuzzy search to the textarea lookup box on the /graph
page. It uses a small neat library from github.com/mattyork/fuzzy.
* Add fuzzy lib to NOTICE and re-build assets
Previously built assets changed the mode.
This extracts Querier as an instantiateable and closeable object
rather than just defining extending methods of the storage interface.
This improves composability and allows abstracting query transactions,
which can be useful for transaction-level caches, consistent data views,
and encapsulating teardown.
If an existing request is aborted due to a new request, ignore the completion of the initial request.
Example:
1. Chrome dev tools: enable 5 second network latency
2. Execute query
3. A second later, execute the query again
4. Currently, the spinner will hide, and the stats will immediately display, as if the request had completed. Instead, the spinner and stats should wait until the 2nd execution finishes.
This is based on https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/pull/1997.
This adds contexts to the relevant Storage methods and already passes
PromQL's new per-query context into the storage's query methods.
The immediate motivation supporting multi-tenancy in Frankenstein, but
this could also be used by Prometheus's normal local storage to support
cancellations and timeouts at some point.
For Weaveworks' Frankenstein, we need to support multitenancy. In
Frankenstein, we initially solved this without modifying the promql
package at all: we constructed a new promql.Engine for every
query and injected a storage implementation into that engine which would
be primed to only collect data for a given user.
This is problematic to upstream, however. Prometheus assumes that there
is only one engine: the query concurrency gate is part of the engine,
and the engine contains one central cancellable context to shut down all
queries. Also, creating a new engine for every query seems like overkill.
Thus, we want to be able to pass per-query contexts into a single engine.
This change gets rid of the promql.Engine's built-in base context and
allows passing in a per-query context instead. Central cancellation of
all queries is still possible by deriving all passed-in contexts from
one central one, but this is now the responsibility of the caller. The
central query context is now created in main() and passed into the
relevant components (web handler / API, rule manager).
In a next step, the per-query context would have to be passed to the
storage implementation, so that the storage can implement multi-tenancy
or other features based on the contextual information.
This will avoid duplicate MetricFamilies, thereby shrinking the size
of the federation payload and also creating legal text format.
Also, add unit tests for federation. They were also needed for the
previous state of the code, but were missing.
This reverts commit aa43d34a86.
This brings back the /graph changes so that @grandbora can continue to
work on the redirect for backwards compatibility. And other changes
can already take the new /graph parameters into account.
This revert will be reverted once v1.1 is released and has its own
release branch. Since we had already change on top of this, there was
no cleaner way of cutting those changes out.
This commit reverts the following commits:
Revert "Update backend helpers and templates to new url schema"
This reverts commit fc6cdd0611.
Revert "Refactor graph.js"
This reverts commit 445fac56e0.
Revert "Use query parameters in the url"
This reverts commit 3e18d86d8a.
Revert "Point to correct place for GraphLinkForExpression"
This reverts commit 3da825fc76.
Assets are also updated.