* added `Copy to clipboard` button
Signed-off-by: Stafford Williams <stafford.williams@gmail.com>
* generate vsfdata
Signed-off-by: Stafford Williams <stafford.williams@gmail.com>
* new lines
Signed-off-by: Stafford Williams <stafford.williams@gmail.com>
* single newline
Signed-off-by: Stafford Williams <stafford.williams@gmail.com>
When a metric has a null value, number formatters like
`humanizeNoSmallPrefix` will throw "Uncaught TypeError: Cannot read
property 'toPrecision' of null".
This is fixed by explicitly checking for `null` and returning the string
"null".
Note: This is usually not seen as rickshaw doesn't show annotations for
null values, but still calls the formatter.
Signed-off-by: David Coles <coles.david@gmail.com>
* update promlog to latest version
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* Update api tests, fix main setup
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* tidy go.sum
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* revendor prometheus/common
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* only initialize config; use kingpin for remote_storage_adapter
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* actually parse the flags
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* clean up imports
Signed-off-by: Alex Yu <yu.alex96@gmail.com>
* web: added ability to set page title through flag.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Chiu <andrew.chiu2@baesystems.com>
* Reformatted variable names and Flag description for readability.
Signed-off-by: Andrew Chiu <andrew.chiu2@baesystems.com>
* assets_vfsdata.go
Signed-off-by: Andrew Chiu <andrew.chiu2@baesystems.com>
* Flag name changed from web.ui-title to web.page-title
Signed-off-by: Andrew Chiu <andrew.chiu2@baesystems.com>
* make assets
Signed-off-by: Andrew Chiu <andrew.chiu2@baesystems.com>
By default the gRPC client of the REST API gateway relies on the
HTTP_PROXY variable to connect to the local gRPC server which isn't
desired as the server runs in the same process. This change uses a
custom dialer that connects directly to the server's address.
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* *: move to go 1.11
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Reduce number of places where we specify the Go version
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Add evaluationTimestamp (Last Evaluation) column to display on /rules
Signed-off-by: Will Hegedus <wbhegedus@liberty.edu>
* Add lastScrapeDuration ("Scrape Duration") to display on /targets
Signed-off-by: Will Hegedus <wbhegedus@liberty.edu>
* Updates based on Julius' feedback
Signed-off-by: Will Hegedus <wbhegedus@liberty.edu>
* Update to set timestamp to when eval started (after eval completes)
Signed-off-by: Will Hegedus <wbhegedus@liberty.edu>
* Update /rules to display time since last evaluation
Signed-off-by: Will Hegedus <wbhegedus@liberty.edu>
* Re-order Last Eval/Eval Time to be consistent with targets page
Signed-off-by: Will Hegedus <wbhegedus@liberty.edu>
With the addition of the errors in the views list, it is now difficult
to have a view on all the rules in a screen witdh.
This commit adds wrapping to improve the overall display of the rules
page.
Signed-off-by: Julien Pivotto <roidelapluie@inuits.eu>
The scrape manage receiver's channel now just saves the target sets
and another backgorund runner updates the scrape loops every 5 seconds.
This is so that the scrape manager doesn't block the receiving channel
when it does the long background reloading of the scrape loops.
Active and dropped targets are now saved in each scrape pool instead of
the scrape manager. This is mainly to avoid races when getting the
targets via the web api.
When reloading the scrape loops now happens in parallel to speed up the
final disared state and this also speeds up the prometheus's shutting
down.
Also updated some funcs signatures in the web package for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Krasi Georgiev <kgeorgie@redhat.com>
* web: fix asset paths for Windows platforms
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* web: add tests
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Limit the number of samples remote read can return.
- Return 413 entity too large.
- Limit can be set be a flag. Allow 0 to mean no limit.
- Include limit in error message.
- Set default limit to 50M (* 16 bytes = 800MB).
Signed-off-by: Tom Wilkie <tom.wilkie@gmail.com>
When prom2 came out the storage querier interface consolidated to a
single Select() method. While doing this it makes it impossible as the
implementer of the querier to know if you are being called for metadata
or actual data. The workaround has been to check if the SelectParams are
nil, which the federation call is always nil. This has 2 negative
consequences (1) remote implementations interpret this as a metadata
call, which makes the federation endpoint return nothing. (2) this means
that the storage implementations don't get the same information passed
down to them as far as SelectParams goes.
This diff simply adds SelectParams to the Select() call in the
federation handler
Mitigation for #4057
Signed-off-by: Thomas Jackson <jacksontj.89@gmail.com>
Looking at https://tech.townsourced.com/post/embedding-static-files-in-go/ (which was mentioned in the issue), vfsgen has all the needed features.
In particular:
- Reproducible builds (no issue with timestamping).
- Well maintained and relatively popular.
- Integration with go generate.
- Self-contained (no external dependency).
* [WIP] Replace go-bindata by vfsgen
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Add license + remove doc.go
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Generate templates assets
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Use new templates assets
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* split static assets
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Idempotent make assets
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Update vendor/
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* vendor vfsgendev
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Update README.md
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Simplify assets generation
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Fix README.md
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Use generate helper program instead of vfsgen
This avoids installing vfsgendev in the target environment.
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Remove unused vfsgen package
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Fix Makefile
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* vendoring shurcooL/vfsgen
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Fix go generate command
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Sync web/ui/assets_vfsdata.go
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
There are many more (mostly finalizers like Close/Stop/etc.), but most of
the others seemed like one couldn't do much about them anyway.
Signed-off-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>
* adding information about the health and errors for Rules
adding Health() and LastError() to the Rule interface. This will allow
us to easily surface information about rules.
Signed-off-by: noqcks <benny@noqcks.io>
* updating rules.html with fields for Rule errors and health state
Signed-off-by: noqcks <benny@noqcks.io>
* fix code comment grammar & access Rule health/error info using a mutex
Signed-off-by: noqcks <benny@noqcks.io>
* s/Errors/Error/ in rules.html to remain consistent with targets.html
Signed-off-by: noqcks <benny@noqcks.io>
* adding periods to code comments in reporting/alerting
Signed-off-by: noqcks <benny@noqcks.io>
* putting health/error below mutex in struct field
Signed-off-by: noqcks <benny@noqcks.io>
It was added 5 years ago by Matt and I'm not sure anyone ever used
it after public release (since we have /debug/pprof/heap as well).
It also lacked error checking and allows people to write to disk over HTTP.
Signed-off-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>
* Allow for BufferedSeriesIterator instances to be created without an underlying iterator, to simplify their usage.
Signed-off-by: Alin Sinpalean <alin.sinpalean@gmail.com>
* Add Start/End to SelectParams
* Make remote read use the new selectParams for start/end
This commit will continue sending the start/end time of the remote read
query as the overarching promql time and the specific range of data that
the query is intersted in receiving a response to is now part of the
ReadHints (upstream discussion in #4226).
* Remove unused vendored code
The genproto.sh script was updated, but the code wasn't regenerated.
This simply removes the vendored deps that are no longer part of the
codegen output.
Signed-off-by: Thomas Jackson <jacksontj.89@gmail.com>
This adds a per-target cache of scraped metadata. The metadata is only
available for the lifecycle of the attached target. An API endpoint allows
to select metadata by metric name and a label selection of targets.
Signed-off-by: Fabian Reinartz <freinartz@google.com>
Displaying all the dropped targets in the service-discovery page hurts
the Prometheus server as well as the browser when thousands of dropped
targets exist. This change limits this number to 1,000 and display the
number of active/total targets per scrape configuration.
Add warning when more than 100 targets are dropped
Signed-off-by: Simon Pasquier <spasquie@redhat.com>
* Move range logic to 'eval'
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make aggregegate range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* PromQL is statically typed, so don't eval to find the type.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Extend rangewrapper to multiple exprs
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Start making function evaluation ranged
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make instant queries a special case of range queries
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Eliminate evalString
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Evaluate range vector functions one series at a time
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make unary operators range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make binops range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Pass time to range-aware functions.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make simple _over_time functions range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reduce allocs when working with matrix selectors
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Add basic benchmark for range evaluation
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reuse objects for function arguments
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Do dropmetricname and allocating output vector only once.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Add range-aware support for range vector functions with params
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Optimise holt_winters, cut cpu and allocs by ~25%
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make rate&friends range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make more functions range aware. Document calling convention.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make date functions range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make simple math functions range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Convert more functions to be range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make more functions range aware
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Specialcase timestamp() with vector selector arg for range awareness
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Remove transition code for functions
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Remove the rest of the engine transition code
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Remove more obselete code
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Remove the last uses of the eval* functions
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Remove engine finalizers to prevent corruption
The finalizers set by matrixSelector were being called
just before the value they were retruning to the pool
was then being provided to the caller. Thus a concurrent query
could corrupt the data that the user has just been returned.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Add new benchmark suite for range functinos
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Migrate existing benchmarks to new system
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Expand promql benchmarks
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Simply test by removing unused range code
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* When testing instant queries, check range queries too.
To protect against subsequent steps in a range query being
affected by the previous steps, add a test that evaluates
an instant query that we know works again as a range query
with the tiimestamp we care about not being the first step.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reuse ring for matrix iters. Put query results back in pool.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reuse buffer when iterating over matrix selectors
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Unary minus should remove metric name
Cut down benchmarks for faster runs.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reduce repetition in benchmark test cases
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Work series by series when doing normal vectorSelectors
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Optimise benchmark setup, cuts time by 60%
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Have rangeWrapper use an evalNodeHelper to cache across steps
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Use evalNodeHelper with functions
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Cache dropMetricName within a node evaluation.
This saves both the calculations and allocs done by dropMetricName
across steps.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reuse input vectors in rangewrapper
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Reuse the point slices in the matrixes input/output by rangeWrapper
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make benchmark setup faster using AddFast
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Simplify benchmark code.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Add caching in VectorBinop
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Use xor to have one-level resultMetric hash key
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Add more benchmarks
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Call Query.Close in apiv1
This allows point slices allocated for the response data
to be reused by later queries, saving allocations.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Optimise histogram_quantile
It's now 5-10% faster with 97% less garbage generated for 1k steps
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make the input collection in rangeVector linear rather than quadratic
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Optimise label_replace, for 1k steps 15x fewer allocs and 3x faster
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Optimise label_join, 1.8x faster and 11x less memory for 1k steps
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Expand benchmarks, cleanup comments, simplify numSteps logic.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Address Fabian's comments
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Comments from Alin.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Address jrv's comments
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Remove dead code
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Address Simon's comments.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Rename populateIterators, pre-init some sizes
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Handle case where function has non-matrix args first
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Split rangeWrapper out to rangeEval function, improve comments
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Cleanup and make things more consistent
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Make EvalNodeHelper public
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
* Fabian's comments.
Signed-off-by: Brian Brazil <brian.brazil@robustperception.io>
Fix race by properly locking access to scrape pools. Use separate mutex for information needed by UI so that UI isn't blocked when targets are being updated.
* web: replace deprecated InstrumentHandler()
This change replaces the deprecated InstrumentHandler function by the
equivalent functions from the promhttp package.
The following metrics are removed:
* http_request_duration_microseconds (Summary).
* http_request_size_bytes (Summary).
* http_requests_total (Counter).
And the following metrics are added instead:
* prometheus_http_request_duration_seconds (Histogram).
* prometheus_http_response_size_bytes (Histogram).
* promhttp_metric_handler_requests_in_flight (Gauge).
* promhttp_metric_handler_requests_total (Counter).
* Update github.com/prometheus/common/route package
* web: refactor using the new prometheus/common/route package
After removing the checkbox in #3913 the only remaining element that
looked like it was the new Show Annotations checkbox on the Alerts page.
Which in turn didn't look like the Enable query history checkout on the
graph page. So:
1. This takes the Enable query history button as canonical.
2. Updates the show annotations button code to match it.
3. Simplifies the JS for the checkbox.
The new Service Discovery page uses the CSS/JS from the Targets page but
used slightly differently. This makes the job header match in the
Service Discovery page for a more consistent look-n-feel.
* Added only healthy to Targets
This adds a "Only heathly" button to supplement the "Only unhealthy"
button. The two are mutually exclusive.
I've also added a red/green text color to the buttons.
Arguably this could be a toggle instead if folks think this is
worthwhile... Happy to modify it.
* Moved functions above init
* Simplifed code and made prettier
* Appeased codeacy
* Made buttons square
* Fix JS error: cannot read source of undefined
When the page was refreshed with queries on the page,
the updateTypeaheadMetricsSet function was called before
the typeahead had been initialized.
* Fix: updates URL when query submits
When queries were submitted by pressing enter, the URL did not update
to reflect the change. Not sure why, but this was only the case when
the queries were non-simple, meaning when either labels werre specified
or other promql functions were used.
* Rebase master and make assets
This is a very minor UX change. The current "No Alert rules" present
table row has the `alert_header` class attached. This changes the cursor
and some other stuff and makes sense with the populated table but less
sense with the unpopulated table. So removing it the latter case.
This adds a parameter to the storage selection interface which allows
query engine(s) to pass information about the operations surrounding a
data selection.
This can for example be used by remote storage backends to infer the
correct downsampling aggregates that need to be provided.
When you have no alerting rules defined you get a screen sharing this
information in the WebUI. If no rules are defined then you instead see
an empty white screen. This adds a "No rules" defined `else` clause and
a `Rules` header to the page.
* Do not autoselect the first item in the dropdown
* Historical queries only show in dropdown when toggled on
* Move shared behavior to queryHistory.isEnabled function
* Do not auto submit selected history queries
net.Listener converts 0.0.0.0 to :: which fails for hosts where IPv6 is
disabled. This change uses the original listen address parameter instead
of grpcl.Addr().String().
Federation makes use of dedupedSeriesSet to merge SeriesSets for every
query into one output stream. If many match[] arguments are provided,
many dedupedSeriesSet objects will get chained. This has the downside of
causing a potential O(n*k) running time, where n is the number of series
and k the number of match[] arguments.
In the mean time, the storage package provides a mergeSeriesSet that
accomplishes the same with an O(n*log(k)) running time by making use of
a binary heap. Let's just get rid of dedupedSeriesSet and change all
existing callers to use mergeSeriesSet.
When there is an empty result set, the Prometheus server replies with
{"status":"success","data":{"resultType":"vector","result":null}}
That "null" reply was not handled correctly by the graphing library.
This commit handles that case and shows "no data" in the UI console view
instead of throwing an error in the browser javascript console.
Fixes#3515
Signed-off-by: Julien Pivotto <roidelapluie@inuits.eu>
API consumers should be able to get insight into the query run times.
The UI currently measures total roundtrip times. This PR allows for more
fine grained metrics to be exposed.
* adds new timer for total execution time (queue + eval)
* expose new timer, queue timer, and eval timer in stats field of the
range query response:
```json
{
"status": "success",
"data": {
"resultType": "matrix",
"result": [],
"stats": {
"execQueueTimeNs": 4683,
"execTotalTimeNs": 2086587,
"totalEvalTimeNs": 2077851
}
}
}
```
* stats field is optional, only set when query parameter `stats` is not
empty
Try it via
```sh
curl 'http://localhost:9090/api/v1/query_range?query=up&start=1486480279&end=1486483879&step=14000&stats=true'
```
Review feedback
* moved query stats json generation to query_stats.go
* use seconds for all query timers
* expose all timers available
* Changed ExecTotalTime string representation from Exec queue total time to Exec total time
This PR fixes#3072 by providing POST endpoints for `query` and `query_range`.
POST request must be made with `Content-Type: application/x-www-form-urlencoded` header.
* Add UI warning for time drift >30 seconds
* Yellow time drift warning & better warning message
* Set warning threshold to 30 sec
* Include changed assets
* Re-add contexts to storage.Storage.Querier()
These are needed when replacing the storage by a multi-tenant
implementation where the tenant is stored in the context.
The 1.x query interfaces already had contexts, but they got lost in 2.x.
* Convert promql.Engine to use native contexts
No matter how we refactor docs, `/docs/` will stay the prefix, so there's not long-term risk in changing this.
One we version docs, we should probably try and keep link & version in sync.
Whenever a route prefix is applied, the router prepends the prefix to
the URL path on the request. For most handlers, this is not an issue
because the request's path is only used for routing and is not actually
needed by the handler itself. However, Prometheus delegates the handling
of the /debug/* endpoints to the http.DefaultServeMux which has it's own
routing logic that depends on the url.Path. As a result, whenever a
prefix is applied, the prefixed URL is passed to the DefaultServeMux
which has no awareness of the prefix and returns a 404.
This change fixes the issue by creating a new serveDebug handler which
routes requests /debug/* requests to appropriate net/http/pprof handler
and removing the net/http/pprof import in cmd/prometheus since it is no
longer necessary.
Fixes#2183.
This PR adds the `/status/config` endpoint which exposes the currently
loaded Prometheus config. This is the same config that is displayed on
`/config` in the UI in YAML format. The response payload looks like
such:
```
{
"status": "success",
"data": {
"yaml": <CONFIG>
}
}
```
Issue #3046 is triggered by html/template changes in go1.9.
See https://tip.golang.org/pkg/html/template. Quote:
// To ease migration to Go 1.9 and beyond, "html" and "urlquery" will
// continue to be allowed as the last command in a pipeline. However, if the
// pipeline occurs in an unquoted attribute value context, "html" is
// disallowed. Avoid using "html" and "urlquery" entirely in new templates.
The commit also includes a trivial whitespace fix.
To cover the cases where stale markers may not be available,
we need to infer the interval and mark series stale based on that.
As we're lacking stale markers this is less accurate, however
it should be good enough for these cases.
We need 4 intervals as if say we had data at t=0 and t=10,
coming via federation. The next data point should be at t=20 however it
could take up to t=30 for it actually to be ingested, t=40 for it to be
scraped via federation and t=50 for it to be ingested.
We then add 10% on to that for slack, as we do elsewhere.
* Use request.Context() instead of a global map of contexts.
* Add some basic opentracing instrumentation on the query path.
* Remove tracehandler endpoint.
This is needed for federating non-instance level metrics, so they don't
end up with the instance label of the prometheus target.
Also sort external labels, so label output order is consistent.
* Fixed int64 overflow for timestamp in v1/api parseDuration and parseTime
This led to unexpected results on wrong query with "(...)&start=148966367200.372&end=1489667272.372"
That query is wrong because of `start > end` but actually internal int64 overflow caused start to be something around MinInt64 (huge negative value) and was passing validation.
BTW: Not sure if negative timestamp makes sense even.. But model.Earliest is actually MinInt64, can someone explain me why?
Signed-off-by: Bartek Plotka <bwplotka@gmail.com>
* Added missing trailing periods on comments.
Signed-off-by: Bartek Plotka <bwplotka@gmail.com>
* MOved to only `<` and `>`. Removed equal.
Signed-off-by: Bartek Plotka <bwplotka@gmail.com>
Expose buildQueryUrl, refactor dispatch to use
buildQueryUrl will allow users to execute queries over the range of an
existing graph. This will be helpful to select data series they wish to
annotate the graph with, for example.
The fuzzy library didn't try to find a "best match", but settled on the
first fuzzy match that exists. This patch includes a modified version of
the fuzzy library, which recursivley tries on the rest of the search
string to find a better match. If found, returns that one.
Another small modification is that if a pattern fully matches, it
skips the lookup entirley and returns the highest score possible for
that match.
For some of the queries, the fuzzy lookup was not filtering properly.
The problem is due to the "replace" beind made on the query itself. It
accidently removes only the first underscore. This patch changes it so
that it removes all of the whitespaces, letting the fuzzy algorithm do
its magic, also fixing this problem.
Originally, the underscore were replaced by a space for this specific
reason, to let the user type a space and have the lookup treat it as the
word break.
Fixes#2380
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.
There's no corresponding table column for this table header. The
placeholder link for silences was removed in e8800730.
Accordingly, regenerate `web/ui/bindata.go` by running:
make assets format
See discussion in
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/prometheus-developers/bkuGbVlvQ9g
The main idea is that the user of a storage shouldn't have to deal with
fingerprints anymore, and should not need to do an individual preload
call for each metric. The storage interface needs to be made more
high-level to not expose these details.
This also makes it easier to reuse the same storage interface for remote
storages later, as fewer roundtrips are required and the fingerprint
concept doesn't work well across the network.
NOTE: this deliberately gets rid of a small optimization in the old
query Analyzer, where we dedupe instants and ranges for the same series.
This should have a minor impact, as most queries do not have multiple
selectors loading the same series (and at the same offset).
I got feedback from different sources about rules and targets being
too heavy in the status tab if their are lots of them.
This change also allows for more fine-granular locking.
Prometheus is Apache 2 licensed, and most source files have the
appropriate copyright license header, but some were missing it without
apparent reason. Correct that by adding it.
The chunk encoding was hardcoded there because it mostly doesn't
matter what encoding is chosen in that test. Since type 1 is
battle-hardened enough, I'm switching to type 2 here so that we can
catch unexpected problems as a byproduct. My expectation is that the
chunk encoding doesn't matter anyway, as said, but then "unexpected
problems" contains the word "unexpected".
WIP: This needs more tests.
It now gets a from and through value, which it may opportunistically
use to optimize the retrieval. With possible future range indices,
this could be used in a very efficient way. This change merely applies
some easy checks, which should nevertheless solve the use case of
heavy rule evaluations on servers with a lot of series churn.
Idea is the following:
- Only archive series that are at least as old as the headChunkTimeout
(which was already extremely unlikely to happen).
- Then maintain a high watermark for the last archival, i.e. no
archived series has a sample more recent than that watermark.
- Any query that doesn't reach to a time before that watermark doesn't
have to touch the archive index at all. (A production server at
Soundcloud with the aforementioned series churn and heavy rule
evaluations spends 50% of its CPU time in archive index
lookups. Since rule evaluations usually only touch very recent
values, most of those lookup should disappear with this change.)
- Federation with a very broad label matcher will profit from this,
too.
As a byproduct, the un-needed MetricForFingerprint method was removed
from the Storage interface.
This commit simplifies the TargetHealth type and moves the target
status into the target itself. This also removes a race where error
and last scrape time could have been out of sync.
Formalize ZeroSamplePair as return value for non-existing samples.
Change LastSamplePairForFingerprint to return a SamplePair (and not a
pointer to it), which saves allocations in a potentially extremely
frequent call.
It's actually happening in several places (and for flags, we use the
standard Go time.Duration...). This at least reduces all our
home-grown parsing to one place (in model).
This enables metric name autocompletion for every word in an expression,
not just the very first one. It would be great to also support all
language keywords during autocompletion in the future.
This adapts some functionality from the Go standard library for string
literal lexing and unquoting/unescaping.
The following string types are now supported:
Double- or single-quoted strings:
These support all escape sequences that Go supports in double-quoted
string literals. The difference is that Prometheus also has
single-quoted strings (instead of single-quoted runes in Go). Raw
newlines are not allowed.
Backtick-quoted raw strings:
Strings quoted in backticks are treated as raw strings just like in Go
and may contain raw newlines and other special characters directly.
Fixes https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/1122
Fixes https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/1121
This is with `golint -min_confidence=0.5`.
I left several lint warnings untouched because they were either
incorrect or I felt it was better not to change them at the moment.
Let's remove the silencing links until we actually have support for that.
A silencing link shouldn't only redirect to Alertmanager, but also open a
silencing dialog for the respective alert name or active alert element.
This got broken in
78047326b4
since it stopped using the DefaultServeMux.
This approach will defer pprof requests to the DefaultServeMux, which
may or may not have pprof enabled (in Prometheus, it gets it included in
main.go). An alternative approach would be to duplicate the four lines in
https://golang.org/src/net/http/pprof/pprof.go#L62. When choosing that
approach though, we would not automatically gain any new endpoints added
by net/http/pprof or other /debug endpoints in the future.
Besides fixing https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/805 by
making the entire externally reachable server URL configurable, this
adds tests for the "globalURL" template function and makes it easier to
test other such functions in the future.
This breaks the `web.Hostname` flag (and introduces `web.external-url`).
This flag is likely only used by few users, so I hope that's
justifiable.
Fixes https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/805
Also remove hidden input fields that are not used anymore, because the
query params are now passed as JSON to the AJAX function. This also has
the wonderful side effect that we're no longer sending all the other
non-hidden fields along to the query endpoints anymore.
Changes to the UI:
- "Active Since" timestamps are now human-readable.
- Alerting rules are now pretty-printed better.
- Labels are no longer just strings, but alert bubbles (like we do on
the status page for base labels).
- Alert states and target health states are now capitalized in the
presentation layer rather than at the source.
This commit adds a federation handler on /federate. It accepts `match[]`
query parameters containing vector selectors. Their intersection determines
the in-memory metrics that are returned in the same way as the
/metrics endpoint does (modulo sorting).
Version information is determined at build-time and thus there is
no need to pass it down from main. In its own package it can
be used from various other packages.
Also, rearrange and clean up some things to make this work.
The textarea starts as a single line, but auto-expands when entering
multiple lines (e.g. via Shift+Enter). Pressing just "Enter" still
executes the expression.
Main changes:
- Switched to using `go-bindata` in place of `scripts/embed-static.sh`.
- Support for building Prometheus without a `Makefile`.
- Minor typo fix to make Prometheus build on Windows (without Makefiles).
Please note that this does not mean that prometheus will work on Windows.
There are still failing tests!
Figuring out what's going on with the new service discovery
and labels is difficult. Add a popover with the labels
to the target table to make things simpler, and help
discovery of potentially useful labels.
Previously we redirected any non-existent path to the root (or path
prefix).
The new behavior:
With no path prefix:
- "" -> "/"
- "/biz" -> 404
With path prefix of "/foo/bar":
- "" -> "/foo/bar/"
- "/" -> "/foo/bar/"
- "/foo/bar" -> "/foo/bar/"
- "/biz" -> /foo/bar/biz"
(anything not starting with the path prefix gets the prefix prepended)
- "/foo/bar/biz" -> 404
This change is conceptually very simple, although the diff is large. It
switches logging from "github.com/golang/glog" to
"github.com/prometheus/log", while not actually changing any log
messages. V(1)-style logging has been changed to be log.Debug*().
Appending to the storage can block for a long time. Timing out
scrapes can also cause longer blocks. This commit avoids that those
blocks affect other compnents than the target itself.
Also the Target interface was removed.
The target implementation and interface contain methods only serving a
specific purpose of the templates. They were moved to the template
as they operate on more fundamental target data.
With this commit, sending SIGHUP to the Prometheus process will reload
and apply the configuration file. The different components attempt
to handle failing changes gracefully.
This commits renames the RuleManager to Manager as the package
name is 'rules' now. The unused layer of abstraction of the
RuleManager interface is removed.
This commit shifts responsibility for maintaining targets from providers and
pools to the target manager. Target groups have a source name that identifies
them for updates.
This adds the population standard deviation and
variance as aggregation functions, useful for
spotting how many standard deviations some samples
are from the mean.
Don't handle `0` as a special timestamp value for "now" anymore, except
in the `QueryRange()` case, where existing API consumers still expect
`0` to mean "now".
Also, properly return errors now for malformed timestamp/duration
float values.
/api/targets was undocumented and never used and also broken.
Showing instance and job labels on the status page (next to targets)
does not make sense as those labels are set in an obvious way.
Also add a doc comment to TargetStateToClass.
The one central sample ingestion channel has caused a variety of
trouble. This commit removes it. Targets and rule evaluation call an
Append method directly now. To incorporate multiple storage backends
(like OpenTSDB), storage.Tee forks the Append into two different
appenders.
Note that the tsdb queue manager had its own queue anyway. It was a
queue after a queue... Much queue, so overhead...
Targets have their own little buffer (implemented as a channel) to
avoid stalling during an http scrape. But a new scrape will only be
started once the old one is fully ingested.
The contraption of three pipelined ingesters was removed. A Target is
an ingester itself now. Despite more logic in Target, things should be
less confusing now.
Also, remove lint and vet warnings in ast.go.
- original series data is saved so it can be re-transformed after
Rickshaw's stacking modified the series data
- always reconstruct graphs from scratch instead of updating the
settings of an existing one (simplification)
- always wipe and recreate all graph-related DOM elements completely so
that no left-over event handlers cause background event handlers
This is related to #454. Queries now timeout after a duration set by
the -query.timeout flag. The TotalEvalTimer is now started/stopped
inside any of the ast.Eval* functions.
When Rickshaw was updated to 1.5.1 in
fd43daf82e,
the Rickshaw upstream package now contained 3 different D3 files:
d3.min.js
d3.v2.js
d3.v3.js
For details on why that is, see
https://groups.google.com/forum/#!topic/d3-js/lXQgKA7mtEw
For the 1.5.1 Rickshaw to work properly (being able to format dates with
D3 without causing a JS error), it needs d3.v2.js or d3.v3.js, not the
d3.min.js one. I chose to update us to d3.v3.js now, since that is the
most recent and minified version, and I didn't see any problems with it
(also, the current Rickshaw examples are using that D3 version).
Currently, displaying graphs with a range >14d is broken. This fixes
that.
While the recent commit 7e5745f solved the issue of having an
independent blob-stamp file, which was possible to become out of
sync with the necessary web/blob/files.go file, this change further
simplifies the setup by merging the two Makefile.
The only purpose of web/Makefile was to call targets in
web/blob/Makefile. As all dependencies for blob/files.go are
outside of the blob/ directory, the separation isn't logically
necessary.
- Use only the minified versions of bootstrap.
- Do not embed non-minified bootstrap files and bootstrap map files.
- Simplify the 'blob-stamp' Makefile contraption.
- Move CONTRIBUTORS.md to the more common AUTHORS.
- Added the required NOTICE file.
- Changed "Prometheus Team" to "The Prometheus Authors".
- Reverted the erroneous changes to the Apache License.
This provides the basic js, css and console template
templates required to build dashboards.
Included as an example are consoles for the node_exporter.
Change-Id: I4cfeea5e9691a9413f74ae98ca32a908df8e4a59
The "Address" is actually a URL which may contain username and
password. Calling this Address is misleading so we rename it.
Change-Id: I441c7ab9dfa2ceedc67cde7a47e6843a65f60511
This doesn't make the import order consistend everywhere, just where
it was touched by the previous commit.
Change-Id: I82fc75f8691da9901c7ceb808e6f6fe8e5d62c0e
Essentially:
- Remove unused code.
- Make it 'go vet' clean. The only remaining warnings are in generated code.
- Make it 'golint' clean. The only remaining warnings are in gerenated code.
- Smoothed out same minor things.
Change-Id: I3fe5c1fbead27b0e7a9c247fee2f5a45bc2d42c6
After many transformations, it doesn't make sense to keep the metric
names, since the result of the transformation is no longer that metric.
This drops the metric name after such transformations and makes the web
UI deal well with missing metric names.
This depends on the current branch on the following things:
- prometheus/client_golang needs to be at
e237cf15c6
in branch "julius/int-fingerprints" (to be merged with new storage)
- prometheus/promdash needs to be at
dd7691c9c2
Change-Id: Ib3c8cad8d647d9854e8c653c424b8c235ccc231d
This removes the dependancy on C leveldb and snappy.
It also takes care of fewer dependencies as they would
anyway not work on any non-Debian, non-Brew system.
Change-Id: Ia70dce1ba8a816a003587927e0b3a3f8ad2fd28c
Gracefully handle decimal values, by truncating them.
Limit amount of steps, to avoid accidentally pulling too much data.
This limit returns up to ~500kB per timeseries, and allows
for 60s granularity for a week and 1h granularity for a year.
Change-Id: Ie549fc24deb2eecbc6c5d1b6088a548a6b02e849
Having metrics with variable timestamps inconsistently
spaced when things fail will make it harder to write correct rules.
Update status page, requires some refactoring to insert a function.
Change-Id: Ie1c586cca53b8f3b318af8c21c418873063738a8
This fixes the problem where samples become temporarily unavailable for
queries while they are being flushed to disk. Although the entire
flushing code could use some major refactoring, I'm explicitly trying to
do the minimal change to fix the problem since there's a whole new
storage implementation in the pipeline.
Change-Id: I0f5393a30b88654c73567456aeaea62f8b3756d9
Due to the lack of a </a>, this makes the entire header render badly.
Accordingly it's safe to assume noone is using it, so remove it.
With the new console template support, we'll need to something a bit
more nuanced later.
Change-Id: I3424bed6aea18cbd4c63ad48f98808098dadc3ad
Add a function to bypass the new auto-escaping.
Add a function to workaround go's templates only allowing passing in one argument.
Change-Id: Id7aa3f95e7c227692dc22108388b1d9b1e2eec99
This is consistent with alertmanager, and more intiutive for users.
The graphs page just has graphs, so remove mention of consoles.
Change-Id: I87780a4ade33697a6095423e1a7de47d341d2838
Move rulemanager to it's own package to break cicrular dependency.
Make NewTestTieredStorage available to tests, remove duplication.
Change-Id: I33b321245a44aa727bfc3614a7c9ae5005b34e03
This was initially motivated by wanting to distribute the rule checker
tool under `tools/rule_checker`. However, this was not possible without
also distributing the LevelDB dynamic libraries because the tool
transitively depended on Levigo:
rule checker -> query layer -> tiered storage layer -> leveldb
This change separates external storage interfaces from the
implementation (tiered storage, leveldb storage, memory storage) by
putting them into separate packages:
- storage/metric: public, implementation-agnostic interfaces
- storage/metric/tiered: tiered storage implementation, including memory
and LevelDB storage.
I initially also considered splitting up the implementation into
separate packages for tiered storage, memory storage, and LevelDB
storage, but these are currently so intertwined that it would be another
major project in itself.
The query layers and most other parts of Prometheus now have notion of
the storage implementation anymore and just use whatever implementation
they get passed in via interfaces.
The rule_checker is now a static binary :)
Change-Id: I793bbf631a8648ca31790e7e772ecf9c2b92f7a0
The closing of Prometheus now using a sync.Once wrapper to prevent
any accidental multiple invocations of it, which could trigger
corruption or a race condition. The shutdown process is made more
verbose through logging.
A not-enabled by default web handler has been provided to trigger a
remote shutdown if requested for debugging purposes.
Change-Id: If4fee75196bbff1fb1e4a4ef7e1cfa53fef88f2e
This also fixes the compaction test, which before worked only because
the input sample sorting was accidentally equal to the resulting on-disk
sample sorting.
Change-Id: I2a21c4b46ba562424b27058fc02eba84fa6a6006
So far we've been using Go's native time.Time for anything related to sample
timestamps. Since the range of time.Time is much bigger than what we need, this
has created two problems:
- there could be time.Time values which were out of the range/precision of the
time type that we persist to disk, therefore causing incorrectly ordered keys.
One bug caused by this was:
https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/367
It would be good to use a timestamp type that's more closely aligned with
what the underlying storage supports.
- sizeof(time.Time) is 192, while Prometheus should be ok with a single 64-bit
Unix timestamp (possibly even a 32-bit one). Since we store samples in large
numbers, this seriously affects memory usage. Furthermore, copying/working
with the data will be faster if it's smaller.
*MEMORY USAGE RESULTS*
Initial memory usage comparisons for a running Prometheus with 1 timeseries and
100,000 samples show roughly a 13% decrease in total (VIRT) memory usage. In my
tests, this advantage for some reason decreased a bit the more samples the
timeseries had (to 5-7% for millions of samples). This I can't fully explain,
but perhaps garbage collection issues were involved.
*WHEN TO USE THE NEW TIMESTAMP TYPE*
The new clientmodel.Timestamp type should be used whenever time
calculations are either directly or indirectly related to sample
timestamps.
For example:
- the timestamp of a sample itself
- all kinds of watermarks
- anything that may become or is compared to a sample timestamp (like the timestamp
passed into Target.Scrape()).
When to still use time.Time:
- for measuring durations/times not related to sample timestamps, like duration
telemetry exporting, timers that indicate how frequently to execute some
action, etc.
*NOTE ON OPERATOR OPTIMIZATION TESTS*
We don't use operator optimization code anymore, but it still lives in
the code as dead code. It still has tests, but I couldn't get all of them to
pass with the new timestamp format. I commented out the failing cases for now,
but we should probably remove the dead code soon. I just didn't want to do that
in the same change as this.
Change-Id: I821787414b0debe85c9fffaeb57abd453727af0f
Due to on going issues, we've decided to remove gorest. It started with gorest
not being thread-safe (it does introspection to create a new handler which is
an easy process to mess up with multiple threads of execution):
https://code.google.com/p/gorest/issues/detail?id=15
While the issue has been marked fixed, it looks like the patch has introduced
more problems than the original issue and simply doesn't work properly.
I'm not sure the behaviour was thought through properly. If a new instance is
needed every request then a handler-factory is needed or the library needs to
set expectations about how the new objects should interact with their
constructor state.
While it was tempting to try out another routing library, I think for now
it's better to use dumb vanilla Go routing. At least until we decide which
URL format we intend to standardize on.
Change-Id: Ica3da135d05f8ab8fc206f51eeca4f684f8efa0e
This commit fixes a critique of the old storage API design, whereby
the input parameters were always as raw bytes and never Protocol
Buffer messages that encapsulated the data, meaning every place a
read or mutation was conducted needed to manually perform said
translations on its own. This is taxing.
Change-Id: I4786938d0d207cefb7782bd2bd96a517eead186f
An design question was open for me in the beginning was whether to
serialize other types to disk, but Protocol Buffers quickly won out,
which allows us to drop support for other types. This is a good
start to cleaning up a lot of cruft in the storage stack and
can let us eventually decouple the various moving parts into
separate subsystems for easier reasoning.
This commit is not strictly required, but it is a start to making
the rest a lot more enjoyable to interact with.