Currently all read queries are simply pushed to remote read clients.
This is fine, except for remote storage for wich it unefficient and
make query slower even if remote read is unnecessary.
So we need instead to compare the oldest timestamp in primary/local
storage with the query range lower boundary. If the oldest timestamp
is older than the mint parameter, then there is no need for remote read.
This is an optionnal behavior per remote read client.
Signed-off-by: Thibault Chataigner <t.chataigner@criteo.com>
This change enables the OpenStack service discovery to read the
authentication parameters from the OS_* environment variables when the
identity endpoint URL is not defined in the Prometheus configuration
file.
* Add UI warning for time drift >30 seconds
* Yellow time drift warning & better warning message
* Set warning threshold to 30 sec
* Include changed assets
The postings list index may point to series that no longer
exist during garbage collection. This clarifies that this is valid
behavior.
It would be possible, though more complex, to always keep them in sync.
However, series existance means nothing in itself as the queried time
range defines whether there's actual data. Thus our definition is sane
overall as long as drift is kept small.
Instead, just make the anchoring part of the internal regex. This helps because
some users will want to read back the `Value` field and expect it to be the
same as the input value (e.g. some tests in Cortex), or use the value in
another context which is already expected to add its own anchoring, leading to
superfluous double anchoring (such as when we translate matchers into remote
read request matchers).
This commit introduces error returns in various places and is explicit
about closing persisted blocks.
{Index,Chunk,Tombstone}Readers are more consistent about their Close()
method. Whenever a reader is retrieved, the corresponding close method
must eventually be called. We use this to track pending readers against
persisted blocks.
Querier's against the DB no longer hold a read lock for their entire
lifecycle. This avoids long running queriers to starve new ones when we
have to acquire a write lock when reloading blocks.