Currently the only way to convert a scalar to a vector is to
use absent(), which isn't very clean. This adds a vector()
function that's the inverse of scalar() and lets your optionally
set labels.
Example usage would be
vector(time() % 86400) < 3600
to filter to only the first hour of the day.
Move defer resp.Body.Close() up to make sure it's called even when the
HTTP request returns something other than 200 or Decoder construction
fails. This avoids leaking and eventually running out of file descriptors.
* Support multiple masters with retries against each master as required.
* Scrape masters' metrics.
* Add role meta label for node/service/master to make it easier for relabeling.
When doing comparison operations on vectors, filtering
sometimes gets in the way and you have to go to a fair bit of
effort to workaround it in order to always return a result.
The 'bool' modifier instead of filtering returns 0/1 depending
on the result of the compairson.
This is also a prerequisite to removing plain scalar/scalar comparisons,
as it maintains the current behaviour under a new syntax.
When the test ends, all files matching the watcher's glob are removed
via defer. In that moment, the draining goroutine may still be running
and then detect no files matching the configured glob just before the
test exits.
This is now solved by waiting for the draining goroutine to finish
before leaving the test function and thus causing the deferred file
removal.
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.
The current behaviour produces values that are not
from rules or scrapes. So if for example I have
a boolean 0/1 it can be returned as 0.2344589. This
prevents a number of advanced use cases, introduces
race conditions and can produce misleading graphs.
merge() closes the channel that handleUpdates() reads from when there
are zero configured target providers in the configuration. In that case,
the for-select loop in handleUpdates() entered a busy loop. It should
exit when the upstream channel is closed.