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Signed-off-by: hwdef <hwdef97@gmail.com>
1366 lines
53 KiB
Markdown
1366 lines
53 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Configuration
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sort_rank: 1
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---
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# Configuration
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Prometheus is configured via command-line flags and a configuration file. While
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the command-line flags configure immutable system parameters (such as storage
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locations, amount of data to keep on disk and in memory, etc.), the
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configuration file defines everything related to scraping [jobs and their
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instances](https://prometheus.io/docs/concepts/jobs_instances/), as well as
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which [rule files to load](recording_rules.md#configuring-rules).
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To view all available command-line flags, run `./prometheus -h`.
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Prometheus can reload its configuration at runtime. If the new configuration
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is not well-formed, the changes will not be applied.
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A configuration reload is triggered by sending a `SIGHUP` to the Prometheus process or
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sending a HTTP POST request to the `/-/reload` endpoint (when the `--web.enable-lifecycle` flag is enabled).
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This will also reload any configured rule files.
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## Configuration file
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To specify which configuration file to load, use the `--config.file` flag.
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The file is written in [YAML format](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAML),
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defined by the scheme described below.
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Brackets indicate that a parameter is optional. For non-list parameters the
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value is set to the specified default.
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Generic placeholders are defined as follows:
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* `<boolean>`: a boolean that can take the values `true` or `false`
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* `<duration>`: a duration matching the regular expression `[0-9]+(ms|[smhdwy])`
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* `<labelname>`: a string matching the regular expression `[a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*`
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* `<labelvalue>`: a string of unicode characters
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* `<filename>`: a valid path in the current working directory
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* `<host>`: a valid string consisting of a hostname or IP followed by an optional port number
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* `<path>`: a valid URL path
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* `<scheme>`: a string that can take the values `http` or `https`
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* `<string>`: a regular string
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* `<secret>`: a regular string that is a secret, such as a password
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* `<tmpl_string>`: a string which is template-expanded before usage
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The other placeholders are specified separately.
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A valid example file can be found [here](/config/testdata/conf.good.yml).
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The global configuration specifies parameters that are valid in all other configuration
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contexts. They also serve as defaults for other configuration sections.
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```yaml
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global:
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# How frequently to scrape targets by default.
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[ scrape_interval: <duration> | default = 1m ]
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# How long until a scrape request times out.
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[ scrape_timeout: <duration> | default = 10s ]
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# How frequently to evaluate rules.
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[ evaluation_interval: <duration> | default = 1m ]
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# The labels to add to any time series or alerts when communicating with
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# external systems (federation, remote storage, Alertmanager).
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external_labels:
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[ <labelname>: <labelvalue> ... ]
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# Rule files specifies a list of globs. Rules and alerts are read from
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# all matching files.
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rule_files:
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[ - <filepath_glob> ... ]
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# A list of scrape configurations.
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scrape_configs:
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[ - <scrape_config> ... ]
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# Alerting specifies settings related to the Alertmanager.
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alerting:
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alert_relabel_configs:
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[ - <relabel_config> ... ]
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alertmanagers:
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[ - <alertmanager_config> ... ]
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# Settings related to the remote write feature.
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remote_write:
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[ - <remote_write> ... ]
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# Settings related to the remote read feature.
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remote_read:
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[ - <remote_read> ... ]
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```
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### `<scrape_config>`
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A `scrape_config` section specifies a set of targets and parameters describing how
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to scrape them. In the general case, one scrape configuration specifies a single
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job. In advanced configurations, this may change.
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Targets may be statically configured via the `static_configs` parameter or
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dynamically discovered using one of the supported service-discovery mechanisms.
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Additionally, `relabel_configs` allow advanced modifications to any
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target and its labels before scraping.
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```yaml
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# The job name assigned to scraped metrics by default.
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job_name: <job_name>
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# How frequently to scrape targets from this job.
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[ scrape_interval: <duration> | default = <global_config.scrape_interval> ]
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# Per-scrape timeout when scraping this job.
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[ scrape_timeout: <duration> | default = <global_config.scrape_timeout> ]
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# The HTTP resource path on which to fetch metrics from targets.
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[ metrics_path: <path> | default = /metrics ]
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# honor_labels controls how Prometheus handles conflicts between labels that are
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# already present in scraped data and labels that Prometheus would attach
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# server-side ("job" and "instance" labels, manually configured target
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# labels, and labels generated by service discovery implementations).
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#
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# If honor_labels is set to "true", label conflicts are resolved by keeping label
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# values from the scraped data and ignoring the conflicting server-side labels.
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#
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# If honor_labels is set to "false", label conflicts are resolved by renaming
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# conflicting labels in the scraped data to "exported_<original-label>" (for
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# example "exported_instance", "exported_job") and then attaching server-side
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# labels.
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#
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# Setting honor_labels to "true" is useful for use cases such as federation and
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# scraping the Pushgateway, where all labels specified in the target should be
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# preserved.
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#
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# Note that any globally configured "external_labels" are unaffected by this
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# setting. In communication with external systems, they are always applied only
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# when a time series does not have a given label yet and are ignored otherwise.
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[ honor_labels: <boolean> | default = false ]
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# honor_timestamps controls whether Prometheus respects the timestamps present
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# in scraped data.
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#
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# If honor_timestamps is set to "true", the timestamps of the metrics exposed
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# by the target will be used.
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#
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# If honor_timestamps is set to "false", the timestamps of the metrics exposed
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# by the target will be ignored.
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[ honor_timestamps: <boolean> | default = true ]
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# Configures the protocol scheme used for requests.
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[ scheme: <scheme> | default = http ]
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# Optional HTTP URL parameters.
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params:
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[ <string>: [<string>, ...] ]
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# Sets the `Authorization` header on every scrape request with the
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# configured username and password.
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# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
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basic_auth:
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[ username: <string> ]
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[ password: <secret> ]
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[ password_file: <string> ]
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# Sets the `Authorization` header on every scrape request with
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# the configured bearer token. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token_file`.
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[ bearer_token: <secret> ]
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# Sets the `Authorization` header on every scrape request with the bearer token
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# read from the configured file. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token`.
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[ bearer_token_file: /path/to/bearer/token/file ]
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# Configures the scrape request's TLS settings.
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tls_config:
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[ <tls_config> ]
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# Optional proxy URL.
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[ proxy_url: <string> ]
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# List of Azure service discovery configurations.
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azure_sd_configs:
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[ - <azure_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of Consul service discovery configurations.
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consul_sd_configs:
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[ - <consul_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of DNS service discovery configurations.
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dns_sd_configs:
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[ - <dns_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of EC2 service discovery configurations.
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ec2_sd_configs:
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[ - <ec2_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of OpenStack service discovery configurations.
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openstack_sd_configs:
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[ - <openstack_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of file service discovery configurations.
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file_sd_configs:
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[ - <file_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of GCE service discovery configurations.
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gce_sd_configs:
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[ - <gce_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of Kubernetes service discovery configurations.
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kubernetes_sd_configs:
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[ - <kubernetes_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of Marathon service discovery configurations.
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marathon_sd_configs:
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[ - <marathon_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of AirBnB's Nerve service discovery configurations.
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nerve_sd_configs:
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[ - <nerve_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of Zookeeper Serverset service discovery configurations.
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serverset_sd_configs:
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[ - <serverset_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of Triton service discovery configurations.
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triton_sd_configs:
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[ - <triton_sd_config> ... ]
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# List of labeled statically configured targets for this job.
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static_configs:
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[ - <static_config> ... ]
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# List of target relabel configurations.
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relabel_configs:
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[ - <relabel_config> ... ]
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# List of metric relabel configurations.
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metric_relabel_configs:
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[ - <relabel_config> ... ]
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# Per-scrape limit on number of scraped samples that will be accepted.
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# If more than this number of samples are present after metric relabelling
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# the entire scrape will be treated as failed. 0 means no limit.
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[ sample_limit: <int> | default = 0 ]
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```
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Where `<job_name>` must be unique across all scrape configurations.
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### `<tls_config>`
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A `tls_config` allows configuring TLS connections.
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```yaml
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# CA certificate to validate API server certificate with.
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[ ca_file: <filename> ]
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# Certificate and key files for client cert authentication to the server.
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[ cert_file: <filename> ]
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[ key_file: <filename> ]
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# ServerName extension to indicate the name of the server.
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# https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc4366#section-3.1
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[ server_name: <string> ]
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# Disable validation of the server certificate.
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[ insecure_skip_verify: <boolean> ]
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```
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### `<azure_sd_config>`
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Azure SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from Azure VMs.
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The following meta labels are available on targets during relabeling:
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* `__meta_azure_machine_id`: the machine ID
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* `__meta_azure_machine_location`: the location the machine runs in
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* `__meta_azure_machine_name`: the machine name
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* `__meta_azure_machine_os_type`: the machine operating system
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* `__meta_azure_machine_private_ip`: the machine's private IP
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* `__meta_azure_machine_public_ip`: the machine's public IP if it exists
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* `__meta_azure_machine_resource_group`: the machine's resource group
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* `__meta_azure_machine_tag_<tagname>`: each tag value of the machine
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* `__meta_azure_machine_scale_set`: the name of the scale set which the vm is part of (this value is only set if you are using a [scale set](https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/virtual-machine-scale-sets/))
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* `__meta_azure_subscription_id`: the subscription ID
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* `__meta_azure_tenant_id`: the tenant ID
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See below for the configuration options for Azure discovery:
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```yaml
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# The information to access the Azure API.
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# The Azure environment.
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[ environment: <string> | default = AzurePublicCloud ]
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# The authentication method, either OAuth or ManagedIdentity.
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# See https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/azure/active-directory/managed-identities-azure-resources/overview
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[ authentication_method: <string> | default = OAuth]
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# The subscription ID. Always required.
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subscription_id: <string>
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# Optional tenant ID. Only required with authentication_method OAuth.
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[ tenant_id: <string> ]
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# Optional client ID. Only required with authentication_method OAuth.
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[ client_id: <string> ]
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# Optional client secret. Only required with authentication_method OAuth.
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[ client_secret: <secret> ]
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# Refresh interval to re-read the instance list.
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[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 300s ]
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# The port to scrape metrics from. If using the public IP address, this must
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# instead be specified in the relabeling rule.
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[ port: <int> | default = 80 ]
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```
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### `<consul_sd_config>`
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Consul SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from [Consul's](https://www.consul.io)
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Catalog API.
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The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
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* `__meta_consul_address`: the address of the target
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* `__meta_consul_dc`: the datacenter name for the target
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* `__meta_consul_tagged_address_<key>`: each node tagged address key value of the target
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* `__meta_consul_metadata_<key>`: each node metadata key value of the target
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* `__meta_consul_node`: the node name defined for the target
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* `__meta_consul_service_address`: the service address of the target
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* `__meta_consul_service_id`: the service ID of the target
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* `__meta_consul_service_metadata_<key>`: each service metadata key value of the target
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* `__meta_consul_service_port`: the service port of the target
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* `__meta_consul_service`: the name of the service the target belongs to
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* `__meta_consul_tags`: the list of tags of the target joined by the tag separator
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```yaml
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# The information to access the Consul API. It is to be defined
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# as the Consul documentation requires.
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[ server: <host> | default = "localhost:8500" ]
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[ token: <secret> ]
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[ datacenter: <string> ]
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[ scheme: <string> | default = "http" ]
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[ username: <string> ]
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[ password: <secret> ]
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tls_config:
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[ <tls_config> ]
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# A list of services for which targets are retrieved. If omitted, all services
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# are scraped.
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services:
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[ - <string> ]
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# See https://www.consul.io/api/catalog.html#list-nodes-for-service to know more
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# about the possible filters that can be used.
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# An optional list of tags used to filter nodes for a given service. Services must contain all tags in the list.
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tags:
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[ - <string> ]
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# Node metadata used to filter nodes for a given service.
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[ node_meta:
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[ <name>: <value> ... ] ]
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# The string by which Consul tags are joined into the tag label.
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[ tag_separator: <string> | default = , ]
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# Allow stale Consul results (see https://www.consul.io/api/features/consistency.html). Will reduce load on Consul.
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[ allow_stale: <bool> ]
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# The time after which the provided names are refreshed.
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# On large setup it might be a good idea to increase this value because the catalog will change all the time.
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[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 30s ]
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```
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Note that the IP number and port used to scrape the targets is assembled as
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`<__meta_consul_address>:<__meta_consul_service_port>`. However, in some
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Consul setups, the relevant address is in `__meta_consul_service_address`.
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In those cases, you can use the [relabel](#relabel_config)
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feature to replace the special `__address__` label.
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The [relabeling phase](#relabel_config) is the preferred and more powerful
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way to filter services or nodes for a service based on arbitrary labels. For
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users with thousands of services it can be more efficient to use the Consul API
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directly which has basic support for filtering nodes (currently by node
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metadata and a single tag).
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### `<dns_sd_config>`
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A DNS-based service discovery configuration allows specifying a set of DNS
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domain names which are periodically queried to discover a list of targets. The
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DNS servers to be contacted are read from `/etc/resolv.conf`.
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This service discovery method only supports basic DNS A, AAAA and SRV record
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queries, but not the advanced DNS-SD approach specified in
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[RFC6763](https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc6763).
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During the [relabeling phase](#relabel_config), the meta label
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`__meta_dns_name` is available on each target and is set to the
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record name that produced the discovered target.
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```yaml
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# A list of DNS domain names to be queried.
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names:
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[ - <domain_name> ]
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# The type of DNS query to perform.
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[ type: <query_type> | default = 'SRV' ]
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# The port number used if the query type is not SRV.
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[ port: <number>]
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# The time after which the provided names are refreshed.
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[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 30s ]
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```
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Where `<domain_name>` is a valid DNS domain name.
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Where `<query_type>` is `SRV`, `A`, or `AAAA`.
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### `<ec2_sd_config>`
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EC2 SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from AWS EC2
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instances. The private IP address is used by default, but may be changed to
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the public IP address with relabeling.
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The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
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* `__meta_ec2_availability_zone`: the availability zone in which the instance is running
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* `__meta_ec2_instance_id`: the EC2 instance ID
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* `__meta_ec2_instance_state`: the state of the EC2 instance
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* `__meta_ec2_instance_type`: the type of the EC2 instance
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* `__meta_ec2_owner_id`: the ID of the AWS account that owns the EC2 instance
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* `__meta_ec2_platform`: the Operating System platform, set to 'windows' on Windows servers, absent otherwise
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* `__meta_ec2_primary_subnet_id`: the subnet ID of the primary network interface, if available
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* `__meta_ec2_private_dns_name`: the private DNS name of the instance, if available
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* `__meta_ec2_private_ip`: the private IP address of the instance, if present
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* `__meta_ec2_public_dns_name`: the public DNS name of the instance, if available
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* `__meta_ec2_public_ip`: the public IP address of the instance, if available
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* `__meta_ec2_subnet_id`: comma separated list of subnets IDs in which the instance is running, if available
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* `__meta_ec2_tag_<tagkey>`: each tag value of the instance
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* `__meta_ec2_vpc_id`: the ID of the VPC in which the instance is running, if available
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See below for the configuration options for EC2 discovery:
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```yaml
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# The information to access the EC2 API.
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# The AWS region. If blank, the region from the instance metadata is used.
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[ region: <string> ]
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# Custom endpoint to be used.
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[ endpoint: <string> ]
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# The AWS API keys. If blank, the environment variables `AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID`
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# and `AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY` are used.
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[ access_key: <string> ]
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[ secret_key: <secret> ]
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# Named AWS profile used to connect to the API.
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[ profile: <string> ]
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# AWS Role ARN, an alternative to using AWS API keys.
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[ role_arn: <string> ]
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# Refresh interval to re-read the instance list.
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[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 60s ]
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# The port to scrape metrics from. If using the public IP address, this must
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# instead be specified in the relabeling rule.
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[ port: <int> | default = 80 ]
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# Filters can be used optionally to filter the instance list by other criteria.
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# Available filter criteria can be found here:
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# https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_DescribeInstances.html
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# Filter API documentation: https://docs.aws.amazon.com/AWSEC2/latest/APIReference/API_Filter.html
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filters:
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[ - name: <string>
|
|
values: <string>, [...] ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
The [relabeling phase](#relabel_config) is the preferred and more powerful
|
|
way to filter targets based on arbitrary labels. For users with thousands of
|
|
instances it can be more efficient to use the EC2 API directly which has
|
|
support for filtering instances.
|
|
|
|
### `<openstack_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
OpenStack SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from OpenStack Nova
|
|
instances.
|
|
|
|
One of the following `<openstack_role>` types can be configured to discover targets:
|
|
|
|
#### `hypervisor`
|
|
|
|
The `hypervisor` role discovers one target per Nova hypervisor node. The target
|
|
address defaults to the `host_ip` attribute of the hypervisor.
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_hypervisor_host_ip`: the hypervisor node's IP address.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_hypervisor_name`: the hypervisor node's name.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_hypervisor_state`: the hypervisor node's state.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_hypervisor_status`: the hypervisor node's status.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_hypervisor_type`: the hypervisor node's type.
|
|
|
|
#### `instance`
|
|
|
|
The `instance` role discovers one target per network interface of Nova
|
|
instance. The target address defaults to the private IP address of the network
|
|
interface.
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_address_pool`: the pool of the private IP.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_instance_flavor`: the flavor of the OpenStack instance.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_instance_id`: the OpenStack instance ID.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_instance_name`: the OpenStack instance name.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_instance_status`: the status of the OpenStack instance.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_private_ip`: the private IP of the OpenStack instance.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_project_id`: the project (tenant) owning this instance.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_public_ip`: the public IP of the OpenStack instance.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_tag_<tagkey>`: each tag value of the instance.
|
|
* `__meta_openstack_user_id`: the user account owning the tenant.
|
|
|
|
See below for the configuration options for OpenStack discovery:
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The information to access the OpenStack API.
|
|
|
|
# The OpenStack role of entities that should be discovered.
|
|
role: <openstack_role>
|
|
|
|
# The OpenStack Region.
|
|
region: <string>
|
|
|
|
# identity_endpoint specifies the HTTP endpoint that is required to work with
|
|
# the Identity API of the appropriate version. While it's ultimately needed by
|
|
# all of the identity services, it will often be populated by a provider-level
|
|
# function.
|
|
[ identity_endpoint: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# username is required if using Identity V2 API. Consult with your provider's
|
|
# control panel to discover your account's username. In Identity V3, either
|
|
# userid or a combination of username and domain_id or domain_name are needed.
|
|
[ username: <string> ]
|
|
[ userid: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# password for the Identity V2 and V3 APIs. Consult with your provider's
|
|
# control panel to discover your account's preferred method of authentication.
|
|
[ password: <secret> ]
|
|
|
|
# At most one of domain_id and domain_name must be provided if using username
|
|
# with Identity V3. Otherwise, either are optional.
|
|
[ domain_name: <string> ]
|
|
[ domain_id: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# The project_id and project_name fields are optional for the Identity V2 API.
|
|
# Some providers allow you to specify a project_name instead of the project_id.
|
|
# Some require both. Your provider's authentication policies will determine
|
|
# how these fields influence authentication.
|
|
[ project_name: <string> ]
|
|
[ project_id: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# The application_credential_id or application_credential_name fields are
|
|
# required if using an application credential to authenticate. Some providers
|
|
# allow you to create an application credential to authenticate rather than a
|
|
# password.
|
|
[ application_credential_name: <string> ]
|
|
[ application_credential_id: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# The application_credential_secret field is required if using an application
|
|
# credential to authenticate.
|
|
[ application_credential_secret: <secret> ]
|
|
|
|
# Whether the service discovery should list all instances for all projects.
|
|
# It is only relevant for the 'instance' role and usually requires admin permissions.
|
|
[ all_tenants: <boolean> | default: false ]
|
|
|
|
# Refresh interval to re-read the instance list.
|
|
[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 60s ]
|
|
|
|
# The port to scrape metrics from. If using the public IP address, this must
|
|
# instead be specified in the relabeling rule.
|
|
[ port: <int> | default = 80 ]
|
|
|
|
# TLS configuration.
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### `<file_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
File-based service discovery provides a more generic way to configure static targets
|
|
and serves as an interface to plug in custom service discovery mechanisms.
|
|
|
|
It reads a set of files containing a list of zero or more
|
|
`<static_config>`s. Changes to all defined files are detected via disk watches
|
|
and applied immediately. Files may be provided in YAML or JSON format. Only
|
|
changes resulting in well-formed target groups are applied.
|
|
|
|
The JSON file must contain a list of static configs, using this format:
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
[
|
|
{
|
|
"targets": [ "<host>", ... ],
|
|
"labels": {
|
|
"<labelname>": "<labelvalue>", ...
|
|
}
|
|
},
|
|
...
|
|
]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
As a fallback, the file contents are also re-read periodically at the specified
|
|
refresh interval.
|
|
|
|
Each target has a meta label `__meta_filepath` during the
|
|
[relabeling phase](#relabel_config). Its value is set to the
|
|
filepath from which the target was extracted.
|
|
|
|
There is a list of
|
|
[integrations](https://prometheus.io/docs/operating/integrations/#file-service-discovery) with this
|
|
discovery mechanism.
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# Patterns for files from which target groups are extracted.
|
|
files:
|
|
[ - <filename_pattern> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# Refresh interval to re-read the files.
|
|
[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 5m ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Where `<filename_pattern>` may be a path ending in `.json`, `.yml` or `.yaml`. The last path segment
|
|
may contain a single `*` that matches any character sequence, e.g. `my/path/tg_*.json`.
|
|
|
|
### `<gce_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
[GCE](https://cloud.google.com/compute/) SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from GCP GCE instances.
|
|
The private IP address is used by default, but may be changed to the public IP
|
|
address with relabeling.
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_gce_instance_id`: the numeric id of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_instance_name`: the name of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_label_<name>`: each GCE label of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_machine_type`: full or partial URL of the machine type of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_metadata_<name>`: each metadata item of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_network`: the network URL of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_private_ip`: the private IP address of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_project`: the GCP project in which the instance is running
|
|
* `__meta_gce_public_ip`: the public IP address of the instance, if present
|
|
* `__meta_gce_subnetwork`: the subnetwork URL of the instance
|
|
* `__meta_gce_tags`: comma separated list of instance tags
|
|
* `__meta_gce_zone`: the GCE zone URL in which the instance is running
|
|
|
|
See below for the configuration options for GCE discovery:
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The information to access the GCE API.
|
|
|
|
# The GCP Project
|
|
project: <string>
|
|
|
|
# The zone of the scrape targets. If you need multiple zones use multiple
|
|
# gce_sd_configs.
|
|
zone: <string>
|
|
|
|
# Filter can be used optionally to filter the instance list by other criteria
|
|
# Syntax of this filter string is described here in the filter query parameter section:
|
|
# https://cloud.google.com/compute/docs/reference/latest/instances/list
|
|
[ filter: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Refresh interval to re-read the instance list
|
|
[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 60s ]
|
|
|
|
# The port to scrape metrics from. If using the public IP address, this must
|
|
# instead be specified in the relabeling rule.
|
|
[ port: <int> | default = 80 ]
|
|
|
|
# The tag separator is used to separate the tags on concatenation
|
|
[ tag_separator: <string> | default = , ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Credentials are discovered by the Google Cloud SDK default client by looking
|
|
in the following places, preferring the first location found:
|
|
|
|
1. a JSON file specified by the `GOOGLE_APPLICATION_CREDENTIALS` environment variable
|
|
2. a JSON file in the well-known path `$HOME/.config/gcloud/application_default_credentials.json`
|
|
3. fetched from the GCE metadata server
|
|
|
|
If Prometheus is running within GCE, the service account associated with the
|
|
instance it is running on should have at least read-only permissions to the
|
|
compute resources. If running outside of GCE make sure to create an appropriate
|
|
service account and place the credential file in one of the expected locations.
|
|
|
|
### `<kubernetes_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
Kubernetes SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from
|
|
[Kubernetes'](https://kubernetes.io/) REST API and always staying synchronized with
|
|
the cluster state.
|
|
|
|
One of the following `role` types can be configured to discover targets:
|
|
|
|
#### `node`
|
|
|
|
The `node` role discovers one target per cluster node with the address defaulting
|
|
to the Kubelet's HTTP port.
|
|
The target address defaults to the first existing address of the Kubernetes
|
|
node object in the address type order of `NodeInternalIP`, `NodeExternalIP`,
|
|
`NodeLegacyHostIP`, and `NodeHostName`.
|
|
|
|
Available meta labels:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_node_name`: The name of the node object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_node_label_<labelname>`: Each label from the node object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_node_labelpresent_<labelname>`: `true` for each label from the node object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_node_annotation_<annotationname>`: Each annotation from the node object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_node_annotationpresent_<annotationname>`: `true` for each annotation from the node object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_node_address_<address_type>`: The first address for each node address type, if it exists.
|
|
|
|
In addition, the `instance` label for the node will be set to the node name
|
|
as retrieved from the API server.
|
|
|
|
#### `service`
|
|
|
|
The `service` role discovers a target for each service port for each service.
|
|
This is generally useful for blackbox monitoring of a service.
|
|
The address will be set to the Kubernetes DNS name of the service and respective
|
|
service port.
|
|
|
|
Available meta labels:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_namespace`: The namespace of the service object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_annotation_<annotationname>`: Each annotation from the service object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_annotationpresent_<annotationname>`: "true" for each annotation of the service object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_cluster_ip`: The cluster IP address of the service. (Does not apply to services of type ExternalName)
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_external_name`: The DNS name of the service. (Applies to services of type ExternalName)
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_label_<labelname>`: Each label from the service object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_labelpresent_<labelname>`: `true` for each label of the service object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_name`: The name of the service object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_port_name`: Name of the service port for the target.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_service_port_protocol`: Protocol of the service port for the target.
|
|
|
|
#### `pod`
|
|
|
|
The `pod` role discovers all pods and exposes their containers as targets. For each declared
|
|
port of a container, a single target is generated. If a container has no specified ports,
|
|
a port-free target per container is created for manually adding a port via relabeling.
|
|
|
|
Available meta labels:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_namespace`: The namespace of the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_name`: The name of the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_ip`: The pod IP of the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_label_<labelname>`: Each label from the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_labelpresent_<labelname>`: `true`for each label from the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_annotation_<annotationname>`: Each annotation from the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_annotationpresent_<annotationname>`: `true` for each annotation from the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_init`: `true` if the container is an [InitContainer](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/init-containers/)
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_name`: Name of the container the target address points to.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_port_name`: Name of the container port.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_port_number`: Number of the container port.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_port_protocol`: Protocol of the container port.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_ready`: Set to `true` or `false` for the pod's ready state.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_phase`: Set to `Pending`, `Running`, `Succeeded`, `Failed` or `Unknown`
|
|
in the [lifecycle](https://kubernetes.io/docs/concepts/workloads/pods/pod-lifecycle/#pod-phase).
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_node_name`: The name of the node the pod is scheduled onto.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_host_ip`: The current host IP of the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_uid`: The UID of the pod object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_controller_kind`: Object kind of the pod controller.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_pod_controller_name`: Name of the pod controller.
|
|
|
|
#### `endpoints`
|
|
|
|
The `endpoints` role discovers targets from listed endpoints of a service. For each endpoint
|
|
address one target is discovered per port. If the endpoint is backed by a pod, all
|
|
additional container ports of the pod, not bound to an endpoint port, are discovered as targets as well.
|
|
|
|
Available meta labels:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_namespace`: The namespace of the endpoints object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoints_name`: The names of the endpoints object.
|
|
* For all targets discovered directly from the endpoints list (those not additionally inferred
|
|
from underlying pods), the following labels are attached:
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_hostname`: Hostname of the endpoint.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_node_name`: Name of the node hosting the endpoint.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_ready`: Set to `true` or `false` for the endpoint's ready state.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_port_name`: Name of the endpoint port.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_port_protocol`: Protocol of the endpoint port.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_address_target_kind`: Kind of the endpoint address target.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_endpoint_address_target_name`: Name of the endpoint address target.
|
|
* If the endpoints belong to a service, all labels of the `role: service` discovery are attached.
|
|
* For all targets backed by a pod, all labels of the `role: pod` discovery are attached.
|
|
|
|
#### `ingress`
|
|
|
|
The `ingress` role discovers a target for each path of each ingress.
|
|
This is generally useful for blackbox monitoring of an ingress.
|
|
The address will be set to the host specified in the ingress spec.
|
|
|
|
Available meta labels:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_namespace`: The namespace of the ingress object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_name`: The name of the ingress object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_label_<labelname>`: Each label from the ingress object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_labelpresent_<labelname>`: `true` for each label from the ingress object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_annotation_<annotationname>`: Each annotation from the ingress object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_annotationpresent_<annotationname>`: `true` for each annotation from the ingress object.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_scheme`: Protocol scheme of ingress, `https` if TLS
|
|
config is set. Defaults to `http`.
|
|
* `__meta_kubernetes_ingress_path`: Path from ingress spec. Defaults to `/`.
|
|
|
|
See below for the configuration options for Kubernetes discovery:
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The information to access the Kubernetes API.
|
|
|
|
# The API server addresses. If left empty, Prometheus is assumed to run inside
|
|
# of the cluster and will discover API servers automatically and use the pod's
|
|
# CA certificate and bearer token file at /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/.
|
|
[ api_server: <host> ]
|
|
|
|
# The Kubernetes role of entities that should be discovered.
|
|
role: <role>
|
|
|
|
# Optional authentication information used to authenticate to the API server.
|
|
# Note that `basic_auth`, `bearer_token` and `bearer_token_file` options are
|
|
# mutually exclusive.
|
|
# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
|
|
|
|
# Optional HTTP basic authentication information.
|
|
basic_auth:
|
|
[ username: <string> ]
|
|
[ password: <secret> ]
|
|
[ password_file: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional bearer token authentication information.
|
|
[ bearer_token: <secret> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional bearer token file authentication information.
|
|
[ bearer_token_file: <filename> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional proxy URL.
|
|
[ proxy_url: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# TLS configuration.
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional namespace discovery. If omitted, all namespaces are used.
|
|
namespaces:
|
|
names:
|
|
[ - <string> ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Where `<role>` must be `endpoints`, `service`, `pod`, `node`, or
|
|
`ingress`.
|
|
|
|
See [this example Prometheus configuration file](/documentation/examples/prometheus-kubernetes.yml)
|
|
for a detailed example of configuring Prometheus for Kubernetes.
|
|
|
|
You may wish to check out the 3rd party [Prometheus Operator](https://github.com/coreos/prometheus-operator),
|
|
which automates the Prometheus setup on top of Kubernetes.
|
|
|
|
### `<marathon_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
Marathon SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets using the
|
|
[Marathon](https://mesosphere.github.io/marathon/) REST API. Prometheus
|
|
will periodically check the REST endpoint for currently running tasks and
|
|
create a target group for every app that has at least one healthy task.
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_app`: the name of the app (with slashes replaced by dashes)
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_image`: the name of the Docker image used (if available)
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_task`: the ID of the Mesos task
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_app_label_<labelname>`: any Marathon labels attached to the app
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_port_definition_label_<labelname>`: the port definition labels
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_port_mapping_label_<labelname>`: the port mapping labels
|
|
* `__meta_marathon_port_index`: the port index number (e.g. `1` for `PORT1`)
|
|
|
|
See below for the configuration options for Marathon discovery:
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# List of URLs to be used to contact Marathon servers.
|
|
# You need to provide at least one server URL.
|
|
servers:
|
|
- <string>
|
|
|
|
# Polling interval
|
|
[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 30s ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional authentication information for token-based authentication
|
|
# https://docs.mesosphere.com/1.11/security/ent/iam-api/#passing-an-authentication-token
|
|
# It is mutually exclusive with `auth_token_file` and other authentication mechanisms.
|
|
[ auth_token: <secret> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional authentication information for token-based authentication
|
|
# https://docs.mesosphere.com/1.11/security/ent/iam-api/#passing-an-authentication-token
|
|
# It is mutually exclusive with `auth_token` and other authentication mechanisms.
|
|
[ auth_token_file: <filename> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with the
|
|
# configured username and password.
|
|
# This is mutually exclusive with other authentication mechanisms.
|
|
# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
|
|
basic_auth:
|
|
[ username: <string> ]
|
|
[ password: <string> ]
|
|
[ password_file: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with
|
|
# the configured bearer token. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token_file` and other authentication mechanisms.
|
|
# NOTE: The current version of DC/OS marathon (v1.11.0) does not support standard Bearer token authentication. Use `auth_token` instead.
|
|
[ bearer_token: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with the bearer token
|
|
# read from the configured file. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token` and other authentication mechanisms.
|
|
# NOTE: The current version of DC/OS marathon (v1.11.0) does not support standard Bearer token authentication. Use `auth_token_file` instead.
|
|
[ bearer_token_file: /path/to/bearer/token/file ]
|
|
|
|
# TLS configuration for connecting to marathon servers
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional proxy URL.
|
|
[ proxy_url: <string> ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
By default every app listed in Marathon will be scraped by Prometheus. If not all
|
|
of your services provide Prometheus metrics, you can use a Marathon label and
|
|
Prometheus relabeling to control which instances will actually be scraped.
|
|
See [the Prometheus marathon-sd configuration file](/documentation/examples/prometheus-marathon.yml)
|
|
for a practical example on how to set up your Marathon app and your Prometheus
|
|
configuration.
|
|
|
|
By default, all apps will show up as a single job in Prometheus (the one specified
|
|
in the configuration file), which can also be changed using relabeling.
|
|
|
|
### `<nerve_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
Nerve SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from [AirBnB's Nerve]
|
|
(https://github.com/airbnb/nerve) which are stored in
|
|
[Zookeeper](https://zookeeper.apache.org/).
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during [relabeling](#relabel_config):
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_nerve_path`: the full path to the endpoint node in Zookeeper
|
|
* `__meta_nerve_endpoint_host`: the host of the endpoint
|
|
* `__meta_nerve_endpoint_port`: the port of the endpoint
|
|
* `__meta_nerve_endpoint_name`: the name of the endpoint
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The Zookeeper servers.
|
|
servers:
|
|
- <host>
|
|
# Paths can point to a single service, or the root of a tree of services.
|
|
paths:
|
|
- <string>
|
|
[ timeout: <duration> | default = 10s ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### `<serverset_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
Serverset SD configurations allow retrieving scrape targets from [Serversets]
|
|
(https://github.com/twitter/finagle/tree/master/finagle-serversets) which are
|
|
stored in [Zookeeper](https://zookeeper.apache.org/). Serversets are commonly
|
|
used by [Finagle](https://twitter.github.io/finagle/) and
|
|
[Aurora](https://aurora.apache.org/).
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during relabeling:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_path`: the full path to the serverset member node in Zookeeper
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_endpoint_host`: the host of the default endpoint
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_endpoint_port`: the port of the default endpoint
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_endpoint_host_<endpoint>`: the host of the given endpoint
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_endpoint_port_<endpoint>`: the port of the given endpoint
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_shard`: the shard number of the member
|
|
* `__meta_serverset_status`: the status of the member
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The Zookeeper servers.
|
|
servers:
|
|
- <host>
|
|
# Paths can point to a single serverset, or the root of a tree of serversets.
|
|
paths:
|
|
- <string>
|
|
[ timeout: <duration> | default = 10s ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
Serverset data must be in the JSON format, the Thrift format is not currently supported.
|
|
|
|
### `<triton_sd_config>`
|
|
|
|
[Triton](https://github.com/joyent/triton) SD configurations allow retrieving
|
|
scrape targets from [Container Monitor](https://github.com/joyent/rfd/blob/master/rfd/0027/README.md)
|
|
discovery endpoints.
|
|
|
|
The following meta labels are available on targets during relabeling:
|
|
|
|
* `__meta_triton_groups`: the list of groups belonging to the target joined by a comma separator
|
|
* `__meta_triton_machine_alias`: the alias of the target container
|
|
* `__meta_triton_machine_brand`: the brand of the target container
|
|
* `__meta_triton_machine_id`: the UUID of the target container
|
|
* `__meta_triton_machine_image`: the target containers image type
|
|
* `__meta_triton_server_id`: the server UUID for the target container
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The information to access the Triton discovery API.
|
|
|
|
# The account to use for discovering new target containers.
|
|
account: <string>
|
|
|
|
# The DNS suffix which should be applied to target containers.
|
|
dns_suffix: <string>
|
|
|
|
# The Triton discovery endpoint (e.g. 'cmon.us-east-3b.triton.zone'). This is
|
|
# often the same value as dns_suffix.
|
|
endpoint: <string>
|
|
|
|
# A list of groups for which targets are retrieved. If omitted, all containers
|
|
# available to the requesting account are scraped.
|
|
groups:
|
|
[ - <string> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# The port to use for discovery and metric scraping.
|
|
[ port: <int> | default = 9163 ]
|
|
|
|
# The interval which should be used for refreshing target containers.
|
|
[ refresh_interval: <duration> | default = 60s ]
|
|
|
|
# The Triton discovery API version.
|
|
[ version: <int> | default = 1 ]
|
|
|
|
# TLS configuration.
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### `<static_config>`
|
|
|
|
A `static_config` allows specifying a list of targets and a common label set
|
|
for them. It is the canonical way to specify static targets in a scrape
|
|
configuration.
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The targets specified by the static config.
|
|
targets:
|
|
[ - '<host>' ]
|
|
|
|
# Labels assigned to all metrics scraped from the targets.
|
|
labels:
|
|
[ <labelname>: <labelvalue> ... ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### `<relabel_config>`
|
|
|
|
Relabeling is a powerful tool to dynamically rewrite the label set of a target before
|
|
it gets scraped. Multiple relabeling steps can be configured per scrape configuration.
|
|
They are applied to the label set of each target in order of their appearance
|
|
in the configuration file.
|
|
|
|
Initially, aside from the configured per-target labels, a target's `job`
|
|
label is set to the `job_name` value of the respective scrape configuration.
|
|
The `__address__` label is set to the `<host>:<port>` address of the target.
|
|
After relabeling, the `instance` label is set to the value of `__address__` by default if
|
|
it was not set during relabeling. The `__scheme__` and `__metrics_path__` labels
|
|
are set to the scheme and metrics path of the target respectively. The `__param_<name>`
|
|
label is set to the value of the first passed URL parameter called `<name>`.
|
|
|
|
Additional labels prefixed with `__meta_` may be available during the
|
|
relabeling phase. They are set by the service discovery mechanism that provided
|
|
the target and vary between mechanisms.
|
|
|
|
Labels starting with `__` will be removed from the label set after target
|
|
relabeling is completed.
|
|
|
|
If a relabeling step needs to store a label value only temporarily (as the
|
|
input to a subsequent relabeling step), use the `__tmp` label name prefix. This
|
|
prefix is guaranteed to never be used by Prometheus itself.
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The source labels select values from existing labels. Their content is concatenated
|
|
# using the configured separator and matched against the configured regular expression
|
|
# for the replace, keep, and drop actions.
|
|
[ source_labels: '[' <labelname> [, ...] ']' ]
|
|
|
|
# Separator placed between concatenated source label values.
|
|
[ separator: <string> | default = ; ]
|
|
|
|
# Label to which the resulting value is written in a replace action.
|
|
# It is mandatory for replace actions. Regex capture groups are available.
|
|
[ target_label: <labelname> ]
|
|
|
|
# Regular expression against which the extracted value is matched.
|
|
[ regex: <regex> | default = (.*) ]
|
|
|
|
# Modulus to take of the hash of the source label values.
|
|
[ modulus: <uint64> ]
|
|
|
|
# Replacement value against which a regex replace is performed if the
|
|
# regular expression matches. Regex capture groups are available.
|
|
[ replacement: <string> | default = $1 ]
|
|
|
|
# Action to perform based on regex matching.
|
|
[ action: <relabel_action> | default = replace ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
`<regex>` is any valid
|
|
[RE2 regular expression](https://github.com/google/re2/wiki/Syntax). It is
|
|
required for the `replace`, `keep`, `drop`, `labelmap`,`labeldrop` and `labelkeep` actions. The regex is
|
|
anchored on both ends. To un-anchor the regex, use `.*<regex>.*`.
|
|
|
|
`<relabel_action>` determines the relabeling action to take:
|
|
|
|
* `replace`: Match `regex` against the concatenated `source_labels`. Then, set
|
|
`target_label` to `replacement`, with match group references
|
|
(`${1}`, `${2}`, ...) in `replacement` substituted by their value. If `regex`
|
|
does not match, no replacement takes place.
|
|
* `keep`: Drop targets for which `regex` does not match the concatenated `source_labels`.
|
|
* `drop`: Drop targets for which `regex` matches the concatenated `source_labels`.
|
|
* `hashmod`: Set `target_label` to the `modulus` of a hash of the concatenated `source_labels`.
|
|
* `labelmap`: Match `regex` against all label names. Then copy the values of the matching labels
|
|
to label names given by `replacement` with match group references
|
|
(`${1}`, `${2}`, ...) in `replacement` substituted by their value.
|
|
* `labeldrop`: Match `regex` against all label names. Any label that matches will be
|
|
removed from the set of labels.
|
|
* `labelkeep`: Match `regex` against all label names. Any label that does not match will be
|
|
removed from the set of labels.
|
|
|
|
Care must be taken with `labeldrop` and `labelkeep` to ensure that metrics are
|
|
still uniquely labeled once the labels are removed.
|
|
|
|
### `<metric_relabel_configs>`
|
|
|
|
Metric relabeling is applied to samples as the last step before ingestion. It
|
|
has the same configuration format and actions as target relabeling. Metric
|
|
relabeling does not apply to automatically generated timeseries such as `up`.
|
|
|
|
One use for this is to blacklist time series that are too expensive to ingest.
|
|
|
|
### `<alert_relabel_configs>`
|
|
|
|
Alert relabeling is applied to alerts before they are sent to the Alertmanager.
|
|
It has the same configuration format and actions as target relabeling. Alert
|
|
relabeling is applied after external labels.
|
|
|
|
One use for this is ensuring a HA pair of Prometheus servers with different
|
|
external labels send identical alerts.
|
|
|
|
### `<alertmanager_config>`
|
|
|
|
An `alertmanager_config` section specifies Alertmanager instances the Prometheus
|
|
server sends alerts to. It also provides parameters to configure how to
|
|
communicate with these Alertmanagers.
|
|
|
|
Alertmanagers may be statically configured via the `static_configs` parameter or
|
|
dynamically discovered using one of the supported service-discovery mechanisms.
|
|
|
|
Additionally, `relabel_configs` allow selecting Alertmanagers from discovered
|
|
entities and provide advanced modifications to the used API path, which is exposed
|
|
through the `__alerts_path__` label.
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# Per-target Alertmanager timeout when pushing alerts.
|
|
[ timeout: <duration> | default = 10s ]
|
|
|
|
# The api version of Alertmanager.
|
|
[ api_version: <version> | default = v1 ]
|
|
|
|
# Prefix for the HTTP path alerts are pushed to.
|
|
[ path_prefix: <path> | default = / ]
|
|
|
|
# Configures the protocol scheme used for requests.
|
|
[ scheme: <scheme> | default = http ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with the
|
|
# configured username and password.
|
|
# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
|
|
basic_auth:
|
|
[ username: <string> ]
|
|
[ password: <string> ]
|
|
[ password_file: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with
|
|
# the configured bearer token. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token_file`.
|
|
[ bearer_token: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with the bearer token
|
|
# read from the configured file. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token`.
|
|
[ bearer_token_file: /path/to/bearer/token/file ]
|
|
|
|
# Configures the scrape request's TLS settings.
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional proxy URL.
|
|
[ proxy_url: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Azure service discovery configurations.
|
|
azure_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <azure_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Consul service discovery configurations.
|
|
consul_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <consul_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of DNS service discovery configurations.
|
|
dns_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <dns_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of EC2 service discovery configurations.
|
|
ec2_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <ec2_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of file service discovery configurations.
|
|
file_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <file_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of GCE service discovery configurations.
|
|
gce_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <gce_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Kubernetes service discovery configurations.
|
|
kubernetes_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <kubernetes_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Marathon service discovery configurations.
|
|
marathon_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <marathon_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of AirBnB's Nerve service discovery configurations.
|
|
nerve_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <nerve_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Zookeeper Serverset service discovery configurations.
|
|
serverset_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <serverset_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Triton service discovery configurations.
|
|
triton_sd_configs:
|
|
[ - <triton_sd_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of labeled statically configured Alertmanagers.
|
|
static_configs:
|
|
[ - <static_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# List of Alertmanager relabel configurations.
|
|
relabel_configs:
|
|
[ - <relabel_config> ... ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
### `<remote_write>`
|
|
|
|
`write_relabel_configs` is relabeling applied to samples before sending them
|
|
to the remote endpoint. Write relabeling is applied after external labels. This
|
|
could be used to limit which samples are sent.
|
|
|
|
There is a [small demo](/documentation/examples/remote_storage) of how to use
|
|
this functionality.
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The URL of the endpoint to send samples to.
|
|
url: <string>
|
|
|
|
# Timeout for requests to the remote write endpoint.
|
|
[ remote_timeout: <duration> | default = 30s ]
|
|
|
|
# List of remote write relabel configurations.
|
|
write_relabel_configs:
|
|
[ - <relabel_config> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every remote write request with the
|
|
# configured username and password.
|
|
# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
|
|
basic_auth:
|
|
[ username: <string> ]
|
|
[ password: <string> ]
|
|
[ password_file: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every remote write request with
|
|
# the configured bearer token. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token_file`.
|
|
[ bearer_token: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every remote write request with the bearer token
|
|
# read from the configured file. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token`.
|
|
[ bearer_token_file: /path/to/bearer/token/file ]
|
|
|
|
# Configures the remote write request's TLS settings.
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional proxy URL.
|
|
[ proxy_url: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Configures the queue used to write to remote storage.
|
|
queue_config:
|
|
# Number of samples to buffer per shard before we block reading of more
|
|
# samples from the WAL. It is recommended to have enough capacity in each
|
|
# shard to buffer several requests to keep throughput up while processing
|
|
# occasional slow remote requests.
|
|
[ capacity: <int> | default = 500 ]
|
|
# Maximum number of shards, i.e. amount of concurrency.
|
|
[ max_shards: <int> | default = 1000 ]
|
|
# Minimum number of shards, i.e. amount of concurrency.
|
|
[ min_shards: <int> | default = 1 ]
|
|
# Maximum number of samples per send.
|
|
[ max_samples_per_send: <int> | default = 100]
|
|
# Maximum time a sample will wait in buffer.
|
|
[ batch_send_deadline: <duration> | default = 5s ]
|
|
# Initial retry delay. Gets doubled for every retry.
|
|
[ min_backoff: <duration> | default = 30ms ]
|
|
# Maximum retry delay.
|
|
[ max_backoff: <duration> | default = 100ms ]
|
|
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
There is a list of
|
|
[integrations](https://prometheus.io/docs/operating/integrations/#remote-endpoints-and-storage)
|
|
with this feature.
|
|
|
|
### `<remote_read>`
|
|
|
|
```yaml
|
|
# The URL of the endpoint to query from.
|
|
url: <string>
|
|
|
|
# An optional list of equality matchers which have to be
|
|
# present in a selector to query the remote read endpoint.
|
|
required_matchers:
|
|
[ <labelname>: <labelvalue> ... ]
|
|
|
|
# Timeout for requests to the remote read endpoint.
|
|
[ remote_timeout: <duration> | default = 1m ]
|
|
|
|
# Whether reads should be made for queries for time ranges that
|
|
# the local storage should have complete data for.
|
|
[ read_recent: <boolean> | default = false ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every remote read request with the
|
|
# configured username and password.
|
|
# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
|
|
basic_auth:
|
|
[ username: <string> ]
|
|
[ password: <string> ]
|
|
[ password_file: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every remote read request with
|
|
# the configured bearer token. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token_file`.
|
|
[ bearer_token: <string> ]
|
|
|
|
# Sets the `Authorization` header on every remote read request with the bearer token
|
|
# read from the configured file. It is mutually exclusive with `bearer_token`.
|
|
[ bearer_token_file: /path/to/bearer/token/file ]
|
|
|
|
# Configures the remote read request's TLS settings.
|
|
tls_config:
|
|
[ <tls_config> ]
|
|
|
|
# Optional proxy URL.
|
|
[ proxy_url: <string> ]
|
|
```
|
|
|
|
There is a list of
|
|
[integrations](https://prometheus.io/docs/operating/integrations/#remote-endpoints-and-storage)
|
|
with this feature.
|