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The documentation referenced "data volume containers", which were superseded by named volume support in Docker several years ago. There were to bind-mounting examples in the docs that are effectively doing the same thing, but the description of the second was somewhat erroneous. Signed-off-by: Lars Kellogg-Stedman <lars@redhat.com>
103 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
103 lines
2.6 KiB
Markdown
---
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title: Installation
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sort_rank: 2
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---
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# Installation
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## Using pre-compiled binaries
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We provide precompiled binaries for most official Prometheus components. Check
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out the [download section](https://prometheus.io/download) for a list of all
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available versions.
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## From source
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For building Prometheus components from source, see the `Makefile` targets in
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the respective repository.
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## Using Docker
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All Prometheus services are available as Docker images on
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[Quay.io](https://quay.io/repository/prometheus/prometheus) or
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[Docker Hub](https://hub.docker.com/r/prom/prometheus/).
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Running Prometheus on Docker is as simple as `docker run -p 9090:9090
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prom/prometheus`. This starts Prometheus with a sample
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configuration and exposes it on port 9090.
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The Prometheus image uses a volume to store the actual metrics. For
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production deployments it is highly recommended to use a
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[named volume](https://docs.docker.com/storage/volumes/)
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to ease managing the data on Prometheus upgrades.
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To provide your own configuration, there are several options. Here are
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two examples.
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### Volumes & bind-mount
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Bind-mount your `prometheus.yml` from the host by running:
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```bash
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docker run \
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-p 9090:9090 \
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-v /path/to/prometheus.yml:/etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml \
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prom/prometheus
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```
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Or bind-mount the directory containing `prometheus.yml` onto
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`/etc/prometheus` by running:
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```bash
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docker run \
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-p 9090:9090 \
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-v /path/to/config:/etc/prometheus \
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prom/prometheus
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```
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### Custom image
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To avoid managing a file on the host and bind-mount it, the
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configuration can be baked into the image. This works well if the
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configuration itself is rather static and the same across all
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environments.
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For this, create a new directory with a Prometheus configuration and a
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`Dockerfile` like this:
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```Dockerfile
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FROM prom/prometheus
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ADD prometheus.yml /etc/prometheus/
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```
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Now build and run it:
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```bash
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docker build -t my-prometheus .
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docker run -p 9090:9090 my-prometheus
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```
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A more advanced option is to render the configuration dynamically on start
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with some tooling or even have a daemon update it periodically.
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## Using configuration management systems
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If you prefer using configuration management systems you might be interested in
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the following third-party contributions:
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### Ansible
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* [Cloud Alchemy/ansible-prometheus](https://github.com/cloudalchemy/ansible-prometheus)
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### Chef
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* [rayrod2030/chef-prometheus](https://github.com/rayrod2030/chef-prometheus)
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### Puppet
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* [puppet/prometheus](https://forge.puppet.com/puppet/prometheus)
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### SaltStack
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* [saltstack-formulas/prometheus-formula](https://github.com/saltstack-formulas/prometheus-formula)
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