96a303b348
Currently, if a series stops to exist, its head chunk will be kept open for an hour. That prevents it from being persisted. Which prevents it from being evicted. Which prevents the series from being archived. Most of the time, once no sample has been added to a series within the staleness limit, we can be pretty confident that this series will not receive samples anymore. The whole chain as described above can be started after 5m instead of 1h. In the relaxed case, this doesn't change a lot as the head chunk timeout is only checked during series maintenance, and usually, a series is only maintained every six hours. However, there is the typical scenario where a large service is deployed, the deoply turns out to be bad, and then it is deployed again within minutes, and quite quickly the number of time series has tripled. That's the point where the Prometheus server is stressed and switches (rightfully) into rushed mode. In that mode, time series are processed as quickly as possible, but all of that is in vein if all of those recently ended time series cannot be persisted yet for another hour. In that scenario, this change will help most, and it's exactly the scenario where help is most desperately needed. |
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.github | ||
cmd | ||
config | ||
console_libraries | ||
consoles | ||
discovery | ||
documentation | ||
notifier | ||
promql | ||
relabel | ||
retrieval | ||
rules | ||
scripts | ||
storage | ||
template | ||
util | ||
vendor | ||
web | ||
.codeclimate.yml | ||
.dockerignore | ||
.gitignore | ||
.promu.yml | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CHANGELOG.md | ||
circle.yml | ||
code-of-conduct.md | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
Dockerfile | ||
LICENSE | ||
MAINTAINERS.md | ||
Makefile | ||
NOTICE | ||
README.md | ||
VERSION |
Prometheus
Visit prometheus.io for the full documentation, examples and guides.
Prometheus, a Cloud Native Computing Foundation project, is a systems and service monitoring system. It collects metrics from configured targets at given intervals, evaluates rule expressions, displays the results, and can trigger alerts if some condition is observed to be true.
Prometheus' main distinguishing features as compared to other monitoring systems are:
- a multi-dimensional data model (timeseries defined by metric name and set of key/value dimensions)
- a flexible query language to leverage this dimensionality
- no dependency on distributed storage; single server nodes are autonomous
- timeseries collection happens via a pull model over HTTP
- pushing timeseries is supported via an intermediary gateway
- targets are discovered via service discovery or static configuration
- multiple modes of graphing and dashboarding support
- support for hierarchical and horizontal federation
Architecture overview
Install
There are various ways of installing Prometheus.
Precompiled binaries
Precompiled binaries for released versions are available in the download section on prometheus.io. Using the latest production release binary is the recommended way of installing Prometheus. See the Installing chapter in the documentation for all the details.
Debian packages are available.
Docker images
Docker images are available on Quay.io.
You can launch a Prometheus container for trying it out with
$ docker run --name prometheus -d -p 127.0.0.1:9090:9090 quay.io/prometheus/prometheus
Prometheus will now be reachable at http://localhost:9090/.
Building from source
To build Prometheus from the source code yourself you need to have a working Go environment with version 1.5 or greater installed.
You can directly use the go
tool to download and install the prometheus
and promtool
binaries into your GOPATH
. We use Go 1.5's experimental
vendoring feature, so you will also need to set the GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1
environment variable in this case:
$ GO15VENDOREXPERIMENT=1 go get github.com/prometheus/prometheus/cmd/...
$ prometheus -config.file=your_config.yml
You can also clone the repository yourself and build using make
:
$ mkdir -p $GOPATH/src/github.com/prometheus
$ cd $GOPATH/src/github.com/prometheus
$ git clone https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus.git
$ cd prometheus
$ make build
$ ./prometheus -config.file=your_config.yml
The Makefile provides several targets:
- build: build the
prometheus
andpromtool
binaries - test: run the tests
- format: format the source code
- vet: check the source code for common errors
- assets: rebuild the static assets
- docker: build a docker container for the current
HEAD
More information
- The source code is periodically indexed: Prometheus Core.
- You will find a Travis CI configuration in
.travis.yml
. - See the Community page for how to reach the Prometheus developers and users on various communication channels.
Contributing
Refer to CONTRIBUTING.md
License
Apache License 2.0, see LICENSE.