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Signed-off-by: John Bampton <jbampton@users.noreply.github.com>
36 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
36 lines
1.5 KiB
Markdown
# RabbitMQ Scraping
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This is an example on how to setup RabbitMQ so Prometheus can scrape data from it.
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It uses a third party [RabbitMQ exporter](https://github.com/kbudde/rabbitmq_exporter).
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Since the [RabbitMQ exporter](https://github.com/kbudde/rabbitmq_exporter) needs to
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scrape the RabbitMQ management API to scrape data, and it defaults to localhost, it is
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easier to simply embed the **kbudde/rabbitmq-exporter** on the same pod as RabbitMQ,
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this way they share the same network.
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With this pod running you will have the exporter scraping data, but Prometheus has not
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yet found the exporter and is not scraping data from it.
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For more details on how to use Kubernetes service discovery take a look at the
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[documentation](https://prometheus.io/docs/operating/configuration/#kubernetes-sd-configurations-kubernetes_sd_config)
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and at the [available examples](./../).
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After you have gotten Kubernetes service discovery up and running, add the following scrape_configs to prometheus.yml.
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```
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scrape_configs:
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- job_name: 'RabbitMQ'
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kubernetes_sd_configs:
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- role: pod
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relabel_configs:
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- source_labels:
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- __meta_kubernetes_pod_label_app
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regex: rabbitmq
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action: keep
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```
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And you should be able to see your RabbitMQ exporter being scraped on the Prometheus status page.
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Since the IP that will be scraped will be the pod endpoint it is important that the node
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where Prometheus is running has access to the Kubernetes overlay network
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(flannel, Weave, AWS, or any of the other options that Kubernetes gives to you).
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