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author | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2022-04-14 18:12:10 +0000 |
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committer | Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org> | 2022-04-14 18:12:10 +0000 |
commit | b5321aff06d6ea8d730d62aec2ffd8e9271c1ffc (patch) | |
tree | 36c41e35994786456154f9d3bf88c324763aeea4 /backends/WALKTHROUGH.md | |
parent | Adding upstream version 1.33.1. (diff) | |
download | netdata-b5321aff06d6ea8d730d62aec2ffd8e9271c1ffc.tar.xz netdata-b5321aff06d6ea8d730d62aec2ffd8e9271c1ffc.zip |
Adding upstream version 1.34.0.upstream/1.34.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'backends/WALKTHROUGH.md')
-rw-r--r-- | backends/WALKTHROUGH.md | 258 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 258 deletions
diff --git a/backends/WALKTHROUGH.md b/backends/WALKTHROUGH.md deleted file mode 100644 index bb38e7c1..00000000 --- a/backends/WALKTHROUGH.md +++ /dev/null @@ -1,258 +0,0 @@ -<!-- -title: "Netdata, Prometheus, Grafana stack" -custom_edit_url: https://github.com/netdata/netdata/edit/master/backends/WALKTHROUGH.md ---> - -# Netdata, Prometheus, Grafana stack - -## Intro - -In this article I will walk you through the basics of getting Netdata, Prometheus and Grafana all working together and -monitoring your application servers. This article will be using docker on your local workstation. We will be working -with docker in an ad-hoc way, launching containers that run ‘/bin/bash’ and attaching a TTY to them. I use docker here -in a purely academic fashion and do not condone running Netdata in a container. I pick this method so individuals -without cloud accounts or access to VMs can try this out and for it’s speed of deployment. - -## Why Netdata, Prometheus, and Grafana - -Some time ago I was introduced to Netdata by a coworker. We were attempting to troubleshoot python code which seemed to -be bottlenecked. I was instantly impressed by the amount of metrics Netdata exposes to you. I quickly added Netdata to -my set of go-to tools when troubleshooting systems performance. - -Some time ago, even later, I was introduced to Prometheus. Prometheus is a monitoring application which flips the normal -architecture around and polls rest endpoints for its metrics. This architectural change greatly simplifies and decreases -the time necessary to begin monitoring your applications. Compared to current monitoring solutions the time spent on -designing the infrastructure is greatly reduced. Running a single Prometheus server per application becomes feasible -with the help of Grafana. - -Grafana has been the go to graphing tool for… some time now. It’s awesome, anyone that has used it knows it’s awesome. -We can point Grafana at Prometheus and use Prometheus as a data source. This allows a pretty simple overall monitoring -architecture: Install Netdata on your application servers, point Prometheus at Netdata, and then point Grafana at -Prometheus. - -I’m omitting an important ingredient in this stack in order to keep this tutorial simple and that is service discovery. -My personal preference is to use Consul. Prometheus can plug into consul and automatically begin to scrape new hosts -that register a Netdata client with Consul. - -At the end of this tutorial you will understand how each technology fits together to create a modern monitoring stack. -This stack will offer you visibility into your application and systems performance. - -## Getting Started - Netdata - -To begin let’s create our container which we will install Netdata on. We need to run a container, forward the necessary -port that Netdata listens on, and attach a tty so we can interact with the bash shell on the container. But before we do -this we want name resolution between the two containers to work. In order to accomplish this we will create a -user-defined network and attach both containers to this network. The first command we should run is: - -```sh -docker network create --driver bridge netdata-tutorial -``` - -With this user-defined network created we can now launch our container we will install Netdata on and point it to this -network. - -```sh -docker run -it --name netdata --hostname netdata --network=netdata-tutorial -p 19999:19999 centos:latest '/bin/bash' -``` - -This command creates an interactive tty session (-it), gives the container both a name in relation to the docker daemon -and a hostname (this is so you know what container is which when working in the shells and docker maps hostname -resolution to this container), forwards the local port 19999 to the container’s port 19999 (-p 19999:19999), sets the -command to run (/bin/bash) and then chooses the base container images (centos:latest). After running this you should be -sitting inside the shell of the container. - -After we have entered the shell we can install Netdata. This process could not be easier. If you take a look at [this -link](/packaging/installer/README.md), the Netdata devs give us several one-liners to install Netdata. I have not had -any issues with these one liners and their bootstrapping scripts so far (If you guys run into anything do share). Run -the following command in your container. - -```sh -bash <(curl -Ss https://my-netdata.io/kickstart.sh) --dont-wait -``` - -After the install completes you should be able to hit the Netdata dashboard at <http://localhost:19999/> (replace -localhost if you’re doing this on a VM or have the docker container hosted on a machine not on your local system). If -this is your first time using Netdata I suggest you take a look around. The amount of time I’ve spent digging through -/proc and calculating my own metrics has been greatly reduced by this tool. Take it all in. - -Next I want to draw your attention to a particular endpoint. Navigate to -<http://localhost:19999/api/v1/allmetrics?format=prometheus&help=yes> In your browser. This is the endpoint which -publishes all the metrics in a format which Prometheus understands. Let’s take a look at one of these metrics. -`netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average{chart="system.cpu",family="cpu",dimension="system"} 0.0831255 1501271696000` This -metric is representing several things which I will go in more details in the section on prometheus. For now understand -that this metric: `netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average` has several labels: (chart, family, dimension). This -corresponds with the first cpu chart you see on the Netdata dashboard. - -![](https://github.com/ldelossa/NetdataTutorial/raw/master/Screen%20Shot%202017-07-28%20at%204.00.45%20PM.png) - -This CHART is called ‘system.cpu’, The FAMILY is cpu, and the DIMENSION we are observing is “system”. You can begin to -draw links between the charts in Netdata to the prometheus metrics format in this manner. - -## Prometheus - -We will be installing prometheus in a container for purpose of demonstration. While prometheus does have an official -container I would like to walk through the install process and setup on a fresh container. This will allow anyone -reading to migrate this tutorial to a VM or Server of any sort. - -Let’s start another container in the same fashion as we did the Netdata container. - -```sh -docker run -it --name prometheus --hostname prometheus ---network=netdata-tutorial -p 9090:9090 centos:latest '/bin/bash' -``` - -This should drop you into a shell once again. Once there quickly install your favorite editor as we will be editing -files later in this tutorial. - -```sh -yum install vim -y -``` - -Prometheus provides a tarball of their latest stable versions [here](https://prometheus.io/download/). - -Let’s download the latest version and install into your container. - -```sh -cd /tmp && curl -s https://api.github.com/repos/prometheus/prometheus/releases/latest \ -| grep "browser_download_url.*linux-amd64.tar.gz" \ -| cut -d '"' -f 4 \ -| wget -qi - - -mkdir /opt/prometheus - -sudo tar -xvf /tmp/prometheus-*linux-amd64.tar.gz -C /opt/prometheus --strip=1 -``` - -This should get prometheus installed into the container. Let’s test that we can run prometheus and connect to it’s web -interface. - -```sh -/opt/prometheus/prometheus -``` - -Now attempt to go to <http://localhost:9090/>. You should be presented with the prometheus homepage. This is a good -point to talk about Prometheus’s data model which can be viewed here: <https://prometheus.io/docs/concepts/data_model/> -As explained we have two key elements in Prometheus metrics. We have the ‘metric’ and its ‘labels’. Labels allow for -granularity between metrics. Let’s use our previous example to further explain. - -```conf -netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average{chart="system.cpu",family="cpu",dimension="system"} 0.0831255 1501271696000 -``` - -Here our metric is ‘netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average’ and our labels are ‘chart’, ‘family’, and ‘dimension. The -last two values constitute the actual metric value for the metric type (gauge, counter, etc…). We can begin graphing -system metrics with this information, but first we need to hook up Prometheus to poll Netdata stats. - -Let’s move our attention to Prometheus’s configuration. Prometheus gets it config from the file located (in our example) -at `/opt/prometheus/prometheus.yml`. I won’t spend an extensive amount of time going over the configuration values -documented here: <https://prometheus.io/docs/operating/configuration/>. We will be adding a new“job” under the -“scrape_configs”. Let’s make the “scrape_configs” section look like this (we can use the dns name Netdata due to the -custom user-defined network we created in docker beforehand). - -```yaml -scrape_configs: - # The job name is added as a label `job=<job_name>` to any timeseries scraped from this config. - - job_name: 'prometheus' - - # metrics_path defaults to '/metrics' - # scheme defaults to 'http'. - - static_configs: - - targets: ['localhost:9090'] - - - job_name: 'netdata' - - metrics_path: /api/v1/allmetrics - params: - format: [ prometheus ] - - static_configs: - - targets: ['netdata:19999'] -``` - -Let’s start prometheus once again by running `/opt/prometheus/prometheus`. If we now navigate to prometheus at -‘<http://localhost:9090/targets’> we should see our target being successfully scraped. If we now go back to the -Prometheus’s homepage and begin to type ‘netdata\_’ Prometheus should auto complete metrics it is now scraping. - -![](https://github.com/ldelossa/NetdataTutorial/raw/master/Screen%20Shot%202017-07-28%20at%205.13.43%20PM.png) - -Let’s now start exploring how we can graph some metrics. Back in our Netdata container lets get the CPU spinning with a -pointless busy loop. On the shell do the following: - -```sh -[root@netdata /]# while true; do echo "HOT HOT HOT CPU"; done -``` - -Our Netdata cpu graph should be showing some activity. Let’s represent this in Prometheus. In order to do this let’s -keep our metrics page open for reference: <http://localhost:19999/api/v1/allmetrics?format=prometheus&help=yes> We are -setting out to graph the data in the CPU chart so let’s search for “system.cpu”in the metrics page above. We come across -a section of metrics with the first comments `# COMMENT homogeneous chart "system.cpu", context "system.cpu", family -"cpu", units "percentage"` Followed by the metrics. This is a good start now let us drill down to the specific metric we -would like to graph. - -```conf -# COMMENT -netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average: dimension "system", value is percentage, gauge, dt 1501275951 to 1501275951 inclusive -netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average{chart="system.cpu",family="cpu",dimension="system"} 0.0000000 1501275951000 -``` - -Here we learn that the metric name we care about is‘netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average’ so throw this into Prometheus -and see what we get. We should see something similar to this (I shut off my busy loop) - -![](https://github.com/ldelossa/NetdataTutorial/raw/master/Screen%20Shot%202017-07-28%20at%205.47.53%20PM.png) - -This is a good step toward what we want. Also make note that Prometheus will tag on an ‘instance’ label for us which -corresponds to our statically defined job in the configuration file. This allows us to tailor our queries to specific -instances. Now we need to isolate the dimension we want in our query. To do this let us refine the query slightly. Let’s -query the dimension also. Place this into our query text box. -`netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average{dimension="system"}` We now wind up with the following graph. - -![](https://github.com/ldelossa/NetdataTutorial/raw/master/Screen%20Shot%202017-07-28%20at%205.54.40%20PM.png) - -Awesome, this is exactly what we wanted. If you haven’t caught on yet we can emulate entire charts from Netdata by using -the `chart` dimension. If you’d like you can combine the ‘chart’ and ‘instance’ dimension to create per-instance charts. -Let’s give this a try: `netdata_system_cpu_percentage_average{chart="system.cpu", instance="netdata:19999"}` - -This is the basics of using Prometheus to query Netdata. I’d advise everyone at this point to read [this -page](/backends/prometheus/README.md#using-netdata-with-prometheus). The key point here is that Netdata can export metrics from -its internal DB or can send metrics “as-collected” by specifying the ‘source=as-collected’ url parameter like so. -<http://localhost:19999/api/v1/allmetrics?format=prometheus&help=yes&types=yes&source=as-collected> If you choose to use -this method you will need to use Prometheus's set of functions here: <https://prometheus.io/docs/querying/functions/> to -obtain useful metrics as you are now dealing with raw counters from the system. For example you will have to use the -`irate()` function over a counter to get that metric's rate per second. If your graphing needs are met by using the -metrics returned by Netdata's internal database (not specifying any source= url parameter) then use that. If you find -limitations then consider re-writing your queries using the raw data and using Prometheus functions to get the desired -chart. - -## Grafana - -Finally we make it to grafana. This is the easiest part in my opinion. This time we will actually run the official -grafana docker container as all configuration we need to do is done via the GUI. Let’s run the following command: - -```sh -docker run -i -p 3000:3000 --network=netdata-tutorial grafana/grafana -``` - -This will get grafana running at ‘<http://localhost:3000/’> Let’s go there and - -login using the credentials Admin:Admin. - -The first thing we want to do is click ‘Add data source’. Let’s make it look like the following screenshot - -![](https://github.com/ldelossa/NetdataTutorial/raw/master/Screen%20Shot%202017-07-28%20at%206.36.55%20PM.png) - -With this completed let’s graph! Create a new Dashboard by clicking on the top left Grafana Icon and create a new graph -in that dashboard. Fill in the query like we did above and save. - -![](https://github.com/ldelossa/NetdataTutorial/raw/master/Screen%20Shot%202017-07-28%20at%206.39.38%20PM.png) - -## Conclusion - -There you have it, a complete systems monitoring stack which is very easy to deploy. From here I would begin to -understand how Prometheus and a service discovery mechanism such as Consul can play together nicely. My current prod -deployments automatically register Netdata services into Consul and Prometheus automatically begins to scrape them. Once -achieved you do not have to think about the monitoring system until Prometheus cannot keep up with your scale. Once this -happens there are options presented in the Prometheus documentation for solving this. Hope this was helpful, happy -monitoring. - -[![analytics](https://www.google-analytics.com/collect?v=1&aip=1&t=pageview&_s=1&ds=github&dr=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fnetdata%2Fnetdata&dl=https%3A%2F%2Fmy-netdata.io%2Fgithub%2Fbackends%2FWALKTHROUGH&_u=MAC~&cid=5792dfd7-8dc4-476b-af31-da2fdb9f93d2&tid=UA-64295674-3)](<>) |