From 5da14042f70711ea5cf66e034699730335462f66 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Daniel Baumann Date: Sun, 5 May 2024 14:08:03 +0200 Subject: Merging upstream version 1.45.3+dfsg. Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann --- src/exporting/graphite/integrations/blueflood.md | 172 +++++++++++++++++++++++ 1 file changed, 172 insertions(+) create mode 100644 src/exporting/graphite/integrations/blueflood.md (limited to 'src/exporting/graphite/integrations/blueflood.md') diff --git a/src/exporting/graphite/integrations/blueflood.md b/src/exporting/graphite/integrations/blueflood.md new file mode 100644 index 000000000..1a6a21473 --- /dev/null +++ b/src/exporting/graphite/integrations/blueflood.md @@ -0,0 +1,172 @@ + + +# Blueflood + + + + + +Use the Graphite connector for the exporting engine to archive your Netdata metrics to Graphite providers for long-term storage, +further analysis, or correlation with data from other sources. + + + + + +## Setup + +### Prerequisites + +#### + +- You have already installed Netdata and Graphite. + + + +### Configuration + +#### File + +The configuration file name for this integration is `exporting.conf`. + + +You can edit the configuration file using the `edit-config` script from the +Netdata [config directory](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/blob/master/docs/netdata-agent/configuration.md#the-netdata-config-directory). + +```bash +cd /etc/netdata 2>/dev/null || cd /opt/netdata/etc/netdata +sudo ./edit-config exporting.conf +``` +#### Options + +The following options can be defined for this exporter. + +
Config options + +| Name | Description | Default | Required | +|:----|:-----------|:-------|:--------:| +| enabled | Enables or disables an exporting connector instance (yes/no). | no | yes | +| destination | Accepts a space separated list of hostnames, IPs (IPv4 and IPv6) and ports to connect to. Netdata will use the first available to send the metrics. | no | yes | +| username | Username for HTTP authentication | my_username | no | +| password | Password for HTTP authentication | my_password | no | +| data source | Selects the kind of data that will be sent to the external database. (as collected/average/sum) | | no | +| hostname | The hostname to be used for sending data to the external database server. | [global].hostname | no | +| prefix | The prefix to add to all metrics. | netdata | no | +| update every | Frequency of sending sending data to the external database, in seconds. | 10 | no | +| buffer on failures | The number of iterations (`update every` seconds) to buffer data, when the external database server is not available. | 10 | no | +| timeout ms | The timeout in milliseconds to wait for the external database server to process the data. | 20000 | no | +| send hosts matching | Hosts filter. Determines which hosts will be sent to the external database. The syntax is [simple patterns](https://github.com/netdata/netdata/tree/master/src/libnetdata/simple_pattern#simple-patterns). | localhost * | no | +| send charts matching | One or more space separated patterns (use * as wildcard) checked against both chart id and chart name. | * | no | +| send names instead of ids | Controls the metric names Netdata should send to the external database (yes/no). | | no | +| send configured labels | Controls if host labels defined in the `[host labels]` section in `netdata.conf` should be sent to the external database (yes/no). | | no | +| send automatic labels | Controls if automatically created labels, like `_os_name` or `_architecture` should be sent to the external database (yes/no). | | no | + +##### destination + +The format of each item in this list, is: [PROTOCOL:]IP[:PORT]. +- PROTOCOL can be udp or tcp. tcp is the default and only supported by the current exporting engine. +- IP can be XX.XX.XX.XX (IPv4), or [XX:XX...XX:XX] (IPv6). For IPv6 you can to enclose the IP in [] to separate it from the port. +- PORT can be a number of a service name. If omitted, the default port for the exporting connector will be used. + +Example IPv4: + ```yaml + destination = 10.11.14.2:2003 10.11.14.3:4242 10.11.14.4:2003 + ``` +Example IPv6 and IPv4 together: +```yaml +destination = [ffff:...:0001]:2003 10.11.12.1:2003 +``` +When multiple servers are defined, Netdata will try the next one when the previous one fails. + + +##### update every + +Netdata will add some randomness to this number, to prevent stressing the external server when many Netdata servers +send data to the same database. This randomness does not affect the quality of the data, only the time they are sent. + + +##### buffer on failures + +If the server fails to receive the data after that many failures, data loss on the connector instance is expected (Netdata will also log it). + + +##### send hosts matching + +Includes one or more space separated patterns, using * as wildcard (any number of times within each pattern). +The patterns are checked against the hostname (the localhost is always checked as localhost), allowing us to +filter which hosts will be sent to the external database when this Netdata is a central Netdata aggregating multiple hosts. + +A pattern starting with `!` gives a negative match. So to match all hosts named `*db*` except hosts containing `*child*`, +use `!*child* *db*` (so, the order is important: the first pattern matching the hostname will be used - positive or negative). + + +##### send charts matching + +A pattern starting with ! gives a negative match. So to match all charts named apps.* except charts ending in *reads, +use !*reads apps.* (so, the order is important: the first pattern matching the chart id or the chart name will be used, +positive or negative). There is also a URL parameter filter that can be used while querying allmetrics. The URL parameter +has a higher priority than the configuration option. + + +##### send names instead of ids + +Netdata supports names and IDs for charts and dimensions. Usually IDs are unique identifiers as read by the system and names +are human friendly labels (also unique). Most charts and metrics have the same ID and name, but in several cases they are +different : disks with device-mapper, interrupts, QoS classes, statsd synthetic charts, etc. + + +
+ +#### Examples + +##### Example configuration + +Basic configuration + +```yaml +[graphite:netdata] + enabled = yes + destination = localhost:2003 + +``` +##### Configuration with HTTPS and HTTP authentication + +Add `:https` modifier to the connector type if you need to use the TLS/SSL protocol. For example: `remote_write:https:my_instance`. + +```yaml +[graphite:netdata] + enabled = yes + destination = localhost:2003 + username = my_username + password = my_password + +``` +##### Detailed Configuration for a remote, secure host + +Add `:https` modifier to the connector type if you need to use the TLS/SSL protocol. For example: `remote_write:https:my_instance`. + +```yaml +[graphite:https:netdata] + enabled = yes + username = my_username + password = my_password + destination = 10.10.1.114:2003 + # data source = average + # prefix = netdata + # hostname = my_hostname + # update every = 10 + # buffer on failures = 10 + # timeout ms = 20000 + # send names instead of ids = yes + # send charts matching = * + # send hosts matching = localhost * + +``` + -- cgit v1.2.3