StatsD to Prometheus metrics exporter
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Matthias Rampke 9180cd3afd
Merge pull request #117 from erickpintor/dynamic-metric-name
Allow for dynamic metric name
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.travis.yml Update travis config. 2017-08-30 17:59:10 +02:00
action.go Add drop action for matches 2018-01-02 17:21:50 -05:00
bridge_test.go Add TCP StatsD listener support (#71) 2017-08-01 12:21:00 +02:00
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Dockerfile Dockerfile export 9125/tcp 2017-08-02 13:31:33 +08:00
exporter.go allow for dynamic metric name 2018-01-16 18:45:55 -02:00
exporter_benchmark_test.go Add TCP StatsD listener support (#71) 2017-08-01 12:21:00 +02:00
exporter_test.go Update documentation of metric name escaping. 2017-11-10 20:34:10 +00:00
LICENSE License cleanup 2015-01-22 17:56:04 +01:00
main.go Removes -statsd.add-suffix option flag 2017-09-28 11:30:17 -07:00
MAINTAINERS.md Change maintainership to Matthias 2017-11-09 11:34:34 +01:00
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mapper.go allow for dynamic metric name 2018-01-16 18:45:55 -02:00
mapper_test.go allow for dynamic metric name 2018-01-16 18:45:55 -02:00
match.go Resolves #84 adds support for regex mappers (#85) 2017-09-29 09:57:17 +02:00
NOTICE rename bridge -> exporter 2015-10-09 20:34:28 -04:00
README.md document metric name and labels names unique set 2018-01-17 14:34:33 -02:00
telemetry.go Break out the telemetry during sample processing 2017-11-10 19:23:54 +00:00
timer.go Validate timer type while reading config 2017-07-26 14:50:29 -04:00
VERSION Preperation for v0.5.0 release 2017-11-14 11:04:52 -05:00

statsd exporter Build Status

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statsd_exporter receives StatsD-style metrics and exports them as Prometheus metrics.

Overview

With StatsD

To pipe metrics from an existing StatsD environment into Prometheus, configure StatsD's repeater backend to repeat all received metrics to a statsd_exporter process. This exporter translates StatsD metrics to Prometheus metrics via configured mapping rules.

+----------+                         +-------------------+                        +--------------+
|  StatsD  |---(UDP/TCP repeater)--->|  statsd_exporter  |<---(scrape /metrics)---|  Prometheus  |
+----------+                         +-------------------+                        +--------------+

Without StatsD

Since the StatsD exporter uses the same line protocol as StatsD itself, you can also configure your applications to send StatsD metrics directly to the exporter. In that case, you don't need to run a StatsD server anymore.

We recommend this only as an intermediate solution and recommend switching to native Prometheus instrumentation in the long term.

DogStatsD extensions

The exporter will convert DogStatsD-style tags to prometheus labels. See Tags in the DogStatsD documentation for the concept description and Datagram Format for specifics. It boils down to appending |#tag:value,another_tag:another_value to the normal StatsD format. Tags without values (#some_tag) are not supported.

Building and Running

$ go build
$ ./statsd_exporter --help
Usage of ./statsd_exporter:
  -statsd.listen-address string
      The UDP address on which to receive statsd metric lines. DEPRECATED, use statsd.listen-udp instead.
  -statsd.listen-tcp string
      The TCP address on which to receive statsd metric lines. "" disables it. (default ":9125")
  -statsd.listen-udp string
      The UDP address on which to receive statsd metric lines. "" disables it. (default ":9125")
  -statsd.mapping-config string
      Metric mapping configuration file name.
  -statsd.read-buffer int
      Size (in bytes) of the operating system's transmit read buffer associated with the UDP connection. Please make sure the kernel parameters net.core.rmem_max is set to a value greater than the value specified.
  -version
      Print version information.
  -web.listen-address string
      The address on which to expose the web interface and generated Prometheus metrics. (default ":9102")
  -web.telemetry-path string
      Path under which to expose metrics. (default "/metrics")

Tests

$ go test

Metric Mapping and Configuration

The statsd_exporter can be configured to translate specific dot-separated StatsD metrics into labeled Prometheus metrics via a simple mapping language. A mapping definition starts with a line matching the StatsD metric in question, with *s acting as wildcards for each dot-separated metric component. The lines following the matching expression must contain one label="value" pair each, and at least define the metric name (label name name). The Prometheus metric is then constructed from these labels. $n-style references in the label value are replaced by the n-th wildcard match in the matching line, starting at 1. Multiple matching definitions are separated by one or more empty lines. The first mapping rule that matches a StatsD metric wins.

Metrics that don't match any mapping in the configuration file are translated into Prometheus metrics without any labels and with any non-alphanumeric characters, including periods, translated into underscores.

In general, the different metric types are translated as follows:

StatsD gauge   -> Prometheus gauge

StatsD counter -> Prometheus counter

StatsD timer   -> Prometheus summary                    <-- indicates timer quantiles
               -> Prometheus counter (suffix `_total`)  <-- indicates total time spent
               -> Prometheus counter (suffix `_count`)  <-- indicates total number of timer events

An example mapping configuration:

mappings:
- match: test.dispatcher.*.*.*
  name: "dispatcher_events_total"
  labels:
    processor: "$1"
    action: "$2"
    outcome: "$3"
    job: "test_dispatcher"
- match: *.signup.*.*
  name: "signup_events_total"
  labels:
    provider: "$2"
    outcome: "$3"
    job: "${1}_server"

This would transform these example StatsD metrics into Prometheus metrics as follows:

test.dispatcher.FooProcessor.send.success
 => dispatcher_events_total{processor="FooProcessor", action="send", outcome="success", job="test_dispatcher"}

foo_product.signup.facebook.failure
 => signup_events_total{provider="facebook", outcome="failure", job="foo_product_server"}

test.web-server.foo.bar
 => test_web_server_foo_bar{}

Each mapping in the configuration file must define a name for the metric. The metric's name can contain $n-style references to be replaced by the n-th wildcard match in the matching line. That allows for dynamic rewrites, such as:

mappings:
- match: test.*.*.counter
  name: "${2}_counter"
  labels:
    provider: "$1"

The metric name can also contain references to regex matches. The mapping above could be written as:

mappings:
- match: test\.(\w+)\.(\w+)\.counter
  match_type: regex
  name: "${2}_counter"
  labels:
    provider: "$1"

Please note that metrics with the same name must also have the same set of labels names.

If the default metric help text is insufficient for your needs you may use the YAML configuration to specify a custom help text for each mapping:

mappings:
- match: http.request.*
  help: "Total number of http requests"
  name: "http_requests_total"
  labels:
    code: "$1"

In the configuration, one may also set the timer type to "histogram". The default is "summary" as in the plain text configuration format. For example, to set the timer type for a single metric:

mappings:
- match: test.timing.*.*.*
  timer_type: histogram
  buckets: [ 0.01, 0.025, 0.05, 0.1 ]
  name: "my_timer"
  labels:
    provider: "$2"
    outcome: "$3"
    job: "${1}_server"

Another capability when using YAML configuration is the ability to define matches using raw regular expressions as opposed to the default globbing style of match. This may allow for pulling structured data from otherwise poorly named statsd metrics AND allow for more precise targetting of match rules. When no match_type paramter is specified the default value of glob will be assumed:

mappings:
- match: (.*)\.(.*)--(.*)\.status\.(.*)\.count
  match_type: regex
  name: "request_total"
  labels:
    hostname: "$1"
    exec: "$2"
    protocol: "$3"
    code: "$4"

Note, that one may also set the histogram buckets. If not set, then the default Prometheus client values are used: [.005, .01, .025, .05, .1, .25, .5, 1, 2.5, 5, 10]. +Inf is added automatically.

timer_type is only used when the statsd metric type is a timer. buckets is only used when the statsd metric type is a timerand the timer_type is set to "histogram."

One may also set defaults for the timer type, buckets and match_type. These will be used by all mappings that do not define these.

defaults:
  timer_type: histogram
  buckets: [.005, .01, .025, .05, .1, .25, .5, 1, 2.5 ]
  match_type: glob
mappings:
# This will be a histogram using the buckets set in `defaults`.
- match: test.timing.*.*.*
  name: "my_timer"
  labels: 
    provider: "$2"
    outcome: "$3"
    job: "${1}_server"
# This will be a summary timer.
- match: other.timing.*.*.*
  timer_type: summary
  name: "other_timer"
  labels: 
    provider: "$2"
    outcome: "$3"
    job: "${1}_server_other"

You may also drop metrics by specifying a "drop" action on a match. For example:

mappings:
# This metric would match as normal.
- match: test.timing.*.*.*
  name: "my_timer"
  labels: 
    provider: "$2"
    outcome: "$3"
    job: "${1}_server"
# Any metric not matched will be dropped because "." matches all metrics.
- match: .
  match_type: regex
  action: drop
  name: "dropped"

You can drop any metric using the normal match syntax. The default action is "map" which does the normal metrics mapping.

Using Docker

You can deploy this exporter using the prom/statsd-exporter Docker image.

For example:

docker pull prom/statsd-exporter

docker run -d -p 9102:9102 -p 9125:9125 -p 9125:9125/udp \
        -v $PWD/statsd_mapping.conf:/tmp/statsd_mapping.conf \
        prom/statsd-exporter -statsd.mapping-config=/tmp/statsd_mapping.conf