If you want a full walkthrough of configuring the adapter for a sample metric, please read the configuration walkthrough
The adapter determines which metrics to expose, and how to expose them, through a set of "discovery" rules. Each rule is executed independently (so make sure that your rules are mutually exclusive), and specifies each of the steps the adapter needs to take to expose a metric in the API.
Each rule can be broken down into roughly four parts:
-
Discovery, which specifies how the adapter should find all Prometheus metrics for this rule.
-
Association, which specifies how the adapter should determine which Kubernetes resources a particular metric is associated with.
-
Naming, which specifies how the adapter should expose the metric in the custom metrics API.
-
Querying, which specifies how a request for a particular metric on one or more Kubernetes objects should be turned into a query to Prometheus.
A more comprehensive configuration file can be found in sample-config.yaml, but a basic config with one rule might look like:
rules:
# this rule matches cumulative cAdvisor metrics measured in seconds
- seriesQuery: '{__name__=~"^container_.*",container_name!="POD",namespace!="",pod_name!=""}'
resources:
# skip specifying generic resource<->label mappings, and just
# attach only pod and namespace resources by mapping label names to group-resources
overrides:
namespace: {resource: "namespace"},
pod_name: {resource: "pod"},
# specify that the `container_` and `_seconds_total` suffixes should be removed.
# this also introduces an implicit filter on metric family names
name:
# we use the value of the capture group implicitly as the API name
# we could also explicitly write `as: "$1"`
matches: "^container_(.*)_seconds_total$"
# specify how to construct a query to fetch samples for a given series
# This is a Go template where the `.Series` and `.LabelMatchers` string values
# are available, and the delimiters are `<<` and `>>` to avoid conflicts with
# the prometheus query language
metricsQuery: "sum(rate(<<.Series>>{<<.LabelMatchers>>,container_name!="POD"}[2m])) by (<<.GroupBy>>)"
Discovery governs the process of finding the metrics that you want to
expose in the custom metrics API. There are two fields that factor into
discovery: seriesQuery
and seriesFilters
.
seriesQuery
specifies Prometheus series query (as passed to the
/api/v1/series
endpoint in Prometheus) to use to find some set of
Prometheus series. The adapter will strip the label values from this
series, and then use the resulting metric-name-label-names combinations
later on.
In many cases, seriesQuery
will be sufficient to narrow down the list of
Prometheus series. However, sometimes (especially if two rules might
otherwise overlap), it's useful to do additional filtering on metric
names. In this case, seriesFilters
can be used. After the list of
series is returned from seriesQuery
, each series has its metric name
filtered through any specified filters.
Filters may be either:
-
is: <regex>
, which matches any series whose name matches the specified regex. -
isNot: <regex>
, which matches any series whose name does not match the specified regex.
For example:
# match all cAdvisor metrics that aren't measured in seconds
seriesQuery: '{__name__=~"^container_.*_total",container_name!="POD",namespace!="",pod_name!=""}'
seriesFilters:
- isNot: "^container_.*_seconds_total"
Association governs the process of figuring out which Kubernetes resources
a particular metric could be attached to. The resources
field controls
this process.
There are two ways to associate resources with a particular metric. In both cases, the value of the label becomes the name of the particular object.
One way is to specify that any label name that matches some particular
pattern refers to some group-resource based on the label name. This can
be done using the template
field. The pattern is specified as a Go
template, with the Group
and Resource
fields representing group and
resource. You don't necessarily have to use the Group
field (in which
case the group is guessed by the system). For instance:
# any label `kube_<group>_<resource>` becomes <group>.<resource> in Kubernetes
resources:
template: "kube_<<.Group>>_<<.Resource>>"
The other way is to specify that some particular label represents some
particular Kubernetes resource. This can be done using the overrides
field. Each override maps a Prometheus label to a Kubernetes
group-resource. For instance:
# the microservice label corresponds to the apps.deployment resource
resource:
overrides:
microservice: {group: "apps", resource: "deployment"}
These two can be combined, so you can specify both a template and some individual overrides.
The resources mentioned can be any resource available in your kubernetes cluster, as long as you've got a corresponding label.
Naming governs the process of converting a Prometheus metric name into
a metric in the custom metrics API, and vice versa. It's controlled by
the name
field.
Naming is controlled by specifying a pattern to extract an API name from a Prometheus name, and potentially a transformation on that extracted value.
The pattern is specified in the matches
field, and is just a regular
expression. If not specified, it defaults to .*
.
The transformation is specified by the as
field. You can use any
capture groups defined in the matches
field. If the matches
field
doesn't contain capture groups, the as
field defaults to $0
. If it
contains a single capture group, the as
field defautls to $1
.
Otherwise, it's an error not to specify the as field.
For example:
# match turn any name <name>_total to <name>_per_second
# e.g. http_requests_total becomes http_requests_per_second
name:
matches: "^(.*)_total$"
as: "${1}_per_second"
Querying governs the process of actually fetching values for a particular
metric. It's controlled by the metricsQuery
field.
The metricsQuery
field is a Go template that gets turned into
a Prometheus query, using input from a particular call to the custom
metrics API. A given call to the custom metrics API is distilled down to
a metric name, a group-resource, and one or more objects of that
group-resource. These get turned into the following fields in the
template:
Series
: the metric nameLabelMatchers
: a comma-separated list of label matchers matching the given objects. Currently, this is the label for the particular group-resource, plus the label for namespace, if the group-resource is namespaced.GroupBy
: a comma-separated list of labels to group by. Currently, this contains the group-resource label used inLabelMatchers
.
For instance, suppose we had a series http_requests_total
(exposed as
http_requests_per_second
in the API) with labels service
, pod
,
ingress
, namespace
, and verb
. The first four correspond to
Kubernetes resources. Then, if someone requested the metric
pods/http_request_per_second
for the pods pod1
and pod2
in the
somens
namespace, we'd have:
Series: "http_requests_total"
LabelMatchers: "pod=~\"pod1|pod2",namespace="somens"
GroupBy
:pod
Additionally, there are two advanced fields that are "raw" forms of other fields:
LabelValuesByName
: a map mapping the labels and values from theLabelMatchers
field. The values are pre-joined by|
(for used with the=~
matcher in Prometheus).GroupBySlice
: the slice form ofGroupBy
.
In general, you'll probably want to use the Series
, LabelMatchers
, and
GroupBy
fields. The other two are for advanced usage.
The query is expected to return one value for each object requested. The adapter will use the labels on the returned series to associate a given series back to its corresponding object.
For example:
# convert cumulative cAdvisor metrics into rates calculated over 2 minutes
metricsQuery: "sum(rate(<<.Series>>{<<.LabelMatchers>>,container_name!="POD"}[2m])) by (<<.GroupBy>>)"