Prometheus

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Prometheus is an open-source systems monitoring and alerting toolkit[1] released in 2012. Prometheus design is focused to collect and process metrics, not as an event logging system for logs.[2]


Install Prometheus

Configuration files

  • Linux: /etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml
  • macOS: /usr/local/etc/prometheus.args

Binaries

  • prometheus
  • promtool

Configuring Prometheus

  • In the /etc/prometheus directory, use nano or your favorite text editor to create a configuration file named prometheus.yml. For now, this file will contain just enough information to run Prometheus for the first time.
sudo nano /etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml


  • In the global settings, define the default interval for scraping metrics. Note that Prometheus will apply these settings to every exporter unless an individual exporter's own settings override the global.


  • This scrape_interval value tells Prometheus to collect metrics from its exporters every 15 seconds, which is long enough for most exporters. Now, add Prometheus itself to the list of exporters to scrape from with the following scrape_configs directive:


  • Prometheus uses the job_name to label exporters in queries and on graphs, so be sure to pick something descriptive here. And, as Prometheus exports important data about itself that you can use for monitoring performance and debugging, we've overridden the global scrape_interval directive from 15 seconds to 5 seconds for more frequent updates. Lastly, Prometheus uses the static_configs and targets directives to determine where exporters are running. Since this particular exporter is running on the same server as Prometheus itself, we can use localhost instead of an IP address along with the default port, 9090.


Your configuration file should now look like this:

global:
  scrape_interval: 15s

scrape_configs:
  - job_name: 'prometheus'
    scrape_interval: 5s
    static_configs:
      - targets: ['localhost:9090']


Basic Prometheus Operations

  • Start Prometheus: :sudo systemctl start prometheus
  • Reload systemd: :sudo systemctl daemon-reload prometheus
  • Verify the service's status: :sudo systemctl status prometheus

Activities

See also

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