cc-metric-collector/internal/metricRouter
2022-02-14 18:12:50 +01:00
..
metricCache.go Locking in MetricCache 2022-02-10 15:21:26 +01:00
metricRouter.go Try to operate on multiple metrics if channels if filled 2022-02-14 18:12:50 +01:00
README.md Configuration option to disable MetricCache completely 2022-02-02 15:30:14 +01:00

CC Metric Router

The CCMetric router sits in between the collectors and the sinks and can be used to add and remove tags to/from traversing CCMetrics.

Configuration

{
    "num_cache_intervals" : 1,
    "interval_timestamp" : true,
    "add_tags" : [
        {
            "key" : "cluster",
            "value" : "testcluster",
            "if" : "*"
        },
        {
            "key" : "test",
            "value" : "testing",
            "if" : "name == 'temp_package_id_0'"
        }
    ],
    "delete_tags" : [
        {
            "key" : "unit",
            "value" : "*",
            "if" : "*"
        }
    ],
    "interval_aggregates" : [
        {
            "name" : "temp_cores_avg",
            "if" : "match('temp_core_%d+', metric.Name())",
            "function" : "avg(values)",
            "tags" : {
                "type" : "node"
            },
            "meta" : {
                "group": "IPMI",
                "unit": "degC",
                "source": "TempCollector"
            }
        }
    ],
    "drop_metrics" : [
        "not_interesting_metric_at_all"
    ],
    "drop_metrics_if" : [
        "match('temp_core_%d+', metric.Name())"
    ],
    "rename_metrics" : {
        "metric_12345" : "mymetric"
    }
}

There are three main options add_tags, delete_tags and interval_timestamp. add_tags and delete_tags are lists consisting of dicts with key, value and if. The value can be omitted in the delete_tags part as it only uses the key for removal. The interval_timestamp setting means that a unique timestamp is applied to all metrics traversing the router during an interval.

The interval_timestamp option

The collectors' Read() functions are not called simultaneously and therefore the metrics gathered in an interval can have different timestamps. If you want to avoid that and have a common timestamp (the beginning of the interval), set this option to true and the MetricRouter sets the time.

The num_cache_intervals option

If the MetricRouter should buffer metrics of intervals in a MetricCache, this option specifies the number of past intervals that should be kept. If num_cache_intervals = 0, the cache is disabled. With num_cache_intervals = 1, only the metrics of the last interval are buffered.

A num_cache_intervals > 0 is required to use the interval_aggregates option.

The rename_metrics option

In the ClusterCockpit world we specified a set of standard metrics. Since some collectors determine the metric names based on files, execuables and libraries, they might change from system to system (or installation to installtion, OS to OS, ...). In order to get the common names, you can rename incoming metrics before sending them to the sink. If the metric name matches the oldname, it is changed to newname

{
  "oldname" : "newname",
  "clock_mhz" : "clock"
}

Conditional manipulation of tags (add_tags and del_tags)

Common config format:

{
    "key" : "test",
    "value" : "testing",
    "if" : "name == 'temp_package_id_0'"
}

The del_tags option

The collectors are free to add whatever key=value pair to the metric tags (although the usage of tags should be minimized). If you want to delete a tag afterwards, you can do that. When the if condition matches on a metric, the key is removed from the metric's tags.

If you want to remove a tag for all metrics, use the condition wildcard *. The value field can be omitted in the del_tags case.

Never delete tags:

  • hostname
  • type
  • type-id

The add_tags option

In some cases, metrics should be tagged or an existing tag changed based on some condition. This can be done in the add_tags section. When the if condition evaluates to true, the tag key is added or gets changed to the new value.

If the CCMetric name is equal to temp_package_id_0, it adds an additional tag test=testing to the metric.

For this metric, a more useful example would be:

[
  {
    "key" : "type",
    "value" : "socket",
    "if" : "name == 'temp_package_id_0'"
  },
  {
    "key" : "type-id",
    "value" : "0",
    "if" : "name == 'temp_package_id_0'"
  },
]

The metric temp_package_id_0 corresponds to the tempature of the first CPU socket (=package). With the above configuration, the tags would reflect that because commonly the TempCollector submits only node metrics.

In order to match all metrics, you can use *, so in order to add a flag per default. This is useful to attached system-specific tags like cluster=testcluster:

{
    "key" : "cluster",
    "value" : "testcluster",
    "if" : "*"
}

Dropping metrics

In some cases, you want to drop a metric and don't get it forwarded to the sinks. There are two options based on the required specification:

  • Based only on the metric name -> drop_metrics section
  • An evaluable condition with more overhead -> drop_metrics_if section

The drop_metrics section

The argument is a list of metric names. No futher checks are performed, only a comparison of the metric name

{
  "drop_metrics" : [
      "drop_metric_1",
      "drop_metric_2"
  ]
}

The example drops all metrics with the name drop_metric_1 and drop_metric_2.

The drop_metrics_if section

This option takes a list of evaluable conditions and performs them one after the other on all metrics incoming from the collectors and the metric cache (aka interval_aggregates).

{
  "drop_metrics_if" : [
      "match('drop_metric_%d+', name)",
      "match('cpu', type) && type-id == 0"
  ]
}

The first line is comparable with the example in drop_metrics, it drops all metrics starting with drop_metric_ and ending with a number. The second line drops all metrics of the first hardware thread (not recommended)

Aggregate metric values of the current interval with the interval_aggregates option

Note: interval_aggregates works only if num_cache_intervals > 0

In some cases, you need to derive new metrics based on the metrics arriving during an interval. This can be done in the interval_aggregates section. The logic is similar to the other metric manipulation and filtering options. A cache stores all metrics that arrive during an interval. At the beginning of the next interval, the list of metrics is submitted to the MetricAggregator. It derives new metrics and submits them back to the MetricRouter, so they are sent in the next interval but have the timestamp of the previous interval beginning.

"interval_aggregates" : [
  {
    "name" : "new_metric_name",
    "if" : "match('sub_metric_%d+', metric.Name())",
    "function" : "avg(values)",
    "tags" : {
      "key" : "value",
      "type" : "node"
    },
    "meta" : {
      "key" : "value",
      "group": "IPMI",
      "unit": "<copy>",
    }
  }
]

The above configuration, collects all metric values for metrics evaluating if to true. Afterwards it calculates the average avg of the values (list of all metrics' field value) and creates a new CCMetric with the name new_metric_name and adds the tags in tags and the meta information in meta. The special value <copy> searches the input metrics and copies the value of the first match of key to the new CCMetric.

If you are not interested in the input metrics sub_metric_%d+ at all, you can add the same condition used here to the drop_metrics_if section to drop them.

Use cases for interval_aggregates:

  • Combine multiple metrics of the a collector to a new one like the MemstatCollector does it for mem_used)):
  {
    "name" : "mem_used",
    "if" : "source == 'MemstatCollector'",
    "function" : "sum(mem_total) - (sum(mem_free) + sum(mem_buffers) + sum(mem_cached))",
    "tags" : {
      "type" : "node"
    },
    "meta" : {
      "group": "<copy>",
      "unit": "<copy>",
      "source": "<copy>"
    }
  }