cc-metric-store/README.md
2024-06-18 07:27:27 +02:00

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# ClusterCockpit Metric Store
[![Build & Test](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit/cc-metric-store/actions/workflows/test.yml/badge.svg)](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit/cc-metric-store/actions/workflows/test.yml)
The cc-metric-store provides a simple in-memory time series database for storing
metrics of cluster nodes at preconfigured intervals. It is meant to be used as
part of the [ClusterCockpit suite](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit). As all
data is kept in-memory (but written to disk as compressed JSON for long term
storage), accessing it is very fast. It also provides aggregations over time
_and_ nodes/sockets/cpus.
There are major limitations: Data only gets written to disk at periodic
checkpoints, not as soon as it is received.
Go look at the `TODO.md` file and the [GitHub
Issues](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit/cc-metric-store/issues) for a progress
overview. Things work, but are not properly tested. The
[NATS.io](https://nats.io/) based writing endpoint consumes messages in [this
format of the InfluxDB line
protocol](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit/cc-specifications/blob/master/metrics/lineprotocol_alternative.md).
## REST API Endpoints
The REST API is documented in [openapi.yaml](./api/openapi.yaml) in the OpenAPI
3.0 format.
## Run tests
Some benchmarks concurrently access the `MemoryStore`, so enabling the
[Race Detector](https://golang.org/doc/articles/race_detector) might be useful.
The benchmarks also work as tests as they do check if the returned values are as
expected.
```sh
# Tests only
go test -v ./...
# Benchmarks as well
go test -bench=. -race -v ./...
```
## What are these selectors mentioned in the code?
Tags in InfluxDB are used to build indexes over the stored data. InfluxDB-Tags
have no relation to each other, they do not depend on each other and have no
hierarchy. Different tags build up different indexes (I am no expert at all, but
this is how i think they work).
This project also works as a time-series database and uses the InfluxDB line
protocol. Unlike InfluxDB, the data is indexed by one single strictly
hierarchical tree structure. A selector is build out of the tags in the InfluxDB
line protocol, and can be used to select a node (not in the sense of a compute
node, can also be a socket, cpu, ...) in that tree. The implementation calls
those nodes `level` to avoid confusion. It is impossible to access data only by
knowing the _socket_ or _cpu_ tag, all higher up levels have to be specified as
well.
This is what the hierarchy currently looks like:
- cluster1
- host1
- socket0
- socket1
- ...
- cpu1
- cpu2
- cpu3
- cpu4
- ...
- host2
- ...
- cluster2
- ...
Example selectors:
1. `["cluster1", "host1", "cpu0"]`: Select only the cpu0 of host1 in cluster1
2. `["cluster1", "host1", ["cpu4", "cpu5", "cpu6", "cpu7"]]`: Select only CPUs 4-7 of host1 in cluster1
3. `["cluster1", "host1"]`: Select the complete node. If querying for a CPU-specific metric such as floats, all CPUs are implied
## Config file
All durations are specified as string that will be parsed [like
this](https://pkg.go.dev/time#ParseDuration) (Allowed suffixes: `s`, `m`, `h`,
...).
- `metrics`: Map of metric-name to objects with the following properties
- `frequency`: Timestep/Interval/Resolution of this metric
- `aggregation`: Can be `"sum"`, `"avg"` or `null`
- `null` means aggregation across nodes is forbidden for this metric
- `"sum"` means that values from the child levels are summed up for the parent level
- `"avg"` means that values from the child levels are averaged for the parent level
- `scope`: Unused at the moment, should be something like `"node"`, `"socket"` or `"hwthread"`
- `nats`:
- `address`: Url of NATS.io server, example: "nats://localhost:4222"
- `username` and `password`: Optional, if provided use those for the connection
- `subscriptions`:
- `subscribe-to`: Where to expect the measurements to be published
- `cluster-tag`: Default value for the cluster tag
- `http-api`:
- `address`: Address to bind to, for example `0.0.0.0:8080`
- `https-cert-file` and `https-key-file`: Optional, if provided enable HTTPS using those files as certificate/key
- `jwt-public-key`: Base64 encoded string, use this to verify requests to the HTTP API
- `retention-on-memory`: Keep all values in memory for at least that amount of time
- `checkpoints`:
- `interval`: Do checkpoints every X seconds/minutes/hours
- `directory`: Path to a directory
- `restore`: After a restart, load the last X seconds/minutes/hours of data back into memory
- `archive`:
- `interval`: Move and compress all checkpoints not needed anymore every X seconds/minutes/hours
- `directory`: Path to a directory
## Test the complete setup (excluding cc-backend itself)
There are two ways for sending data to the cc-metric-store, both of which are
supported by the
[cc-metric-collector](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit/cc-metric-collector).
This example uses Nats, the alternative is to use HTTP.
```sh
# Only needed once, downloads the docker image
docker pull nats:latest
# Start the NATS server
docker run -p 4222:4222 -ti nats:latest
```
Second, build and start the
[cc-metric-collector](https://github.com/ClusterCockpit/cc-metric-collector)
using the following as Sink-Config:
```json
{
"type": "nats",
"host": "localhost",
"port": "4222",
"database": "updates"
}
```
Third, build and start the metric store. For this example here, the
`config.json` file already in the repository should work just fine.
```sh
# Assuming you have a clone of this repo in ./cc-metric-store:
cd cc-metric-store
make
./cc-metric-store
```
And finally, use the API to fetch some data. The API is protected by JWT based
authentication if `jwt-public-key` is set in `config.json`. You can use this JWT
for testing:
`eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJFZERTQSJ9.eyJ1c2VyIjoiYWRtaW4iLCJyb2xlcyI6WyJST0xFX0FETUlOIiwiUk9MRV9BTkFMWVNUIiwiUk9MRV9VU0VSIl19.d-3_3FZTsadPjDEdsWrrQ7nS0edMAR4zjl-eK7rJU3HziNBfI9PDHDIpJVHTNN5E5SlLGLFXctWyKAkwhXL-Dw`
```sh
JWT="eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJFZERTQSJ9.eyJ1c2VyIjoiYWRtaW4iLCJyb2xlcyI6WyJST0xFX0FETUlOIiwiUk9MRV9BTkFMWVNUIiwiUk9MRV9VU0VSIl19.d-3_3FZTsadPjDEdsWrrQ7nS0edMAR4zjl-eK7rJU3HziNBfI9PDHDIpJVHTNN5E5SlLGLFXctWyKAkwhXL-Dw"
# If the collector and store and nats-server have been running for at least 60 seconds on the same host, you may run:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $JWT" -D - "http://localhost:8080/api/query" -d "{ \"cluster\": \"testcluster\", \"from\": $(expr $(date +%s) - 60), \"to\": $(date +%s), \"queries\": [{
\"metric\": \"load_one\",
\"host\": \"$(hostname)\"
}] }"
# ...
```
For debugging there is a debug endpoint to dump the current content to stdout:
```sh
JWT="eyJ0eXAiOiJKV1QiLCJhbGciOiJFZERTQSJ9.eyJ1c2VyIjoiYWRtaW4iLCJyb2xlcyI6WyJST0xFX0FETUlOIiwiUk9MRV9BTkFMWVNUIiwiUk9MRV9VU0VSIl19.d-3_3FZTsadPjDEdsWrrQ7nS0edMAR4zjl-eK7rJU3HziNBfI9PDHDIpJVHTNN5E5SlLGLFXctWyKAkwhXL-Dw"
# If the collector and store and nats-server have been running for at least 60 seconds on the same host, you may run:
curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $JWT" -D - "http://localhost:8080/api/debug"
# ...
```