Personal tools
Skip to content. | Skip to navigation
Usage: prometheus-cli [flags] query <expression> prometheus-cli [flags] query_range <expression> <end_timestamp> <range_seconds> [<step_seconds>] prometheus-cli [flags] metrics Flags: -csv=true: Whether to format output as CSV -csvDelimiter=";": Single-character delimiter to use in CSV output -server="": URL of the Prometheus server to query -timeout=1m0s: Timeout to use when querying the Prometheus server
Exporter for Celery/Flower metrics, inspired by https://github.com/vooydzig/flower-prometheus-exporter
iPerf3 exporter is configured via command-line flags. To view all available command-line flags, run iperf3_exporter -h. The timeout of each probe is automatically determined from the scrape_timeout in the Prometheus config. This can be also be limited by the iperf3.timeout command-line flag. If neither is specified, it defaults to 30 seconds. Prometheus Configuration The iPerf3 exporter needs to be passed the target as a parameter, this can be done with relabelling. Optional: pass the port that the target iperf3 server is lisenting on as the "port" parameter. Example config: scrape_configs: - job_name: 'iperf3' metrics_path: /probe static_configs: - targets: - foo.server - bar.server params: port: ['5201'] relabel_configs: - source_labels: [__address__] target_label: __param_target - source_labels: [__param_target] target_label: instance - target_label: __address__ replacement: 127.0.0.1:5201 # The iPerf3 exporter's real hostname:port.
A Prometheus metrics exporter for LDAP. This exporter allows for configurable tree attributes to be exposed as prometheus metrics, and bundles a set of useful metrics for LDAP backends it knows of (currently this is just 389 Directory Server).
Features MongoDB Server Status metrics (cursors, operations, indexes, storage, etc) MongoDB Replica Set metrics (members, ping, replication lag, etc) MongoDB Replication Oplog metrics (size, length in time, etc) MongoDB Sharding metrics (shards, chunks, db/collections, balancer operations) MongoDB RocksDB storage-engine metrics (levels, compactions, cache usage, i/o rates, etc) MongoDB WiredTiger storage-engine metrics (cache, blockmanger, tickets, etc) MongoDB Top Metrics per collection (writeLock, readLock, query, etc*)
Prometheus exporter for machine metrics, written in Go with pluggable metric collectors. Collectors There is varying support for collectors on each operating system. The tables below list all existing collectors and the supported systems. Which collectors are used is controlled by the --collectors.enabled flag. Enabled by default Name Description OS conntrack Shows conntrack statistics (does nothing if no /proc/sys/net/netfilter/ present). Linux cpu Exposes CPU statistics FreeBSD diskstats Exposes disk I/O statistics from /proc/diskstats. Linux entropy Exposes available entropy. Linux filefd Exposes file descriptor statistics from /proc/sys/fs/file-nr. Linux filesystem Exposes filesystem statistics, such as disk space used. FreeBSD, Dragonfly, Linux, OpenBSD loadavg Exposes load average. Darwin, Dragonfly, FreeBSD, Linux, NetBSD, OpenBSD, Solaris mdadm Exposes statistics about devices in /proc/mdstat (does nothing if no /proc/mdstat present). Linux meminfo Exposes memory statistics. Dragonfly, FreeBSD, Linux netdev Exposes network interface statistics such as bytes transferred. Dragonfly, FreeBSD, Linux, OpenBSD netstat Exposes network statistics from /proc/net/netstat. This is the same information as netstat -s. Linux stat Exposes various statistics from /proc/stat. This includes CPU usage, boot time, forks and interrupts. Linux textfile Exposes statistics read from local disk. The --collector.textfile.directory flag must be set. any time Exposes the current system time. any vmstat Exposes statistics from /proc/vmstat. Linux Disabled by default Name Description OS bonding Exposes the number of configured and active slaves of Linux bonding interfaces. Linux devstat Exposes device statistics FreeBSD gmond Exposes statistics from Ganglia. any interrupts Exposes detailed interrupts statistics. Linux, OpenBSD ipvs Exposes IPVS status from /proc/net/ip_vs and stats from /proc/net/ip_vs_stats. Linux ksmd Exposes kernel and system statistics from /sys/kernel/mm/ksm. Linux logind Exposes session counts from logind. Linux megacli Exposes RAID statistics from MegaCLI. Linux meminfo_numa Exposes memory statistics from /proc/meminfo_numa. Linux ntp Exposes time drift from an NTP server. any runit Exposes service status from runit. any supervisord Exposes service status from supervisord. any systemd Exposes service and system status from systemd. Linux tcpstat Exposes TCP connection status information from /proc/net/tcp and /proc/net/tcp6. (Warning: the current version has potential performance issues in high load situations.) Linux Textfile Collector The textfile collector is similar to the Pushgateway, in that it allows exporting of statistics from batch jobs. It can also be used to export static metrics, such as what role a machine has. The Pushgateway should be used for service-level metrics. The textfile module is for metrics that are tied to a machine. To use it, set the --collector.textfile.directory flag on the Node exporter. The collector will parse all files in that directory matching the glob *.prom using the text format.