Adapter for easy exporting your collected metrics from your application to the Prometheus!
- https://github.com/discourse/prometheus_exporter – built on assumption that various processes (web, jobs, etc) are able to communicate between them on single machine. But in containerized environments all your processes on different “machines”!
- https://github.com/getqujing/prome – actually inspired this all these gems but seems abandoned and lacks extensibility.
Add this line to your application's Gemfile:
gem 'yabeda-prometheus'
And then execute:
$ bundle
-
Exporting from running web servers:
Place following in your
config.ru
before running your application:use Yabeda::Prometheus::Exporter
Metrics will be available on
/metrics
path (configured by:path
option), additionally metrics can be served only on specific port with:port
option.Alternatively you can mount it in Rails application routes as standalone Rack application:
Rails.application.routes.draw do mount Yabeda::Prometheus::Exporter, at: "/metrics" end
Additional options (like
:port
) are also accepted and forwarded to Prometheus Exporter middleware. -
Run web-server from long-running processes (delayed jobs, …):
Yabeda::Prometheus::Exporter.start_metrics_server!
WEBrick will be launched in separate thread and will serve metrics on
/metrics
path.ATTENTION: Starting from Ruby 3.0 WEBrick isn't included with Ruby by default. You should either add
gem "webrick"
into your Gemfile or launchYabeda::Prometheus::Exporter.rack_app
with application server of your choice.See yabeda-sidekiq for example.
Listening address is configured via
PROMETHEUS_EXPORTER_BIND
env variable (default is0.0.0.0
).Port is configured by
PROMETHEUS_EXPORTER_PORT
orPORT
variables (default is9394
). -
Use push gateway for short living things (rake tasks, cron jobs, …):
Yabeda::Prometheus.push_gateway.add(Yabeda::Prometheus.registry)
Address of push gateway is configured with
PROMETHEUS_PUSH_GATEWAY
env variable.
To use Unicorn or Puma in clustered mode, you'll want to set up underlying prometheus-client gem to use DirectFileStore
, which aggregates metrics across the processes.
Prometheus::Client.config.data_store = Prometheus::Client::DataStores::DirectFileStore.new(dir: '/tmp/prometheus_direct_file_store')
See more information at prometheus-client README.
You can specify aggregation policy in gauges declaration:
group :some do
gauge :tasks do
comment "Number of test tasks"
aggregation :max
end
end
- Time of already collected metrics rendering in response for Prometheus:
yabeda_prometheus_render_duration
.
These are only enabled in debug mode. See Yabeda debugging metrics on how to enable it (e.g. by specifying YABEDA_DEBUG=true
in your environment variables).
By default, exporter web server logs are disabled. For example, you can plug in a Rails logger:
Yabeda::Prometheus::Exporter.start_metrics_server! logger: Rails.application.logger
After checking out the repo, run bin/setup
to install dependencies. Then, run rake spec
to run the tests. You can also run bin/console
for an interactive prompt that will allow you to experiment.
To install this gem onto your local machine, run bundle exec rake install
. To release a new version, update the version number in version.rb
, and then run bundle exec rake release
, which will create a git tag for the version, push git commits and tags, and push the .gem
file to rubygems.org.
Bug reports and pull requests are welcome on GitHub at https://github.com/yabeda-rb/yabeda-prometheus.
-
Bump version number in
lib/yabeda/prometheus/version.rb
In case of pre-releases keep in mind rubygems/rubygems#3086 and check version with command like
Gem::Version.new(Yabeda::Prometheus::VERSION).to_s
-
Fill
CHANGELOG.md
with missing changes, add header with version and date. -
Make a commit:
git add lib/yabeda/prometheus/version.rb CHANGELOG.md version=$(ruby -r ./lib/yabeda/prometheus/version.rb -e "puts Gem::Version.new(Yabeda::Prometheus::VERSION)") git commit --message="${version}: " --edit
-
Create annotated tag:
git tag v${version} --annotate --message="${version}: " --edit --sign
-
Fill version name into subject line and (optionally) some description (list of changes will be taken from changelog and appended automatically)
-
Push it:
git push --follow-tags
-
GitHub Actions will create a new release, build and push gem into RubyGems! You're done!
The gem is available as open source under the terms of the MIT License.