systemd_exporter

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Published: Oct 30, 2023 License: Apache-2.0 Imports: 13 Imported by: 0

README

Systemd exporter

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Prometheus exporter for systemd units, written in Go.

Relation to Node and Process Exporter

The focus on each exporter is different. For example, the node_exporter has a broad node level focus, and the process-exporter is focused on deep analysis of specific processes. systemd-exporter aims to fit in the middle, taking advantage of systemd's builtin process and thread grouping to provide application-level metrics.

Exporter Metric Goals Example
node-exporter Machine-wide monitoring and usage summary CPU usage of entire node (e.g. 127.0.0.1)
systemd-exporter Systemd unit monitoring and resource usage The state of each service (e.g. mongodb.service)
process-exporter Focus is on individual processes CPU of specific process ID (e.g. 1127)
cAdvisor Metrics per cgroup (systemd uses cgroups) CPU usage of each cgroup (e.g. system.slice/mongodb.service

Systemd groups processes, threads, and other resources (PIDs, memory, etc) into logical containers called units. Systemd-exporter will read the 11 different types of systemd units (e.g. service, slice, etc) and give you metrics about the health and resource consumption of each unit. This allows an application specific view of your system, allowing you to determine resource usage of an application such as mysql.service independently from the resources used by other processes on your system.

This clearly allows more granular monitoring than machine-level metrics. However, we do not export metrics for specific processes or threads. Said another way, the granularity of systemd-exporter is limited by the size of the systemd unit. If you've chosen to pack 400 threads and 20 processes inside the mysql.service, we will only export systemd provided metrics on the service unit, not on the individual tasks. For that level of detail (and numerous other "very fine grained") metrics, you should look into process-exporter.

There is overlap between these three exporters, so make sure to read the documents if you use multiple.

For example, if you are using systemd-exporter, then you should not enable these flags in node-exporter as we already expose identical metrics by default: --systemd.collector.enable-task-metrics --systemd.collector.enable-restarts-metrics --systemd.collector.enable-start-time-metrics. process-exporter has a concept of logically grouping processes according to the process names. This is a bottom-up variant of logical process grouping, while systemd's approach is top-down (e.g. groups are named and then processes are launched in them). The systemd approach provides much stronger guarantees that no processes/threads are "missing" from your group, but it does also require that you are using systemd as your init system whereas the bottom-up approach works on all systems.

Systemd versions

There is varying support for different metrics based on systemd version. Flags that come from newer systemd versions are disabled by default to avoid breaking things for users using older systemd versions. Try enabling different flags, to see what works on your system.

Optional Flags:

Name Description
--systemd.collector.enable-restart-count Enables service restart count metrics. This feature only works with systemd 235 and above.
--systemd.collector.enable-file-descriptor-size Enables file descriptor size metrics. Systemd Exporter needs access to /proc/X/fd files.
--systemd.collector.enable-ip-accounting Enables service ip accounting metrics. This feature only works with systemd 235 and above.

Of note, there is no customized support for .snapshot (removed in systemd v228), .busname (only present on systems using kdbus), generated (created via generators), transient (created during systemd-run) have no special support.

Deployment

Take a look at examples for daemonset manifests for Kubernetes.

User privilleges

User needs to access systemd dbus, typically exporter needs to see node's /proc to work.

Metrics

All metrics have name label, which contains systemd unit name. For example name="bluetooth.service" or name="systemd-coredump.socket". Metrics that are present for all units (e.g. those named unit_*) additionally have a label type e.g. (type="socket" or type="service") to allow usage in PromQL grouping queries (e.g. count(systemd_unit_state) by (type))

Note that a number of unit types are filtered by default

Metric name Metric type Status Cardinality
systemd_exporter_build_info Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per systemd-exporter
systemd_unit_info Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per service + 1 per mount
systemd_unit_cpu_seconds_total Gauge UNSTABLE 2 per mount/scope/slice/socket/swap {mode="system/user"}
systemd_unit_state Gauge UNSTABLE 5 per unit {state="activating/active/deactivating/failed/inactive}
systemd_unit_tasks_current Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_unit_tasks_max Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_unit_start_time_seconds Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_service_restart_total Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_service_ip_ingress_bytes Counter UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_service_ip_egress_bytes Counter UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_service_ip_ingress_packets_total Counter UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_service_ip_egress_packets_total Counter UNSTABLE 1 per service
systemd_socket_accepted_connections_total Counter UNSTABLE 1 per socket
systemd_socket_current_connections Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per socket
systemd_socket_refused_connections_total Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per socket
systemd_timer_last_trigger_seconds Gauge UNSTABLE 1 per timer

Configuration

systemd_exporter allows you to include/exclude some systemd units. You can use --systemd.collector.unit-include and --systemd.collector.unit-exclude to select wanted units. Both of these options are in RE2 syntax. For example:

args:
  - --systemd.collector.unit-include=.*ceph.*\.service|ceph.*\.timer|kubelet.service|docker.service
  - --systemd.collector.unit-exclude=ceph-volume.*\.service

TLS and basic authentication

The systemd Exporter supports TLS and basic authentication.

To use TLS and/or basic authentication, you need to pass a configuration file using the --web.config.file parameter. The format of the file is described in the exporter-toolkit repository.

Documentation

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