This should be the way forward when importing libraries in jsonnet. It's
closer to how Go imports look and makes it more obvious where packages
live.
This is not breaking anything, as the old imports were already symlinks
to the now directly used directories.
Signed-off-by: Matthias Loibl <mail@matthiasloibl.com>
* Make FS space alerts thresholds configurable (#1)
This makes it possible to tweak the thresholds for
the NodeFilesystemSpaceFillingUp alerts. Which
might be necessary in systems like Kubernetes,
where the image garbage collector runs at 85%,
so it's not a problem that the disk reaches that usage %.
Signed-off-by: iuri aranda <iuri@skyscrapers.eu>
We actually have to count or sum, respectively, _all_ the selected
metrics for the cluster-wide view. Which means it's easiest to use the
`scalar` approach after all (but only in the cluster dashboard). This
still propagates all the labels.
I have extended the comment for the `nodeExporterSelector` to note
that the cluster dashboard only makes sense if all the selected node
exporter actually belong to the same cluster.
Since this is jsonnet, users can easily disable the cluster
dashboard. Or even create multiple instances of the dashboards with
different `nodeExporterSelector`s for different clusters.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
The `instance:node_memory_swap_io_pages:rate1m` rule was intended to
measure the amount of memory pressure a system is under, but its name is
a bit misleading (it specifically refers to swap), and the rate of
`node_vmstat_pgmajfault` is a better metric for memory pressure
(see #1524).
This commit renames `instance:node_memory_swap_io_pages:rate1m` to
`instance:node_vmstat_pgmajfault:rate1m`, and defines it as
`rate(node_vmstat_pgmajfault{%(nodeExporterSelector)s}[1m])`. The
dashboards are updated accordingly.
Signed-off-by: Benoît Knecht <benoit.knecht@fsfe.org>
As per https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter/pull/1429#discussion_r304210103
we want to fetch all devices and all fs types.
Currently, this is done by setting empty string which breaks most queries which rely on it.
This fixes it by setting the appropriate selector instead of empty string.
Signed-off-by: Sergiusz Urbaniak <sergiusz.urbaniak@gmail.com>
- Use a stacked graph instead of a gauge as development over time is
especially useful for disk space usage.
- By only taking one metric per device into account, we avoid
double-counting for devices that are mounted multiple times.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
* node-mixin: Improve nodes dashboard
- Use stacking where it makes sense.
- Normalize idle CPU so that stacking is more meaningful.
- Consistently fill where stacking is used but don't fill where not.
- Fix y axis max value for Idle CPU panel.
- Fix y axis min value for memory usage panel.
- Use `$__interval` for range where applicable (and set min step
to 1m).
- Make the right Y axis for disk I/O actually work.
This is just an incremental improvements. It doesn't touch the more
involved TODOs.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
This addresses the blissful scenario where single-node failures are
unproblematic. No reason to wake somebody up if a node is about to
screw itself up by filling the disk.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
- Normalize cluster memory utilisation.
- Fix missing `1m` in memory saturation.
- Have both disk-related row next to each other instead with the
network row in between.
- Correctly render transmit network traffic as negative, using
`seriesOverrides` and `min: null` for the y-axis.
- Make panel and row naming consistent.
- Remove legend where it would just display a single entry with
exactly the title of the panel.
- Fix metric name in individual node CPU Saturation panel.
- Break up disk space utilisation by device in the panel for an
individual node.
NB: All of that doesn't touch any more subtle issues captured in the
various TODOs.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>