Examples:
1) -metricsAuthKey=file:///abs/path/to/file - reads flag value from the given absolute filepath
2) -metricsAuthKey=file://./relative/path/to/file - reads flag value from the given relative filepath
3) -metricsAuthKey=http://some-host/some/path?query_arg=abc - reads flag value from the given url
The flag value is automatically updated when the file contents changes.
* app/vmselect/promql: properly handle possible negative results caused by float operations precision error in rollup functions like rate() or increase()
* fix test
Properly determine time range search for instant queries with too big look-behind window like `foo[100y]`.
Previously, such queries could return empty responses even if `foo` is present in database.
https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5553
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* app/vmselect: drop `rollupDefault` function as duplicate
It is unclear why there are two identical fns `rollupDefault`
and `rollupDistinct`. Dropping one of them.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* Update app/vmselect/promql/rollup.go
* Update app/vmselect/promql/rollup.go
---------
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
app/vmselect/promql/eval.go:evalAggrFunc shunts evaluation
of AggrFuncExpr over rollupFunc over MetricsExpr to an optimized
path. tryGetArgRollupFuncWithMetricExpr() checks whether expression
can be shunted, but it mangles the AggrFuncExpr when the aggregation
function has more than one argument. This results in queries like
`sum(aggr_over_time("avg_over_time",m))` failing with error message
'expecting at least 2 args to "aggr_over_time"; got 1 args' while
the analogous query `sum(avg_over_time(m))` executes successfully.
This fix removes the unnecessary mangling.
Signed-off-by: Anton Tykhyy <atykhyy@gmail.com>
* vmui: add show quick tip for autocomplete
* vmui: auto-completion usability improvements #5348
* vmui: add const for min symbols in autocomplete
* Use proper queries to VictoriaMetrics
* vmui: fix comments for autocomplete
* app/vmselect: run `make vmui-update`
---------
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
Previously the lower bound could be too small, which could result in missing values at the beginning of the graph
for default_rollup() function. This function is automatically applied to all the series selectors if they aren't
explicitly wrapped into a rollup function - see https://docs.victoriametrics.com/MetricsQL.html#implicit-query-conversions
While at it, properly take into account `-search.minStalenessInterval` command-line flag when adjusting
the lower bound for the selected time range.
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5388
Previously concurrency for static and fast queries was limited with the -search.maxConcurrentRequests
command-line flag. This could complicate identifying heavy queries via `vmui` at `Top queries` and `Active queries` pages,
since `vmui` and these pages couldn't be opened on overloaded vmselect.
Thanks to @f41gh7 for the idea.
Previously the number of memory allocations inside copyTimeseriesShallow() was equal to 1+len(tss)
Reduce this number to 2 by pre-allocating a slice of timeseries structs with len(tss) length.
evalRollupFuncNoCache() may return time series with identical labels (aka duplicate series)
when performing queries satisfying all the following conditions:
- It must select time series with multiple metric names. For example, {__name__=~"foo|bar"}
- The series selector must be wrapped into rollup function, which drops metric names. For example, rate({__name__=~"foo|bar"})
- The rollup function must be wrapped into aggregate function, which has no streaming optimization.
For example, quantile(0.9, rate({__name__=~"foo|bar"})
In this case VictoriaMetrics shouldn't return `cannot merge series: duplicate series found` error.
Instead, it should fall back to query execution with disabled cache.
Also properly store the merged results. Previously they were incorrectly stored because of a typo
introduced in the commit 41a0fdaf39
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5332
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/pull/5337
- If min_over_time(m[offset] @ timestamp) <= min_over_time(m[offset] @ (timestamp-window)),
then the optimization can be applied.
- If max_over_time(m[offset] @ timestamp) >= max_over_time(m[offset] @ (timestamp-window)),
then the optimization can be applied.
* vmui: reduced the number of server requests
* run `make vmui-update vmui-logs-update`
---------
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
This reduction is based on production testing.
Also expose -search.minWindowForInstantRollupOptimization command-line flag, so users could fine-tune this arg for their needs
vmalert expects string value for stats.seriesFetched, so it is impossible
switching to number without breaking compatibility with old vmalert releases :(
It is still unclear why stats.seriesFetched has string type in the first place...
Repeated instant queries with long lookbehind windows, which contain one of the following rollup functions,
are optimized via partial result caching:
- sum_over_time()
- count_over_time()
- avg_over_time()
- increase()
- rate()
The basic idea of optimization is to calculate
rf(m[d] @ t)
as
rf(m[offset] @ t) + rf(m[d] @ (t-offset)) - rf(m[offset] @ (t-d))
where rf(m[d] @ (t-offset)) is cached query result, which was calculated previously
The offset may be in the range of up to 1 hour.
The new metric gets increased each time `-search.logQueryMemoryUsage` memory limit
is exceeded by a query. This metric should help to identify expensive and heavy queries
without inspecting the logs.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* app/vmselect: limit the number of parallel workers by 32
The change should improve performance and memory usage during query processing
on machines with big number of CPU cores. The number of parallel workers for
query processing is controlled via `-search.maxWorkersPerQuery` command-line flag.
By default, the number of workers is limited by the number of available CPU cores,
but not more than 32. The limit can be increased via `-search.maxWorkersPerQuery`.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* wip
- The `-search.maxWorkersPerQuery` command-line flag doesn't limit resource usage,
so move it from the `resource usage limits` to `troubleshooting` chapter at docs/Single-server-VictoriaMetrics.md
- Make more clear the description for the `-search.maxWorkersPerQuery` command-line flag
- Add the description of `-search.maxWorkersPerQuery` to docs/Cluster-VictoriaMetrics.md
- Limit the maximum value, which can be passed to `-search.maxWorkersPerQuery`, to GOMAXPROCS,
because bigger values may worsen query performance and increase CPU usage
- Improve the the description of the change at docs/CHANGELOG.md. Mark it as FEATURE instead of BUGFIX,
since it is closer to a feature than to a bugfix.
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5087
---------
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
This can be useful in the following queries:
drop_empty_series(temperature <= 30) default 40
This query drops temperature series with all the values bigger than 30 on the selected time range,
while replacing gaps in the remaining series with 40.
The query without drop_empty_series:
(temperature <= 30) default 40
would leave all the temperature series with all the values bigger than 30 on the selected time range,
and replace all their values with 40. This is not what could be epxected in some cases
like here - https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5071
- Reduce vertical space usage, so more information is available on the screen without the need to scroll.
- Show information for lines with higher values at the top of the legend under the graph.
This should simplify graph analysis when it contains many lines.
reduce lock contention for heavy aggregation requests
previously lock contetion may happen on machine with big number of CPU due to enabled string interning. sync.Map was a choke point for all aggregation requests.
Now instead of interning, new string is created. It may increase CPU and memory usage for some cases.
https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5087
`median_over_time` is handled by predefined WITH template in MetricsQL library which translates it to `quantile_over_time(0.5)`
This makes it impossble to use `median_over_time` as a usual rollup function for `aggr_over_time`.
See: https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/5034
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
* Add button to prettify query
Just capitalizes query text for now
* Add /prettify-query API handler
* Replace UI pretiffier using prettifier API
* Add showing server errors
Had to pass setQueryErrors from useFetchQuery.ts
* Use serverUrl from global AppState
* Change icon to AutoAwsome icon + added style change color when button is active
* Add sync/await to prettifyQuery function
* Doc public function for lint
* Minor async fix
* Removed extra blank lines
* Extract usePrettifyQuery hook
* Made more generic style for :active button
* Refactor usePrettifyQuery
However, prettify errors don't clean up query errors, but should
* Add prettyQuery functionality to CHANGELOG.md
* Reuse queryErrors
* Unhide errors on start
---------
Co-authored-by: Tamara <toma.vashchuk@gmail.com>
This reverts commit 252643d100.
Reason for revert: the commit incorrectly fixes the the issue.
The `remoteAddr` must be properly quoted inside lib/httpserver.GetQuotedRemoteAddr().
It isn't quoted properly if the request contains X-Forwarded-For header.
The proper fix will be included in the follow-up commit.
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/pull/4676
This eliminates the need in .(*T) casting for results obtained from Load()
Leave atomic.Value for map, since atomic.Pointer[map[...]...] makes double pointer to map,
because map is already a pointer type.
- Add `Active queries` chapter to VMUI docs
- Set `Content-Type: json` header inside promql.WriteActiveQueries() handler,
in order to be consistent with other request handlers called at app/vmselect/main.go
- Pass the request to promql.WriteActiveQueries() handler, so it can change its output
depending on the provided request params. This also improves consistency of
promql.WriteActiveQueries() args with other request hanlers at app/vmselect/main.go
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/pull/4653
* feat: add page to display a list of active queries (#4598)
* app/vmagent: code formatting
* fix: remove console
---------
Co-authored-by: dmitryk-dk <kozlovdmitriyy@gmail.com>
The `a op b keep_metric_names` is ambigouos to `a op (b keep_metric_names)` when `b` is a transform or rollup function.
For example, `a + rate(b) keep_metric_names`. So it is better to use more clear syntax: `(a op b) keep_metric_names`
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/3710
* metricsql: add support of using keep_metric_names for binary operations
This should help to avoid confusion with queries like one in the issue #3710.
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
* wip
---------
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
Previously all the newly ingested time series were registered in global `MetricName -> TSID` index.
This index was used during data ingestion for locating the TSID (internal series id)
for the given canonical metric name (the canonical metric name consists of metric name plus all its labels sorted by label names).
The `MetricName -> TSID` index is stored on disk in order to make sure that the data
isn't lost on VictoriaMetrics restart or unclean shutdown.
The lookup in this index is relatively slow, since VictoriaMetrics needs to read the corresponding
data block from disk, unpack it, put the unpacked block into `indexdb/dataBlocks` cache,
and then search for the given `MetricName -> TSID` entry there. So VictoriaMetrics
uses in-memory cache for speeding up the lookup for active time series.
This cache is named `storage/tsid`. If this cache capacity is enough for all the currently ingested
active time series, then VictoriaMetrics works fast, since it doesn't need to read the data from disk.
VictoriaMetrics starts reading data from `MetricName -> TSID` on-disk index in the following cases:
- If `storage/tsid` cache capacity isn't enough for active time series.
Then just increase available memory for VictoriaMetrics or reduce the number of active time series
ingested into VictoriaMetrics.
- If new time series is ingested into VictoriaMetrics. In this case it cannot find
the needed entry in the `storage/tsid` cache, so it needs to consult on-disk `MetricName -> TSID` index,
since it doesn't know that the index has no the corresponding entry too.
This is a typical event under high churn rate, when old time series are constantly substituted
with new time series.
Reading the data from `MetricName -> TSID` index is slow, so inserts, which lead to reading this index,
are counted as slow inserts, and they can be monitored via `vm_slow_row_inserts_total` metric exposed by VictoriaMetrics.
Prior to this commit the `MetricName -> TSID` index was global, e.g. it contained entries sorted by `MetricName`
for all the time series ever ingested into VictoriaMetrics during the configured -retentionPeriod.
This index can become very large under high churn rate and long retention. VictoriaMetrics
caches data from this index in `indexdb/dataBlocks` in-memory cache for speeding up index lookups.
The `indexdb/dataBlocks` cache may occupy significant share of available memory for storing
recently accessed blocks at `MetricName -> TSID` index when searching for newly ingested time series.
This commit switches from global `MetricName -> TSID` index to per-day index. This allows significantly
reducing the amounts of data, which needs to be cached in `indexdb/dataBlocks`, since now VictoriaMetrics
consults only the index for the current day when new time series is ingested into it.
The downside of this change is increased indexdb size on disk for workloads without high churn rate,
e.g. with static time series, which do no change over time, since now VictoriaMetrics needs to store
identical `MetricName -> TSID` entries for static time series for every day.
This change removes an optimization for reducing CPU and disk IO spikes at indexdb rotation,
since it didn't work correctly - see https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/1401 .
At the same time the change fixes the issue, which could result in lost access to time series,
which stop receving new samples during the first hour after indexdb rotation - see https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/2698
The issue with the increased CPU and disk IO usage during indexdb rotation will be addressed
in a separate commit according to https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/1401#issuecomment-1553488685
This is a follow-up for 1f28b46ae9
This simplifies routing at auth proxies such as vmauth to vlselect component,
which serves VMUI - just route all the requests, which start with /select/, to vlselect.
at arm based CPUs only 9 digits after comma matches for tests.
Especially at holtWinters functions. Since it only takes effect at tests
it makes no sense for changing float prescision at actual functions
Previously the location inside the sendPrometheusError() was logged.
This could make hard investigating error locations via `vm_log_messages_total` metric.
* vmselect: exit early from queue on context cancel
When `-search.maxConcurrentRequests` is reached, vmselect puts
request in the queue. It is expected, that requests in the queue
will be processed as soon as it would be enough capacity to do so.
However, it could happen that while request was waiting its turn,
the client could have already cancel it (close the connection,
or just close the tab with UI). In this case, we should de-queue
such requests to avoid spending extra resources on them.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* app/vmselect: address review comments
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* feat: add WithTemplate page
* app/vmselect/prometheus: enable json mode for expand with expr API
* app/vmselect/prometheus: enable CORS and add content type
* feat: add api for expand with templates
* fix: remove console from useExpandWithExprs
* app/vmselect/prometheus: fix escaping
* vmui: integrate WITH template
* app/vmctl: check content type instead of form param
* fix: add content-type for fetch with-exprs
* fix: add a header to the server's response that allows the "Content-Type" header
* app/vmctl: added comment and cleanup
* app/vmctl: use format query param
---------
Co-authored-by: dmitryk-dk <kozlovdmitriyy@gmail.com>
Use fs.MustReadDir() instead of os.ReadDir() across the code in order to reduce the code verbosity.
The fs.MustReadDir() logs the error with the directory name and the call stack on error
before exit. This information should be enough for debugging the cause of the error.
Callers of this function log the returned error and exit.
So let's just log the error with the given filepath and the call stack
inside the function itself and then exit. This simplifies the code
at callers' place while leaves the same level of debuggability in case of errors.
Callers of these functions log the returned error and then exit. The returned error already contains the path
to directory, which was failed to be created. So let's just log the error together with the call stack
inside these functions. This leaves the debuggability of the returned error at the same level
while allows simplifying the code at callers' side.
While at it, properly use MustMkdirFailIfExist instead of MustMkdirIfNotExist inside inmemoryPart.MustStoreToDisk().
It is expected that the inmemoryPart.MustStoreToDick() must fail if there is already a directory under the given path.
There is a bug here where if you have a single bucket like:
foo{vmrange="4.084e+02...4.642e+02"} 2 123
The expected output is three le encoded buckets like:
foo{le="4.084e+02"} 0 123
foo{le="4.642e+02"} 2 123
foo{le="+Inf"} 2 123
This correctly encodes the start and end of the vmrange.
If however, the input contains the previous bucket, and that bucket is
empty then you only get the end le and +Inf out currently, i.e:
foo{vmrange="7.743e+05...8.799e+05"} 5 123
foo{vmrange="6.813e+05...7.743e+05"} 0 123
results in:
foo{le="8.799e+05"} 5 123
foo{le="+Inf"} 5 123
This causes issues when you go to compute a quantile because this means
that the assumed lower bound of the buckets is 0 and this we interpolate
between 0->end rather than the vmrange start->end as expected.
- Expose stats.seriesFetched at `/api/v1/query_range` responses too
for the sake of consistency.
- Initialize QueryStats when it is needed and pass it to EvalConfig then.
This guarantees that the QueryStats is properly collected when the query
contains some subqueries.
The change adds a new field `seriesFetched` to EvalConfig object.
Since EvalConfig object can be copied inside `Exec`,
`seriesFetched` is a pointer which can be updated by all copied
objects.
The reason for having stats is that other components, like vmalert,
could benefit from this information.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
using `runtime.Gosched` requires acquiring global lock to check if there are any other goroutines to perform tasks. with the latest versions of runtime it can pause running goroutines automatically without requiring to call `Gosched` directly.
Updates #3966
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
- Allocate and initialize seriesByWorkerID slice in a single go instead
of initializing every item in the list separately.
This should reduce CPU usage a bit.
- Properly set anti-false sharing padding at timeseriesWithPadding structure
- Document the change at docs/CHANGELOG.md
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/3966
* vmselect/promql: refactor `evalRollupNoIncrementalAggregate` to use lock-less approach for parallel workers computation
Locking there is causing issues when running on highly multi-core system as it introduces lock contention during results merge.
New implementation uses lock less approach to store results per workerID and merges final result in the end, this is expected to significantly reduce lock contention and CPU usage for systems with high number of cores.
Related: #3966
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
* vmselect/promql: add pooling for `timeseriesWithPadding` to reduce allocations
Related: #3966
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
* vmselect/promql: refactor `evalRollupFuncWithSubquery` to avoid using locks
Uses same approach as `evalRollupNoIncrementalAggregate` to remove locking between workers and reduce lock contention.
Related: #3966
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Zakhar Bessarab <z.bessarab@victoriametrics.com>
This opens the possibility to remove tssLock from evalRollupFuncWithSubquery()
in the follow-up commit from @zekker6 in order to speed up the code
for systems with many CPU cores.
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/3966
Call runtime.Gosched() only when there is a work to steal from other workers.
Simplify the timeseriesWorker() and unpackWroker() code a bit by inlining stealTimeseriesWork() and stealUnpackWork().
This should reduce CPU usage when processing queries on systems with big number of CPU cores.
Updates https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/issues/3966
* vmselect/promql: check for deadline in `count_values` fn
`count_values` could be very slow during the data processing.
Checking for deadline between iterations supposed to reduce
probability of exceeding `search.maxQueryDuration`.
The change also adds a new trace record, which captures the time
spent in aggregation function. Before that, the trace for aggr funcs
could be confusing since it doesn't account for all the places where
time was spent.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* wip
---------
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>
* metricsql: support optional 2nd argument for rollup functions
Support optional 2nd argument `min`, `max` or `avg` for rollup functions:
* rollup
* rollup_delta
* rollup_deriv
* rollup_increase
* rollup_rate
* rollup_scrape_interval
If second argument is passed, then rollup function will return only the selected aggregation type.
This change can be useful for situations where only one type of rollup calculation is needed.
For example, `rollup_rate(requests_total[5m], "max")`.
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
* wip
---------
Signed-off-by: hagen1778 <roman@victoriametrics.com>
Co-authored-by: Aliaksandr Valialkin <valyala@victoriametrics.com>