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Kubernetes monitoring with VictoriaMetrics Single
This guide covers:
- The setup of VictoriaMetrics single node in Kubernetes via helm charts
- How to store metrics
- How to scrape metrics from k8s components using service discovery
- How to Visualize stored data
Precondition
We will use:
We use GKE cluster from GCP but feel free to use any kubernetes setup eg Amazon EKS
1. VictoriaMetrics helm repository
For this guide we will use helm 3 but if you already use helm 2 please see this https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/helm-charts#for-helm-v2
You need to add the VictoriaMetrics helm repository to install VictoriaMetrics components. We’re going to use VictoriaMetrics single-node. You can do this by running the following command:
helm repo add vm https://victoriametrics.github.io/helm-charts/
Update helm repositories:
helm repo update
To verify that everything is set up correctly you may run this command:
helm search repo vm/
The expected output is:
NAME CHART VERSION APP VERSION DESCRIPTION
vm/victoria-metrics-agent 0.7.20 v1.62.0 Victoria Metrics Agent - collects metrics from ...
vm/victoria-metrics-alert 0.3.34 v1.62.0 Victoria Metrics Alert - executes a list of giv...
vm/victoria-metrics-auth 0.2.23 1.62.0 Victoria Metrics Auth - is a simple auth proxy ...
vm/victoria-metrics-cluster 0.8.30 1.62.0 Victoria Metrics Cluster version - high-perform...
vm/victoria-metrics-k8s-stack 0.2.8 1.16.0 Kubernetes monitoring on VictoriaMetrics stack....
vm/victoria-metrics-operator 0.1.15 0.15.1 Victoria Metrics Operator
vm/victoria-metrics-single 0.7.4 1.62.0 Victoria Metrics Single version - high-performa...
2. Install VictoriaMetrics Single from helm Chart
Run this command in your terminal:
cat <<EOF | helm install victoria-metrics vm/victoria-metrics-single -f -
server:
scrape:
enabled: true
EOF
- By running
helm install victoria-metrics vm/victoria-metrics-single
we will installVictoriaMetrics Single
to default namespace inside your cluster - By adding
scrape: enable: true
we add and enable autodiscovery scraping from kubernetes cluster toVictoriaMetrics Single
As a result of the command you will see the following output:
NAME: victoria-metrics
LAST DEPLOYED: Fri Jun 25 12:06:13 2021
NAMESPACE: default
STATUS: deployed
REVISION: 1
TEST SUITE: None
NOTES:
The VictoriaMetrics write api can be accessed via port 8428 on the following DNS name from within your cluster:
victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server.default.svc.cluster.local
Metrics Ingestion:
Get the Victoria Metrics service URL by running these commands in the same shell:
export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace default -l "app=server" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")
kubectl --namespace default port-forward $POD_NAME 8428
Write url inside the kubernetes cluster:
http://victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server.default.svc.cluster.local:8428/api/v1/write
Metrics Scrape:
Pull-based scrapes are enabled
Scrape config can be displayed by running this command:
kubectl get cm victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server-scrapeconfig -n default
The target’s information is accessible via api:
Inside cluster:
http://victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server.default.svc.cluster.local:8428/atargets
Outside cluster:
You need to port-forward service (see instructions above) and call
http://<service-host-port>/targets
Read Data:
The following url can be used as the datasource url in Grafana:
http://victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server.default.svc.cluster.local:8428
For us it’s important to remember the url for the datasource (copy lines from output).
Verify that VictoriaMetrics pod is up and running by executing the following command:
kubectl get pods
The expected output is:
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server-0 1/1 Running 0 22s
3. Install and connect Grafana to VictoriaMetrics with helm
Add the Grafana helm repository.
helm repo add grafana https://grafana.github.io/helm-charts
helm repo update
See more info on Grafana ArtifactHUB https://artifacthub.io/packages/helm/grafana/grafana
By installing the Chart with the release name my-grafana
, you add the VictoriaMetrics datasource with official dashboard and kubernetes dashboard:
cat <<EOF | helm install my-grafana grafana/grafana -f -
datasources:
datasources.yaml:
apiVersion: 1
datasources:
- name: victoriametrics
type: prometheus
orgId: 1
url: http://victoria-metrics-victoria-metrics-single-server.default.svc.cluster.local:8428
access: proxy
isDefault: true
updateIntervalSeconds: 10
editable: true
dashboardProviders:
dashboardproviders.yaml:
apiVersion: 1
providers:
- name: 'default'
orgId: 1
folder: ''
type: file
disableDeletion: true
editable: true
options:
path: /var/lib/grafana/dashboards/default
dashboards:
default:
victoriametrics:
gnetId: 10229
revision: 19
datasource: victoriametrics
kubernetes:
gnetId: 14205
revision: 1
datasource: victoriametrics
EOF
By running this command we:
- Install Grafana from helm repository.
- Provision VictoriaMetrics datasource with the url from the output above which we copied before.
- Add this https://grafana.com/grafana/dashboards/10229 dashboard for VictoriaMetrics.
- Add this https://grafana.com/grafana/dashboards/14205 dashboard to see Kubernetes cluster metrics.
See the output log in your terminal. Copy, paste and run these commands.
The first one will show admin
password for Grafana admin.
The second and the third will forward Grafana to 127.0.0.1:3000
:
kubectl get secret --namespace default my-grafana -o jsonpath="{.data.admin-password}" | base64 --decode ; echo
export POD_NAME=$(kubectl get pods --namespace default -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=grafana,app.kubernetes.io/instance=my-grafana" -o jsonpath="{.items[0].metadata.name}")
kubectl --namespace default port-forward $POD_NAME 3000
4. Check the obtained result in your browser
To check that VictoriaMetrics has collected metrics from the k8s cluster open in browser http://127.0.0.1:3000/dashboards and choose Kubernetes Cluster Monitoring (via Prometheus)
dashboard. Use admin
for login and password
that you previously obtained from kubectl.
You will see something like this:
VictoriaMetrics dashboard also available to use:
5. Final thoughts
- We have set up TimeSeries Database for your k8s cluster.
- We collected metrics from all running pods, nodes, … and stored them in VictoriaMetrics database.
- We can visualize the resources used in your Kubernetes cluster by using Grafana dashboards.