AMQP and Google Cloud Monitoring Integration
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Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale
Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.
See Ways to Get Started
Input and output integration overview
The AMQP Consumer Input Plugin allows you to ingest data from an AMQP 0-9-1 compliant message broker, such as RabbitMQ, enabling seamless data collection for monitoring and analytics purposes.
The Stackdriver plugin allows users to send metrics directly to a specified project in Google Cloud Monitoring, facilitating robust monitoring capabilities across their cloud resources.
Integration details
AMQP
This plugin provides a consumer for use with AMQP 0-9-1, a prominent implementation of which is RabbitMQ. AMQP, or Advanced Message Queuing Protocol, was originally developed to enable reliable, interoperable messaging between diverse systems in a network. The plugin reads metrics from a topic exchange using a configured queue and binding key, delivering a flexible and efficient means of collecting data from AMQP-compliant messaging systems. This enables users to leverage existing RabbitMQ implementations to monitor their applications effectively by capturing detailed metrics for analysis and alerting.
Google Cloud Monitoring
This plugin writes metrics to a project in Google Cloud Monitoring, which used to be known as Stackdriver. Authentication is a prerequisite and can be achieved via service accounts or user credentials. The plugin is designed to group metrics by a namespace
variable and metric key, facilitating organized data management. However, users are encouraged to use the official
naming format for enhanced query efficiency. The plugin supports additional configurations for managing metric representation and allows tags to be treated as resource labels. Notably, it imposes certain restrictions on the data it can accept, such as not allowing string values or points that are out of chronological order.
Configuration
AMQP
[[inputs.amqp_consumer]]
## Brokers to consume from. If multiple brokers are specified a random broker
## will be selected anytime a connection is established. This can be
## helpful for load balancing when not using a dedicated load balancer.
brokers = ["amqp://localhost:5672/influxdb"]
## Authentication credentials for the PLAIN auth_method.
# username = ""
# password = ""
## Name of the exchange to declare. If unset, no exchange will be declared.
exchange = "telegraf"
## Exchange type; common types are "direct", "fanout", "topic", "header", "x-consistent-hash".
# exchange_type = "topic"
## If true, exchange will be passively declared.
# exchange_passive = false
## Exchange durability can be either "transient" or "durable".
# exchange_durability = "durable"
## Additional exchange arguments.
# exchange_arguments = { }
# exchange_arguments = {"hash_property" = "timestamp"}
## AMQP queue name.
queue = "telegraf"
## AMQP queue durability can be "transient" or "durable".
queue_durability = "durable"
## If true, queue will be passively declared.
# queue_passive = false
## Additional arguments when consuming from Queue
# queue_consume_arguments = { }
# queue_consume_arguments = {"x-stream-offset" = "first"}
## A binding between the exchange and queue using this binding key is
## created. If unset, no binding is created.
binding_key = "#"
## Maximum number of messages server should give to the worker.
# prefetch_count = 50
## Max undelivered messages
## This plugin uses tracking metrics, which ensure messages are read to
## outputs before acknowledging them to the original broker to ensure data
## is not lost. This option sets the maximum messages to read from the
## broker that have not been written by an output.
##
## This value needs to be picked with awareness of the agent's
## metric_batch_size value as well. Setting max undelivered messages too high
## can result in a constant stream of data batches to the output. While
## setting it too low may never flush the broker's messages.
# max_undelivered_messages = 1000
## Timeout for establishing the connection to a broker
# timeout = "30s"
## Auth method. PLAIN and EXTERNAL are supported
## Using EXTERNAL requires enabling the rabbitmq_auth_mechanism_ssl plugin as
## described here: https://www.rabbitmq.com/plugins.html
# auth_method = "PLAIN"
## Optional TLS Config
# tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
# tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
# tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = false
## Content encoding for message payloads, can be set to
## "gzip", "identity" or "auto"
## - Use "gzip" to decode gzip
## - Use "identity" to apply no encoding
## - Use "auto" determine the encoding using the ContentEncoding header
# content_encoding = "identity"
## Maximum size of decoded message.
## Acceptable units are B, KiB, KB, MiB, MB...
## Without quotes and units, interpreted as size in bytes.
# max_decompression_size = "500MB"
## Data format to consume.
## Each data format has its own unique set of configuration options, read
## more about them here:
## https://github.com/influxdata/telegraf/blob/master/docs/DATA_FORMATS_INPUT.md
data_format = "influx"
Google Cloud Monitoring
[[outputs.stackdriver]]
## GCP Project
project = "project-id"
## Quota Project
## Specifies the Google Cloud project that should be billed for metric ingestion.
## If omitted, the quota is charged to the service account’s default project.
## This is useful when sending metrics to multiple projects using a single service account.
## The caller must have the `serviceusage.services.use` permission on the specified project.
# quota_project = ""
## The namespace for the metric descriptor
## This is optional and users are encouraged to set the namespace as a
## resource label instead. If omitted it is not included in the metric name.
namespace = "telegraf"
## Metric Type Prefix
## The DNS name used with the metric type as a prefix.
# metric_type_prefix = "custom.googleapis.com"
## Metric Name Format
## Specifies the layout of the metric name, choose from:
## * path: 'metric_type_prefix_namespace_name_key'
## * official: 'metric_type_prefix/namespace_name_key/kind'
# metric_name_format = "path"
## Metric Data Type
## By default, telegraf will use whatever type the metric comes in as.
## However, for some use cases, forcing int64, may be preferred for values:
## * source: use whatever was passed in
## * double: preferred datatype to allow queries by PromQL.
# metric_data_type = "source"
## Tags as resource labels
## Tags defined in this option, when they exist, are added as a resource
## label and not included as a metric label. The values from tags override
## the values defined under the resource_labels config options.
# tags_as_resource_label = []
## Custom resource type
# resource_type = "generic_node"
## Override metric type by metric name
## Metric names matching the values here, globbing supported, will have the
## metric type set to the corresponding type.
# metric_counter = []
# metric_gauge = []
# metric_histogram = []
## NOTE: Due to the way TOML is parsed, tables must be at the END of the
## plugin definition, otherwise additional config options are read as part of
## the table
## Additional resource labels
# [outputs.stackdriver.resource_labels]
# node_id = "$HOSTNAME"
# namespace = "myapp"
# location = "eu-north0"
Input and output integration examples
AMQP
-
Integrating Application Metrics with AMQP: Use the AMQP Consumer plugin to gather application metrics that are published to a RabbitMQ exchange. By configuring the plugin to listen to specific queues, teams can gain insights into application performance, track request rates, error counts, and latency metrics, all in real-time. This setup not only aids in anomaly detection but also provides valuable data for capacity planning and system optimization.
-
Event-Driven Monitoring: Configure the AMQP Consumer to trigger specific monitoring events whenever certain conditions are met within an application. For instance, if a message indicating a high error rate is received, the plugin can feed this data into monitoring tools, generating alerts or scaling events. This integration can improve responsiveness to issues and automate parts of the operations workflow.
-
Cross-Platform Data Aggregation: Leverage the AMQP Consumer plugin to consolidate metrics from various applications distributed across different platforms. By utilizing RabbitMQ as a centralized message broker, organizations can unify their monitoring data, allowing for comprehensive analysis and dashboarding through Telegraf, thus maintaining visibility across heterogeneous environments.
-
Real-Time Log Processing: Extend the use of the AMQP Consumer to capture log data sent to a RabbitMQ exchange, processing logs in real time for monitoring and alerting purposes. This application ensures that operational issues are detected and addressed swiftly by analyzing log patterns, trends, and anomalies as they occur.
Google Cloud Monitoring
-
Multi-Project Metric Aggregation: Use this plugin to send aggregated metrics from various applications across different projects into a single Google Cloud Monitoring project. This use case helps centralize metrics for teams managing multiple applications, providing a unified view for performance monitoring and enhancing decision-making. By configuring different quota projects for billing, organizations can ensure proper cost management while benefiting from a consolidated monitoring strategy.
-
Anomaly Detection Setup: Integrate the plugin with a machine learning-based analytics tool that identifies anomalies in the collected metrics. Using the historical data provided by the plugin, the tool can learn normal baseline behavior and promptly alert the operations team when unusual patterns arise, enabling proactive troubleshooting and minimizing service disruptions.
-
Dynamic Resource Labeling: Implement dynamic tagging by utilizing the tags_as_resource_label option to adaptively attach resource labels based on runtime conditions. This setup allows metrics to provide context-sensitive information, such as varying environmental parameters or operational states, enhancing the granularity of monitoring and reporting without changing the fundamental metric structure.
-
Custom Metric Visualization Dashboards: Leverage the data collected by the Google Cloud Monitoring output plugin to feed a custom metrics visualization dashboard using a third-party framework. By visualizing metrics in real-time, teams can achieve better situational awareness, notably by correlating different metrics, improving operational decision-making, and streamlining performance management workflows.
Feedback
Thank you for being part of our community! If you have any general feedback or found any bugs on these pages, we welcome and encourage your input. Please submit your feedback in the InfluxDB community Slack.
Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale
Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.
See Ways to Get Started
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