Apache Zookeeper and DuckDB 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 Zookeeper Telegraf plugin collects and reports metrics from Zookeeper servers, facilitating monitoring and performance analysis. It utilizes the ‘mntr’ command output to gather essential statistics critical for maintaining Zookeeper’s operational health.
This plugin enables Telegraf to write structured metrics into DuckDB using SQLite-compatible SQL connections, supporting lightweight local analytics and offline metric analysis.
Integration details
Apache Zookeeper
The Zookeeper plugin for Telegraf is designed to collect vital statistics from Zookeeper servers by executing the ‘mntr’ command. This plugin serves as a monitoring tool that captures important metrics related to Zookeeper’s performance, including connection details, latency, and various operational statistics, facilitating the assessment of the health and efficiency of Zookeeper deployments. In contrast to the Prometheus input plugin, which is recommended when the Prometheus metrics provider is enabled, the Zookeeper plugin accesses raw output from the ‘mntr’ command, rendering it tailored for configurations that do not adopt Prometheus for metrics reporting. This unique approach allows administrators to gather Java Properties formatted metrics directly from Zookeeper, ensuring comprehensive visibility into Zookeeper’s operational state and enabling timely responses to performance anomalies. It specifically excels in environments where Zookeeper operates as a centralized service for maintaining configuration information and names for distributed systems, thus providing immeasurable insights essential for troubleshooting and capacity planning.
DuckDB
Use the Telegraf SQL plugin to write metrics into a local DuckDB database. DuckDB is an in-process OLAP database designed for efficient analytical queries on columnar data. Although it does not provide a traditional client-server interface, DuckDB can be accessed via SQLite-compatible drivers in embedded mode. This allows Telegraf to store time series metrics in DuckDB using SQL, enabling powerful analytics workflows using familiar SQL syntax, Jupyter notebooks, or integration with data science tools like Python and R. DuckDB’s columnar storage and vectorized execution make it ideal for compact and high-performance metric archives.
Configuration
Apache Zookeeper
[[inputs.zookeeper]]
## An array of address to gather stats about. Specify an ip or hostname
## with port. ie localhost:2181, 10.0.0.1:2181, etc.
## If no servers are specified, then localhost is used as the host.
## If no port is specified, 2181 is used
servers = [":2181"]
## Timeout for metric collections from all servers. Minimum timeout is "1s".
# timeout = "5s"
## Float Parsing - the initial implementation forced any value unable to be
## parsed as an int to be a string. Setting this to "float" will attempt to
## parse float values as floats and not strings. This would break existing
## metrics and may cause issues if a value switches between a float and int.
# parse_floats = "string"
## Optional TLS Config
# enable_tls = false
# tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
# tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
# tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
## If false, skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = true
DuckDB
[[outputs.sql]]
## Use the SQLite driver to connect to DuckDB via Go's database/sql
driver = "sqlite3"
## DSN should point to the DuckDB database file
dsn = "file:/var/lib/telegraf/metrics.duckdb"
## SQL INSERT statement with placeholders for metrics
table_template = "INSERT INTO metrics (timestamp, name, value, tags) VALUES (?, ?, ?, ?)"
## Optional: manage connection pooling
# max_open_connections = 1
# max_idle_connections = 1
# conn_max_lifetime = "0s"
## DuckDB does not require TLS or authentication by default
Input and output integration examples
Apache Zookeeper
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Cluster Health Monitoring: Integrate the Zookeeper plugin to monitor the health and performance of a distributed application relying on Zookeeper for configuration management and service discovery. By tracking metrics such as session count, latency, and data size, DevOps teams can identify potential issues before they escalate, ensuring high availability and reliability across applications.
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Performance Benchmarks: Utilize the plugin to benchmark Zookeeper performance in varying workload scenarios. This not only helps in understanding how Zookeeper behaves under load but also assists in tuning configurations to optimize throughput and reduce latency during peak operations.
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Alerting for Anomalies: Combine this plugin with alerting tools to create a proactive monitoring system that notifies engineers if specific Zookeeper metrics exceed threshold limits, such as open file descriptor counts or high latency values. This enables teams to respond promptly to issues that could impact service reliability.
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Historical Data Analysis: Store the metrics collected by the Zookeeper plugin in a time-series database to analyze historical performance trends. This allows teams to evaluate the impact of changes over time, assess the effectiveness of scaling actions, and plan for future capacity needs.
DuckDB
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Embedded Metric Warehousing for Notebooks: Write metrics to a local DuckDB file from Telegraf and analyze them in Jupyter notebooks using Python or R. This workflow supports reproducible analytics, ideal for data science experiments or offline troubleshooting.
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Batch Time-Series Processing on the Edge: Use Telegraf with DuckDB on edge devices to log metrics locally in SQL format. The compact storage and fast analytical capabilities of DuckDB make it ideal for batch processing and low-bandwidth environments.
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Exploratory Querying of Historical Metrics: Accumulate system metrics over time in DuckDB and perform exploratory data analysis (EDA) using SQL joins, window functions, and aggregates. This enables insights that go beyond what typical time-series dashboards provide.
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Self-Contained Metric Snapshots: Use DuckDB as a portable metrics archive by shipping
.duckdb
files between systems. Telegraf can collect and store data in this format, and analysts can later load and query it using the DuckDB CLI or integrations with tools like Tableau and Apache Arrow.
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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