Amazon ECS and Apache Druid Integration

Powerful performance with an easy integration, powered by Telegraf, the open source data connector built by InfluxData.

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This is not the recommended configuration for real-time query at scale. For query and compression optimization, high-speed ingest, and high availability, you may want to consider Amazon ECS and InfluxDB.

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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.

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Input and output integration overview

The Amazon ECS Input Plugin enables Telegraf to gather metrics from AWS ECS containers, providing detailed insights into container performance and resource usage.

This plugin allows Telegraf to send JSON-formatted metrics to Apache Druid over HTTP, enabling real-time ingestion for analytical queries on high-volume time-series data.

Integration details

Amazon ECS

The Amazon ECS plugin for Telegraf is designed to collect metrics from ECS (Elastic Container Service) tasks running on AWS Fargate or EC2 instances. By utilizing the ECS metadata and stats API endpoints (v2 and v3), it fetches real-time information about container performance and health within a task. This plugin operates within the same task as the inspected workload, ensuring seamless access to metadata and statistics. Notably, it incorporates ECS-specific features that distinguish it from the Docker input plugin, such as handling unique ECS metadata formats and statistics. Users can include or exclude specific containers and adjust which container states to monitor, along with defining tag options for ECS labels. This flexibility allows for a tailored monitoring experience that aligns with the specific needs of an ECS environment, thereby enhancing observability and control over containerized applications.

Apache Druid

This configuration uses Telegraf’s HTTP output plugin with json data format to send metrics directly to Apache Druid, a real-time analytics database designed for fast, ad hoc queries on high-ingest time-series data. Druid supports ingestion via HTTP POST to various components like the Tranquility service or native ingestion endpoints. The JSON format is ideal for structuring Telegraf metrics into event-style records for Druid’s columnar and time-partitioned storage engine. Druid excels at powering interactive dashboards and exploratory queries across massive datasets, making it an excellent choice for real-time observability and monitoring analytics when integrated with Telegraf.

Configuration

Amazon ECS

[[inputs.ecs]]
  # endpoint_url = ""
  # container_name_include = []
  # container_name_exclude = []
  # container_status_include = []
  # container_status_exclude = []
  ecs_label_include = [ "com.amazonaws.ecs.*" ]
  ecs_label_exclude = []
  # timeout = "5s"

[[inputs.ecs]]
  endpoint_url = "http://169.254.170.2"
  # container_name_include = []
  # container_name_exclude = []
  # container_status_include = []
  # container_status_exclude = []
  ecs_label_include = [ "com.amazonaws.ecs.*" ]
  ecs_label_exclude = []
  # timeout = "5s"

Apache Druid

[[outputs.http]]
  ## Druid ingestion endpoint (e.g., Tranquility, HTTP Ingest, or Kafka REST Proxy)
  url = "http://druid-ingest.example.com/v1/post"

  ## Use POST method to send events
  method = "POST"

  ## Data format for Druid ingestion (expects JSON format)
  data_format = "json"

  ## Optional headers (may vary depending on Druid setup)
  # [outputs.http.headers]
  #   Content-Type = "application/json"
  #   Authorization = "Bearer YOUR_API_TOKEN"

  ## Optional timeout and TLS settings
  timeout = "10s"
  # tls_ca = "/path/to/ca.pem"
  # tls_cert = "/path/to/cert.pem"
  # tls_key = "/path/to/key.pem"
  # insecure_skip_verify = false

Input and output integration examples

Amazon ECS

  1. Dynamic Container Monitoring: Use the Amazon ECS plugin to monitor container health dynamically within an autoscaling ECS architecture. As new containers spin up or down, the plugin will automatically adjust the metrics it collects, ensuring that each container’s performance data is captured efficiently without manual configuration.

  2. Custom Resource Allocation Alerts: Implement the ECS plugin to establish thresholds for resource usage per container. By integrating with notification systems, teams can receive alerts when a container’s CPU or memory usage exceeds predefined limits, enabling proactive resource management and maintaining application performance.

  3. Cost-Optimization Dashboard: Leverage the metrics gathered from the ECS plugin to create a dashboard that visualizes resource usage and costs associated with each container. This insight allows organizations to identify underutilized resources, optimizing costs associated with their container infrastructure, thus driving financial efficiency in cloud operations.

  4. Advanced Container Security Monitoring: Utilize this plugin in conjunction with security tools to monitor ECS container metrics for anomalies. By continuously analyzing usage patterns, any sudden spikes or irregular behaviors can be detected, prompting automated security responses and maintaining system integrity.

Apache Druid

  1. Real-Time Application Monitoring Dashboard: Use Telegraf to collect metrics from application servers and send them to Druid for immediate analysis and visualization in dashboards. Druid’s low-latency querying allows users to interactively explore system behavior in near real-time.

  2. Security Event Aggregation: Aggregate and forward security-related metrics such as failed logins, port scans, or process anomalies to Druid. Analysts can build dashboards to monitor threat patterns and investigate incidents with millisecond-level granularity.

  3. IoT Device Analytics: Collect telemetry from edge devices via Telegraf and send it to Druid for fast, scalable processing. Druid’s time-partitioned storage and roll-up capabilities are ideal for handling billions of small JSON events from sensors or gateways.

  4. Web Traffic Behavior Exploration: Use Telegraf to capture web server metrics (e.g., requests per second, latency, error rates) and forward them to Druid. This enables teams to drill down into user behavior by region, device, or request type with subsecond query performance.

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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