Cisco Model-Driven Telemetry and Apache Druid 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.
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Input and output integration overview
The Cisco Model-Driven Telemetry (MDT) plugin facilitates the collection of telemetry data from Cisco networking platforms, utilizing gRPC and TCP transport mechanisms. This plugin is essential for users looking to implement advanced telemetry solutions for better insights and operational efficiency.
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
Cisco Model-Driven Telemetry
Cisco model-driven telemetry (MDT) is designed to provide a robust means of consuming telemetry data from various Cisco platforms, including IOS XR, IOS XE, and NX-OS. This plugin focuses on the efficient transport of telemetry data using either TCP or gRPC protocols, offering flexibility based on the network environment and requirements. The gRPC transport is particularly advantageous as it supports TLS for enhanced security through encryption and authentication. The plugin is compatible with a range of software versions on Cisco devices, enabling organizations to leverage telemetry capabilities across their network operations. It is especially useful for network monitoring and analytics, as it enables real-time data collection directly from Cisco devices, enhancing visibility into network performance, resource utilization, and operational metrics.
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
Cisco Model-Driven Telemetry
[[inputs.cisco_telemetry_mdt]]
## Telemetry transport can be "tcp" or "grpc". TLS is only supported when
## using the grpc transport.
transport = "grpc"
## Address and port to host telemetry listener
service_address = ":57000"
## Grpc Maximum Message Size, default is 4MB, increase the size. This is
## stored as a uint32, and limited to 4294967295.
max_msg_size = 4000000
## Enable TLS; grpc transport only.
# tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
# tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
## Enable TLS client authentication and define allowed CA certificates; grpc
## transport only.
# tls_allowed_cacerts = ["/etc/telegraf/clientca.pem"]
## Define (for certain nested telemetry measurements with embedded tags) which fields are tags
# embedded_tags = ["Cisco-IOS-XR-qos-ma-oper:qos/interface-table/interface/input/service-policy-names/service-policy-instance/statistics/class-stats/class-name"]
## Include the delete field in every telemetry message.
# include_delete_field = false
## Specify custom name for incoming MDT source field.
# source_field_name = "mdt_source"
## Define aliases to map telemetry encoding paths to simple measurement names
[inputs.cisco_telemetry_mdt.aliases]
ifstats = "ietf-interfaces:interfaces-state/interface/statistics"
## Define Property Xformation, please refer README and https://pubhub.devnetcloud.com/media/dme-docs-9-3-3/docs/appendix/ for Model details.
[inputs.cisco_telemetry_mdt.dmes]
# Global Property Xformation.
# prop1 = "uint64 to int"
# prop2 = "uint64 to string"
# prop3 = "string to uint64"
# prop4 = "string to int64"
# prop5 = "string to float64"
# auto-prop-xfrom = "auto-float-xfrom" #Xform any property which is string, and has float number to type float64
# Per Path property xformation, Name is telemetry configuration under sensor-group, path configuration "WORD Distinguished Name"
# Per Path configuration is better as it avoid property collision issue of types.
# dnpath = '{"Name": "show ip route summary","prop": [{"Key": "routes","Value": "string"}, {"Key": "best-paths","Value": "string"}]}'
# dnpath2 = '{"Name": "show processes cpu","prop": [{"Key": "kernel_percent","Value": "float"}, {"Key": "idle_percent","Value": "float"}, {"Key": "process","Value": "string"}, {"Key": "user_percent","Value": "float"}, {"Key": "onesec","Value": "float"}]}'
# dnpath3 = '{"Name": "show processes memory physical","prop": [{"Key": "processname","Value": "string"}]}'
## Additional GRPC connection settings.
[inputs.cisco_telemetry_mdt.grpc_enforcement_policy]
## GRPC permit keepalives without calls, set to true if your clients are
## sending pings without calls in-flight. This can sometimes happen on IOS-XE
## devices where the GRPC connection is left open but subscriptions have been
## removed, and adding subsequent subscriptions does not keep a stable session.
# permit_keepalive_without_calls = false
## GRPC minimum timeout between successive pings, decreasing this value may
## help if this plugin is closing connections with ENHANCE_YOUR_CALM (too_many_pings).
# keepalive_minimum_time = "5m"
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
Cisco Model-Driven Telemetry
-
Real-Time Network Monitoring: Utilize the Cisco MDT plugin to collect network performance metrics from Cisco routers and switches. By feeding telemetry data into a visualization tool, network operators can observe traffic trends, bandwidth usage, and error rates in real-time. This proactive monitoring allows teams to swiftly address issues before they affect network performance, resulting in a more reliable service.
-
Automated Anomaly Detection: Integrate Cisco MDT with machine learning algorithms to create an automated anomaly detection system. By continuously analyzing telemetry data, the system can identify deviations from typical operational patterns, providing alerts for unusual conditions that may signify network problems or security threats, which can aid in maintaining operational integrity.
-
Dynamic Configuration Management: Leveraging the telemetry data collected from Cisco devices, organizations can implement dynamic configuration management solutions that automatically adjust network settings based on current performance indicators. For instance, if the telemetry indicates high utilization on certain links, the system could dynamically route traffic to underutilized paths, optimizing resource usage.
-
Enhanced Reporting and Analytics: Use the Cisco MDT plugin to feed detailed telemetry data into analytics platforms, enabling comprehensive reporting on network health and performance. Historical and real-time analysis can guide decision-making and strategic planning, helping organizations to allocate resources more effectively and understand their network’s operational landscape better.
Apache Druid
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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.
-
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.
-
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.
-
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.
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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
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