Consul and GroundWork Integration
Powerful performance with an easy integration, powered by Telegraf, the open source data connector built by InfluxData.
5B+
Telegraf downloads
#1
Time series database
Source: DB Engines
1B+
Downloads of InfluxDB
2,800+
Contributors
Table of Contents
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 Consul Input Plugin collects health check metrics from a Consul server, allowing users to monitor service statuses effectively.
This plugin writes to a GroundWork Monitor instance, allowing for effective metrics management and monitoring in a centralized manner.
Integration details
Consul
The Consul Input Plugin is designed to gather health check statuses from all services registered with Consul, a tool for service discovery and infrastructure management. By querying the Consul API, this plugin helps users monitor the health of their services and ensure that they are operational and meeting service level agreements. It does not provide telemetry data, but users can utilize StatsD if they want to collect those metrics. The plugin offers configuration options to connect to the Consul server, manage authentication, and specify how to handle tags derived from health checks.
GroundWork
The GroundWork plugin enables Telegraf to send metrics to a GroundWork Monitor instance, specifically supporting GW8 and newer versions. This integration allows users to leverage the robust monitoring capabilities of GroundWork, enabling comprehensive oversight of metrics collected from diverse sources. Users can specify various parameters such as the GroundWork instance URL, agent IDs, and authentication credentials, allowing for a tailored fit within their existing monitoring setups. It also supports secret-store secrets to enhance security for sensitive fields like username and password. Tags used within the plugin provide fine-grained control over how metrics are categorized and displayed within the GroundWork interface, allowing for custom configurations that adapt to different monitoring needs. However, users should be aware that string metrics are currently not supported by GroundWork, impacting how they manage their data.
Configuration
Consul
[[inputs.consul]]
## Consul server address
# address = "localhost:8500"
## URI scheme for the Consul server, one of "http", "https"
# scheme = "http"
## Metric version controls the mapping from Consul metrics into
## Telegraf metrics. Version 2 moved all fields with string values
## to tags.
##
## example: metric_version = 1; deprecated in 1.16
## metric_version = 2; recommended version
# metric_version = 1
## ACL token used in every request
# token = ""
## HTTP Basic Authentication username and password.
# username = ""
# password = ""
## Data center to query the health checks from
# datacenter = ""
## 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 = true
## Consul checks' tag splitting
# When tags are formatted like "key:value" with ":" as a delimiter then
# they will be split and reported as proper key:value in Telegraf
# tag_delimiter = ":"
GroundWork
[[outputs.groundwork]]
## URL of your groundwork instance.
url = "https://groundwork.example.com"
## Agent uuid for GroundWork API Server.
agent_id = ""
## Username and password to access GroundWork API.
username = ""
password = ""
## Default application type to use in GroundWork client
# default_app_type = "TELEGRAF"
## Default display name for the host with services(metrics).
# default_host = "telegraf"
## Default service state.
# default_service_state = "SERVICE_OK"
## The name of the tag that contains the hostname.
# resource_tag = "host"
## The name of the tag that contains the host group name.
# group_tag = "group"
Input and output integration examples
Consul
-
Service Health Monitoring Dashboard: Utilize the Consul Input Plugin to create a comprehensive health monitoring dashboard for all services registered with Consul. This allows operations teams to visualize the health status in real time, enabling quick identification of service issues and facilitating rapid responses to service outages or performance degradation.
-
Automated Alerting System: Implement an automated alerting system that uses the health check data gathered by the Consul Input Plugin to trigger notifications whenever a service status changes to critical. This setup can integrate with notification systems like Slack or email, ensuring that team members are alerted immediately to address potential issues.
-
Integration with Incident Management: Leverage the health check data from the Consul Input Plugin to feed into incident management systems. By analyzing the health status trends, teams can prioritize incidents based on the criticality of the affected services and streamline their resolution processes, improving overall service reliability and customer satisfaction.
GroundWork
-
Centralized Monitoring Dashboard: Use the GroundWork plugin to aggregate metrics from multiple Telegraf instances into a single GroundWork Monitor dashboard. This configuration offers complete visibility into system health across various components, enabling swift identification of performance bottlenecks and improved incident response times.
-
Service Health Monitoring with Alerts: Configure this plugin to send critical service metrics to GroundWork, establishing a robust alerting system. Metrics such as CPU usage and service statuses can trigger alerts based on threshold values, informing administrators of potential issues before they escalate, thereby enhancing system reliability.
-
Historical Data Analysis: Leverage the historical metric capabilities of GroundWork using this plugin to conduct trend analysis over time. This application allows organizations to make data-driven decisions based on comprehensive historical performance metrics, which can assist in capacity planning and optimize resource allocation.
-
Custom Service Tags for Enhanced Monitoring: Extend the functionality of this plugin by utilizing custom tags for different services and hosts. By customizing these tags, users can filter and categorize metrics more effectively within their monitoring framework, leading to tailored monitoring experiences that align specifically with business objectives.
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
Related Integrations
Related Integrations
HTTP and InfluxDB Integration
The HTTP plugin collects metrics from one or more HTTP(S) endpoints. It supports various authentication methods and configuration options for data formats.
View IntegrationKafka and InfluxDB Integration
This plugin reads messages from Kafka and allows the creation of metrics based on those messages. It supports various configurations including different Kafka settings and message processing options.
View IntegrationKinesis and InfluxDB Integration
The Kinesis plugin allows for reading metrics from AWS Kinesis streams. It supports multiple input data formats and offers checkpointing features with DynamoDB for reliable message processing.
View Integration