Kubernetes and Apache Hudi 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
This plugin captures metrics for Kubernetes pods and containers by communicating with the Kubelet API.
Writes metrics to Parquet files via Telegraf’s Parquet output plugin, preparing them for ingestion into Apache Hudi’s lakehouse architecture.
Integration details
Kubernetes
The Kubernetes input plugin interfaces with the Kubelet API to gather metrics for running pods and containers on a single host, ideally as part of a daemonset in a Kubernetes installation. By operating on each node within the cluster, it collects metrics from the locally running kubelet, ensuring that the data reflects the real-time state of the environment. Being a rapidly evolving project, Kubernetes sees frequent updates, and this plugin adheres to the major cloud providers’ supported versions, maintaining compatibility across multiple releases within a limited time span. Significant consideration is given to the potential high series cardinality, which can burden the database; thus, users are advised to implement filtering techniques and retention policies to manage this load effectively. Configuration options provide flexible customization of the plugin’s behavior to integrate seamlessly into different setups, enhancing its utility in monitoring Kubernetes environments.
Apache Hudi
This configuration leverages Telegraf’s Parquet plugin to serialize metrics into columnar Parquet files suitable for downstream ingestion by Apache Hudi. The plugin writes metrics grouped by metric name into files in a specified directory, buffering writes for efficiency and optionally rotating files on timers. It considers schema compatibility—metrics with incompatible schemas are dropped—ensuring consistency. Apache Hudi can then consume these Parquet files via tools like DeltaStreamer or Spark jobs, enabling transactional ingestion, time-travel queries, and upserts on your time series data.
Configuration
Kubernetes
[[inputs.kubernetes]]
## URL for the kubelet, if empty read metrics from all nodes in the cluster
url = "http://127.0.0.1:10255"
## Use bearer token for authorization. ('bearer_token' takes priority)
## If both of these are empty, we'll use the default serviceaccount:
## at: /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token
##
## To re-read the token at each interval, please use a file with the
## bearer_token option. If given a string, Telegraf will always use that
## token.
# bearer_token = "/var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token"
## OR
# bearer_token_string = "abc_123"
## Kubernetes Node Metric Name
## The default Kubernetes node metric name (i.e. kubernetes_node) is the same
## for the kubernetes and kube_inventory plugins. To avoid conflicts, set this
## option to a different value.
# node_metric_name = "kubernetes_node"
## Pod labels to be added as tags. An empty array for both include and
## exclude will include all labels.
# label_include = []
# label_exclude = ["*"]
## Set response_timeout (default 5 seconds)
# response_timeout = "5s"
## Optional TLS Config
# tls_ca = /path/to/cafile
# tls_cert = /path/to/certfile
# tls_key = /path/to/keyfile
## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = false
Apache Hudi
[[outputs.parquet]]
## Directory to write parquet files in. If a file already exists the output
## will attempt to continue using the existing file.
directory = "/var/lib/telegraf/hudi_metrics"
## File rotation interval (default is no rotation)
# rotation_interval = "1h"
## Buffer size before writing (default is 1000 metrics)
# buffer_size = 1000
## Optional: compression codec (snappy, gzip, etc.)
# compression_codec = "snappy"
## When grouping metrics, each metric name goes to its own file
## If a metric’s schema doesn’t match the existing schema, it will be dropped
Input and output integration examples
Kubernetes
-
Dynamic Resource Allocation Monitoring: By utilizing the Kubernetes plugin, teams can set up alerts for resource usage patterns across various pods and containers. This proactive monitoring approach enables automatic scaling of resources in response to specific thresholds—helping to optimize performance while minimizing costs during peak usage.
-
Multi-tenancy Resource Isolation Analysis: Organizations using Kubernetes can leverage this plugin to track resource consumption per namespace. In a multi-tenant scenario, understanding the resource allocations and usages across different teams becomes critical for ensuring fair access and performance guarantees, leading to better resource management strategies.
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Real-time Health Dashboards: Integrate the data captured by the Kubernetes plugin into visualization tools like Grafana to create real-time dashboards. These dashboards provide insights into the overall health and performance of the Kubernetes environment, allowing teams to quickly identify and rectify issues across clusters, pods, and containers.
-
Automated Incident Response Workflows: By combining the Kubernetes plugin with alert management systems, teams can automate incident response procedures based on real-time metrics. If a pod’s resource usage exceeds predefined limits, an automated workflow can trigger remediation actions, such as restarting the pod or reallocating resources—all of which can help improve system resilience.
Apache Hudi
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Transactional Lakehouse Metrics: Buffer and write Web service metrics as Parquet files for DeltaStreamer to ingest into Hudi, enabling upserts, ACID compliance, and time-travel on historical performance data.
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Edge Device Batch Analytics: Telegraf running on IoT gateways writes metrics to Parquet locally, where periodic Spark jobs ingest them into Hudi for long-term analytics and traceability.
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Schema-Enforced Abnormal Metric Handling: Use Parquet plugin’s strict schema-dropping behavior to prevent malformed or unexpected metric changes. Hudi ingestion then guarantees consistent schema and data quality in downstream datasets.
-
Data Platform Integration: Store Telegraf metrics as Parquet files in an S3/ADLS landing zone. Hudi’s Spark-based ingestion pipeline then loads them into a unified, queryable lakehouse with business events and logs.
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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