Nvidia SMI and AWS Redshift Integration
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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 Nvidia SMI Plugin enables the retrieval of detailed statistics about NVIDIA GPUs attached to the host system, providing essential insights for performance monitoring.
This plugin enables Telegraf to send metrics to Amazon Redshift using the PostgreSQL plugin, allowing metrics to be stored in a scalable, SQL-compatible data warehouse.
Integration details
Nvidia SMI
The Nvidia SMI Plugin is designed to gather metrics regarding the performance and status of NVIDIA GPUs on the host machine. By leveraging the capabilities of the nvidia-smi
command-line tool, this plugin pulls crucial information such as GPU memory utilization, temperature, fan speed, and various performance metrics. This data is essential for monitoring GPU health and performance in real-time, particularly in environments where GPU performance directly impacts computing tasks, such as machine learning, 3D rendering, and high-performance computing. The plugin provides flexibility by allowing users to specify the path to the nvidia-smi
binary and configure polling timeouts, accommodating both Linux and Windows systems where the nvidia-smi
tool is commonly located. With its ability to collect detailed statistics on each GPU, this plugin becomes a vital resource for any infrastructure relying on NVIDIA hardware, facilitating proactive management and performance tuning.
AWS Redshift
This configuration uses the Telegraf PostgreSQL plugin to send metrics to Amazon Redshift, AWS’s fully managed cloud data warehouse that supports SQL-based analytics at scale. Although Redshift is based on PostgreSQL 8.0.2, it does not support all standard PostgreSQL features such as full JSONB, stored procedures, or upserts. Therefore, care must be taken to predefine compatible tables and schema when using Telegraf for Redshift integration. This setup is ideal for use cases that benefit from long-term, high-volume metric storage and integration with AWS analytics tools like QuickSight or Redshift Spectrum. Metrics stored in Redshift can be joined with business datasets for rich observability and BI analysis.
Configuration
Nvidia SMI
[[inputs.nvidia_smi]]
## Optional: path to nvidia-smi binary, defaults "/usr/bin/nvidia-smi"
## We will first try to locate the nvidia-smi binary with the explicitly specified value (or default value),
## if it is not found, we will try to locate it on PATH(exec.LookPath), if it is still not found, an error will be returned
# bin_path = "/usr/bin/nvidia-smi"
## Optional: timeout for GPU polling
# timeout = "5s"
AWS Redshift
[[outputs.postgresql]]
## Redshift connection settings
host = "redshift-cluster.example.us-west-2.redshift.amazonaws.com"
port = 5439
user = "telegraf"
password = "YourRedshiftPassword"
database = "metrics"
sslmode = "require"
## Optional: specify a dynamic table template for inserting metrics
table_template = "telegraf_metrics"
## Note: Redshift does not support all PostgreSQL features; ensure your table exists and is compatible
Input and output integration examples
Nvidia SMI
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Real-Time GPU Monitoring for ML Training: Continuously monitor the GPU utilization and memory usage during machine learning model training. This enables data scientists to ensure that their GPUs are not being overutilized or underutilized, optimizing resource allocation and reviewing performance bottlenecks in real-time.
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Automated Alerts for Overheating GPUs: Implement a system using the Nvidia SMI plugin to track GPU temperatures and set alerts for instances where temperatures exceed safe thresholds. This proactive monitoring can prevent hardware damage and improve system reliability by alerting administrators to potential cooling issues before they result in failure.
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Performance Baselines for GPU Resources: Establish baseline performance metrics for your GPU resources. By regularly collecting data and analyzing trends in GPU usage, organizations can identify anomalies and optimize their workloads accordingly, leading to enhanced operational efficiency.
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Dockerized GPU Usage Insights: In a containerized environment, use the plugin to monitor GPU performance from within a Docker container. This allows developers to track GPU performance of their applications in production, facilitating troubleshooting and performance optimization within isolated environments.
AWS Redshift
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Business-Aware Infrastructure Monitoring: Store infrastructure metrics from Telegraf in Redshift alongside sales, marketing, or customer engagement data. Analysts can correlate system performance with business KPIs using SQL joins and window functions.
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Historical Trend Analysis for Cloud Resources: Use Telegraf to continuously log CPU, memory, and I/O metrics to Redshift. Combine with time-series SQL queries and visualization tools like Amazon QuickSight to spot trends and forecast resource demand.
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Security Auditing of System Behavior: Send metrics related to system logins, file changes, or resource spikes into Redshift. Analysts can build dashboards or reports for compliance auditing using SQL queries across multi-year data sets.
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Cross-Environment SLA Reporting: Aggregate SLA metrics from multiple cloud accounts and regions using Telegraf, and push them to a central Redshift warehouse. Enable unified SLA compliance dashboards and executive reporting via a single SQL interface.
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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