8.9 KiB
PostgreSQL Server Exporter
Prometheus exporter for PostgreSQL server metrics.
CI Tested PostgreSQL versions: 9.4
, 9.5
, 9.6
, 10
, 11
Quick Start
This package is available for Docker:
# Start an example database
docker run --net=host -it --rm -e POSTGRES_PASSWORD=password postgres
# Connect to it
docker run --net=host -e DATA_SOURCE_NAME="postgresql://postgres:password@localhost:5432/postgres?sslmode=disable" wrouesnel/postgres_exporter
Building and running
The build system is based on Mage
The default make file behavior is to build the binary:
$ go get github.com/wrouesnel/postgres_exporter
$ cd ${GOPATH-$HOME/go}/src/github.com/wrouesnel/postgres_exporter
$ go run mage.go
$ export DATA_SOURCE_NAME="postgresql://login:password@hostname:port/dbname"
$ ./postgres_exporter <flags>
To build the dockerfile, run go run mage.go docker
.
This will build the docker image as wrouesnel/postgres_exporter:latest
. This
is a minimal docker image containing just postgres_exporter. By default no SSL
certificates are included, if you need to use SSL you should either bind-mount
/etc/ssl/certs/ca-certificates.crt
or derive a new image containing them.
Vendoring
Package vendoring is handled with govendor
Flags
-
web.listen-address
Address to listen on for web interface and telemetry. Default is:9187
. -
web.telemetry-path
Path under which to expose metrics. Default is/metrics
. -
disable-default-metrics
Use only metrics supplied fromqueries.yaml
via--extend.query-path
. -
disable-settings-metrics
Use the flag if you don't want to scrapepg_settings
. -
extend.query-path
Path to a YAML file containing custom queries to run. Check outqueries.yaml
for examples of the format. -
dumpmaps
Do not run - print the internal representation of the metric maps. Useful when debugging a custom queries file. -
log.level
Set logging level: one ofdebug
,info
,warn
,error
,fatal
-
log.format
Set the log output target and format. e.g.logger:syslog?appname=bob&local=7
orlogger:stdout?json=true
Defaults tologger:stderr
. -
constantLabels
Labels to set in all metrics. A list oflabel=value
pairs, separated by commas.
Environment Variables
The following environment variables configure the exporter:
-
DATA_SOURCE_NAME
the default legacy format. Accepts URI form and key=value form arguments. The URI may contain the username and password to connect with. -
DATA_SOURCE_URI
an alternative toDATA_SOURCE_NAME
which exclusively accepts the raw URI without a username and password component. -
DATA_SOURCE_USER
When usingDATA_SOURCE_URI
, this environment variable is used to specify the username. -
DATA_SOURCE_USER_FILE
The same, but reads the username from a file. -
DATA_SOURCE_PASS
When usingDATA_SOURCE_URI
, this environment variable is used to specify the password to connect with. -
DATA_SOURCE_PASS_FILE
The same as above but reads the password from a file. -
PG_EXPORTER_WEB_LISTEN_ADDRESS
Address to listen on for web interface and telemetry. Default is:9187
. -
PG_EXPORTER_WEB_TELEMETRY_PATH
Path under which to expose metrics. Default is/metrics
. -
PG_EXPORTER_DISABLE_DEFAULT_METRICS
Use only metrics supplied fromqueries.yaml
. Value can betrue
orfalse
. Default isfalse
. -
PG_EXPORTER_DISABLE_SETTINGS_METRICS
Use the flag if you don't want to scrapepg_settings
. Value can betrue
orfalse
. Defauls isfalse
. -
PG_EXPORTER_EXTEND_QUERY_PATH
Path to a YAML file containing custom queries to run. Check outqueries.yaml
for examples of the format. -
PG_EXPORTER_CONSTANT_LABELS
Labels to set in all metrics. A list oflabel=value
pairs, separated by commas.
Settings set by environment variables starting with PG_
will be overwritten by the corresponding CLI flag if given.
Setting the Postgres server's data source name
The PostgreSQL server's data source name
must be set via the DATA_SOURCE_NAME
environment variable.
For running it locally on a default Debian/Ubuntu install, this will work (transpose to init script as appropriate):
sudo -u postgres DATA_SOURCE_NAME="user=postgres host=/var/run/postgresql/ sslmode=disable" postgres_exporter
Also, you can set a list of sources to scrape different instances from the one exporter setup. Just define a comma separated string.
sudo -u postgres DATA_SOURCE_NAME="port=5432,port=6432" postgres_exporter
See the github.com/lib/pq module for other ways to format the connection string.
Adding new metrics
The exporter will attempt to dynamically export additional metrics if they are added in the future, but they will be marked as "untyped". Additional metric maps can be easily created from Postgres documentation by copying the tables and using the following Python snippet:
x = """tab separated raw text of a documentation table"""
for l in StringIO(x):
column, ctype, description = l.split('\t')
print """"{0}" : {{ prometheus.CounterValue, prometheus.NewDesc("pg_stat_database_{0}", "{2}", nil, nil) }}, """.format(column.strip(), ctype, description.strip())
Adjust the value of the resultant prometheus value type appropriately. This helps build rich self-documenting metrics for the exporter.
Adding new metrics via a config file
The -extend.query-path command-line argument specifies a YAML file containing additional queries to run. Some examples are provided in queries.yaml.
Disabling default metrics
To work with non-officially-supported postgres versions you can try disabling (e.g. 8.2.15)
or a variant of postgres (e.g. Greenplum) you can disable the default metrics with the --disable-default-metrics
flag. This removes all built-in metrics, and uses only metrics defined by queries in the queries.yaml
file you supply
(so you must supply one, otherwise the exporter will return nothing but internal statuses and not your database).
Running as non-superuser
To be able to collect metrics from pg_stat_activity
and pg_stat_replication
as non-superuser you have to create functions and views as a superuser, and
assign permissions separately to those.
In PostgreSQL, views run with the permissions of the user that created them so they can act as security barriers. Functions need to be created to share this data with the non-superuser. Only creating the views will leave out the most important bits of data.
CREATE USER postgres_exporter PASSWORD 'password';
ALTER USER postgres_exporter SET SEARCH_PATH TO postgres_exporter,pg_catalog;
-- If deploying as non-superuser (for example in AWS RDS), uncomment the GRANT
-- line below and replace <MASTER_USER> with your root user.
-- GRANT postgres_exporter TO <MASTER_USER>;
CREATE SCHEMA IF NOT EXISTS postgres_exporter;
GRANT USAGE ON SCHEMA postgres_exporter TO postgres_exporter;
CREATE FUNCTION get_pg_stat_activity() RETURNS SETOF pg_stat_activity AS
$$ SELECT * FROM pg_catalog.pg_stat_activity; $$
LANGUAGE sql
VOLATILE
SECURITY DEFINER;
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW postgres_exporter.pg_stat_activity
AS
SELECT * from get_pg_stat_activity();
GRANT SELECT ON postgres_exporter.pg_stat_activity TO postgres_exporter;
CREATE OR REPLACE FUNCTION get_pg_stat_replication() RETURNS SETOF pg_stat_replication AS
$$ SELECT * FROM pg_catalog.pg_stat_replication; $$
LANGUAGE sql
VOLATILE
SECURITY DEFINER;
CREATE OR REPLACE VIEW postgres_exporter.pg_stat_replication
AS
SELECT * FROM get_pg_stat_replication();
GRANT SELECT ON postgres_exporter.pg_stat_replication TO postgres_exporter;
Note
Remember to usepostgres
database name in the connection string:DATA_SOURCE_NAME=postgresql://postgres_exporter:password@localhost:5432/postgres?sslmode=disable
Hacking
- To build a copy for your current architecture run
go run mage.go binary
or justgo run mage.go
This will create a symlink to the just built binary in the root directory. - To build release tar balls run
go run mage.go release
. - Build system is a bit temperamental at the moment since the conversion to mage - I am working on getting it to be a perfect out of the box experience, but am time-constrained on it at the moment.