prometheus/docs/migration.md

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---
title: Migration
sort_rank: 8
---
# Prometheus 2.0 migration guide
In line with our [stability promise](https://prometheus.io/blog/2016/07/18/prometheus-1-0-released/#fine-print),
the Prometheus 2.0 release contains a number of backwards incompatible changes.
This document offers guidance on migrating from Prometheus 1.8 to Prometheus 2.0.
## Flags
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The format of the Prometheus command line flags has changed. Instead of a
single dash, all flags now use a double dash. Common flags (`--config.file`,
`--web.listen-address` and `--web.external-url`) are still the same but beyond
that, almost all the storage-related flags have been removed.
Some notable flags which have been removed:
- `-alertmanager.url` In Prometheus 2.0, the command line flags for configuring
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a static Alertmanager URL have been removed. Alertmanager must now be
discovered via service discovery, see [Alertmanager service discovery](#alertmanager-service-discovery).
- `-log.format` In Prometheus 2.0 logs can only be streamed to standard error.
- `-query.staleness-delta` has been renamed to `--query.lookback-delta`; Prometheus
2.0 introduces a new mechanism for handling staleness, see [staleness](querying/basics.md#staleness).
- `-storage.local.*` Prometheus 2.0 introduces a new storage engine, as such all
flags relating to the old engine have been removed. For information on the
new engine, see [Storage](#storage).
- `-storage.remote.*` Prometheus 2.0 has removed the already deprecated remote
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storage flags, and will fail to start if they are supplied. To write to
InfluxDB, Graphite, or OpenTSDB use the relevant storage adapter.
## Alertmanager service discovery
Alertmanager service discovery was introduced in Prometheus 1.4, allowing Prometheus
to dynamically discover Alertmanager replicas using the same mechanism as scrape
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targets. In Prometheus 2.0, the command line flags for static Alertmanager config
have been removed, so the following command line flag:
```
./prometheus -alertmanager.url=http://alertmanager:9093/
```
Would be replaced with the following in the `prometheus.yml` config file:
```yaml
alerting:
alertmanagers:
- static_configs:
- targets:
- alertmanager:9093
```
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You can also use all the usual Prometheus service discovery integrations and
relabeling in your Alertmanager configuration. This snippet instructs
Prometheus to search for Kubernetes pods, in the `default` namespace, with the
label `name: alertmanager` and with a non-empty port.
```yaml
alerting:
alertmanagers:
- kubernetes_sd_configs:
- role: pod
tls_config:
ca_file: /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/ca.crt
bearer_token_file: /var/run/secrets/kubernetes.io/serviceaccount/token
relabel_configs:
- source_labels: [__meta_kubernetes_pod_label_name]
regex: alertmanager
action: keep
- source_labels: [__meta_kubernetes_namespace]
regex: default
action: keep
- source_labels: [__meta_kubernetes_pod_container_port_number]
regex:
action: drop
```
## Recording rules and alerts
The format for configuring alerting and recording rules has been changed to YAML.
An example of a recording rule and alert in the old format:
```
job:request_duration_seconds:histogram_quantile99 =
histogram_quantile(0.99, sum by (le, job) (rate(request_duration_seconds_bucket[1m])))
ALERT FrontendRequestLatency
IF job:request_duration_seconds:histogram_quantile99{job="frontend"} > 0.1
FOR 5m
ANNOTATIONS {
summary = "High frontend request latency",
}
```
Would look like this:
```yaml
groups:
- name: example.rules
rules:
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- record: job:request_duration_seconds:histogram_quantile99
expr: histogram_quantile(0.99, sum by (le, job) (rate(request_duration_seconds_bucket[1m])))
- alert: FrontendRequestLatency
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expr: job:request_duration_seconds:histogram_quantile99{job="frontend"} > 0.1
for: 5m
annotations:
summary: High frontend request latency
```
To help with the change, the `promtool` tool has a mode to automate the rules conversion. Given a `.rules` file, it will output a `.rules.yml` file in the
new format. For example:
```
$ promtool update rules example.rules
```
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Note that you will need to use promtool from 2.0, not 1.8.
## Storage
The data format in Prometheus 2.0 has completely changed and is not backwards
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compatible with 1.8. To retain access to your historic monitoring data we
recommend you run a non-scraping Prometheus instance running at least version
1.8.1 in parallel with your Prometheus 2.0 instance, and have the new server
read existing data from the old one via the remote read protocol.
Your Prometheus 1.8 instance should be started with the following flags and an
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config file containing only the `external_labels` setting (if any):
```
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$ ./prometheus-1.8.1.linux-amd64/prometheus -web.listen-address ":9094" -config.file old.yml
```
Prometheus 2.0 can then be started (on the same machine) with the following flags:
```
$ ./prometheus-2.0.0.linux-amd64/prometheus --config.file prometheus.yml
```
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Where `prometheus.yml` contains in addition to your full existing configuration, the stanza:
```yaml
remote_read:
- url: "http://localhost:9094/api/v1/read"
```
## PromQL
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The following features have been removed from PromQL:
- `drop_common_labels` function - the `without` aggregation modifier should be used
instead.
- `keep_common` aggregation modifier - the `by` modifier should be used instead.
- `count_scalar` function - use cases are better handled by `absent()` or correct
propagation of labels in operations.
See [issue #3060](https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/issues/3060) for more
details.
## Miscellaneous
### Prometheus non-root user
The Prometheus Docker image is now built to [run Prometheus
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as a non-root user](https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/pull/2859). If you
want the Prometheus UI/API to listen on a low port number (say, port 80), you'll
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need to override it. For Kubernetes, you would use the following YAML:
```yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: Pod
metadata:
name: security-context-demo-2
spec:
securityContext:
runAsUser: 0
...
```
See [Configure a Security Context for a Pod or Container](https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/security-context/)
for more details.
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If you're using Docker, then the following snippet would be used:
```
docker run -p 9090:9090 prom/prometheus:latest
```
### Prometheus lifecycle
If you use the Prometheus `/-/reload` HTTP endpoint to [automatically reload your
Prometheus config when it changes](configuration/configuration.md),
these endpoints are disabled by default for security reasons in Prometheus 2.0.
To enable them, set the `--web.enable-lifecycle` flag.