This is the latest release candidate for the pdata module.
Go will pick the latest released version by default with commands such as `go get`
and ignore pre-released versions, but this version includes updates.
Signed-off-by: Pablo Baeyens <pablo.baeyens@datadoghq.com>
When a particular SeriesLifecycleCallback tries to optimize and run
closer to the Head, keeping track of the HeadSeriesRef instead of the
labelsets, it's impossible to handle the PostDeletion callback properly
as there's no way to know which series refs were deleted from the head.
This changes the callback to provide the series refs alongside the
labelsets, so the implementation can choose what to do.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zaytsev <mail@olegzaytsev.com>
The most common case is to have a nil error when appending series, so
let's check that first instead of checking the 3 error types first.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zaytsev <mail@olegzaytsev.com>
Currently memSeries holds a single head chunk in-memory and a slice of mmapped chunks.
When append() is called on memSeries it might decide that a new headChunk is needed to use for given append() call.
If that happens it will first mmap existing head chunk and only after that happens it will create a new empty headChunk and continue appending
our sample to it.
Since appending samples uses write lock on memSeries no other read or write can happen until any append is completed.
When we have an append() that must create a new head chunk the whole memSeries is blocked until mmapping of existing head chunk finishes.
Mmapping itself uses a lock as it needs to be serialised, which means that the more chunks to mmap we have the longer each chunk might wait
for it to be mmapped.
If there's enough chunks that require mmapping some memSeries will be locked for long enough that it will start affecting
queries and scrapes.
Queries might timeout, since by default they have a 2 minute timeout set.
Scrapes will be blocked inside append() call, which means there will be a gap between samples. This will first affect range queries
or calls using rate() and such, since the time range requested in the query might have too few samples to calculate anything.
To avoid this we need to remove mmapping from append path, since mmapping is blocking.
But this means that when we cut a new head chunk we need to keep the old one around, so we can mmap it later.
This change makes memSeries.headChunk a linked list, memSeries.headChunk still points to the 'open' head chunk that receives new samples,
while older, yet to be mmapped, chunks are linked to it.
Mmapping is done on a schedule by iterating all memSeries one by one. Thanks to this we control when mmapping is done, since we trigger
it manually, which reduces the risk that it will have to compete for mmap locks with other chunks.
Signed-off-by: Łukasz Mierzwa <l.mierzwa@gmail.com>
* Add OTLP Ingestion endpoint
We copy files from the otel-collector-contrib. See the README in
`storage/remote/otlptranslator/README.md`.
This supersedes: https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/pull/11965
Signed-off-by: gouthamve <gouthamve@gmail.com>
* Return a 200 OK
It is what the OTEL Golang SDK expect :(
https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-go/issues/4363
Signed-off-by: Goutham <gouthamve@gmail.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: gouthamve <gouthamve@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Goutham <gouthamve@gmail.com>
If a new series is introduced in a storage.Appender instance, that
series should be written to the WAL once the storage.Appender is closed,
even on Rollback.
Previously, new series would only be written to the WAL when calling
Commit. However, because the series is stored in memory regardless,
subsequent calls to Commit may write samples to the WAL which reference
a series ID which that was never written.
Related to #11589. It's likely that this fix also resolves this issue,
but we need more testing from users to see if the problem persists after
this fix; there may be more cases where samples get written to the WAL
in Prometheus Agent mode without the corresponding series record.
Signed-off-by: Robert Fratto <robertfratto@gmail.com>
Native histograms without observations and with a zero threshold of
zero look the same as classic histograms in the protobuf exposition
format. According to
https://github.com/prometheus/client_golang/issues/1127 , the idea is
to add a no-op span to those histograms to mark them as native
histograms. This commit enables Prometheus to detect that no-op span
and adds a doc comment to the proto spec describing the behavior.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
The operator changes the meaning of the metric, so the metric name should
be dropped. Technically this would be a breaking change, but it's also very
obviously a bug and not likely that anyone depends on it.
Signed-off-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>