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title | sort_rank |
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Federation | 6 |
Federation
Federation allows a Prometheus server to scrape selected time series from another Prometheus server.
Note about native histograms (experimental feature): To scrape native histograms
via federation, the scraping Prometheus server needs to run with native histograms
enabled (via the command line flag --enable-feature=native-histograms
), implying
that the protobuf format is used for scraping. Should the federated metrics contain
a mix of different sample types (float64, counter histogram, gauge histogram) for
the same metric name, the federation payload will contain multiple metric families
with the same name (but different types). Technically, this violates the rules of
the protobuf exposition format, but Prometheus is nevertheless able to ingest all
metrics correctly.
Use cases
There are different use cases for federation. Commonly, it is used to either achieve scalable Prometheus monitoring setups or to pull related metrics from one service's Prometheus into another.
Hierarchical federation
Hierarchical federation allows Prometheus to scale to environments with tens of data centers and millions of nodes. In this use case, the federation topology resembles a tree, with higher-level Prometheus servers collecting aggregated time series data from a larger number of subordinated servers.
For example, a setup might consist of many per-datacenter Prometheus servers that collect data in high detail (instance-level drill-down), and a set of global Prometheus servers which collect and store only aggregated data (job-level drill-down) from those local servers. This provides an aggregate global view and detailed local views.
Cross-service federation
In cross-service federation, a Prometheus server of one service is configured to scrape selected data from another service's Prometheus server to enable alerting and queries against both datasets within a single server.
For example, a cluster scheduler running multiple services might expose resource usage information (like memory and CPU usage) about service instances running on the cluster. On the other hand, a service running on that cluster will only expose application-specific service metrics. Often, these two sets of metrics are scraped by separate Prometheus servers. Using federation, the Prometheus server containing service-level metrics may pull in the cluster resource usage metrics about its specific service from the cluster Prometheus, so that both sets of metrics can be used within that server.
Configuring federation
On any given Prometheus server, the /federate
endpoint allows retrieving the
current value for a selected set of time series in that server. At least one
match[]
URL parameter must be specified to select the series to expose. Each
match[]
argument needs to specify an
instant vector selector like
up
or {job="api-server"}
. If multiple match[]
parameters are provided,
the union of all matched series is selected.
To federate metrics from one server to another, configure your destination
Prometheus server to scrape from the /federate
endpoint of a source server,
while also enabling the honor_labels
scrape option (to not overwrite any
labels exposed by the source server) and passing in the desired match[]
parameters. For example, the following scrape_configs
federates any series
with the label job="prometheus"
or a metric name starting with job:
from
the Prometheus servers at source-prometheus-{1,2,3}:9090
into the scraping
Prometheus:
scrape_configs:
- job_name: 'federate'
scrape_interval: 15s
honor_labels: true
metrics_path: '/federate'
params:
'match[]':
- '{job="prometheus"}'
- '{__name__=~"job:.*"}'
static_configs:
- targets:
- 'source-prometheus-1:9090'
- 'source-prometheus-2:9090'
- 'source-prometheus-3:9090'