vendor github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil package

pull/564/head
Yecheng Fu 2018-11-06 13:00:38 +08:00
parent fad23990ce
commit ccb66066a9
39 changed files with 3427 additions and 1507 deletions

18
Godeps/Godeps.json generated
View File

@ -2933,13 +2933,23 @@
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus",
"Comment": "v0.8.0-83-ge7e903064f5e9e",
"Rev": "e7e903064f5e9eb5da98208bae10b475d4db0f8c"
"Comment": "v0.9.1",
"Rev": "abad2d1bd44235a26707c172eab6bca5bf2dbad3"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal",
"Comment": "v0.9.1",
"Rev": "abad2d1bd44235a26707c172eab6bca5bf2dbad3"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promhttp",
"Comment": "v0.8.0-83-ge7e903064f5e9e",
"Rev": "e7e903064f5e9eb5da98208bae10b475d4db0f8c"
"Comment": "v0.9.1",
"Rev": "abad2d1bd44235a26707c172eab6bca5bf2dbad3"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil",
"Comment": "v0.9.1",
"Rev": "abad2d1bd44235a26707c172eab6bca5bf2dbad3"
},
{
"ImportPath": "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go",

418
Godeps/LICENSES generated
View File

@ -85696,6 +85696,215 @@ SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
================================================================================
================================================================================
= vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal licensed under: =
Apache License
Version 2.0, January 2004
http://www.apache.org/licenses/
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR USE, REPRODUCTION, AND DISTRIBUTION
1. Definitions.
"License" shall mean the terms and conditions for use, reproduction,
and distribution as defined by Sections 1 through 9 of this document.
"Licensor" shall mean the copyright owner or entity authorized by
the copyright owner that is granting the License.
"Legal Entity" shall mean the union of the acting entity and all
other entities that control, are controlled by, or are under common
control with that entity. For the purposes of this definition,
"control" means (i) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the
direction or management of such entity, whether by contract or
otherwise, or (ii) ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the
outstanding shares, or (iii) beneficial ownership of such entity.
"You" (or "Your") shall mean an individual or Legal Entity
exercising permissions granted by this License.
"Source" form shall mean the preferred form for making modifications,
including but not limited to software source code, documentation
source, and configuration files.
"Object" form shall mean any form resulting from mechanical
transformation or translation of a Source form, including but
not limited to compiled object code, generated documentation,
and conversions to other media types.
"Work" shall mean the work of authorship, whether in Source or
Object form, made available under the License, as indicated by a
copyright notice that is included in or attached to the work
(an example is provided in the Appendix below).
"Derivative Works" shall mean any work, whether in Source or Object
form, that is based on (or derived from) the Work and for which the
editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications
represent, as a whole, an original work of authorship. For the purposes
of this License, Derivative Works shall not include works that remain
separable from, or merely link (or bind by name) to the interfaces of,
the Work and Derivative Works thereof.
"Contribution" shall mean any work of authorship, including
the original version of the Work and any modifications or additions
to that Work or Derivative Works thereof, that is intentionally
submitted to Licensor for inclusion in the Work by the copyright owner
or by an individual or Legal Entity authorized to submit on behalf of
the copyright owner. For the purposes of this definition, "submitted"
means any form of electronic, verbal, or written communication sent
to the Licensor or its representatives, including but not limited to
communication on electronic mailing lists, source code control systems,
and issue tracking systems that are managed by, or on behalf of, the
Licensor for the purpose of discussing and improving the Work, but
excluding communication that is conspicuously marked or otherwise
designated in writing by the copyright owner as "Not a Contribution."
"Contributor" shall mean Licensor and any individual or Legal Entity
on behalf of whom a Contribution has been received by Licensor and
subsequently incorporated within the Work.
2. Grant of Copyright License. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual,
worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable
copyright license to reproduce, prepare Derivative Works of,
publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute the
Work and such Derivative Works in Source or Object form.
3. Grant of Patent License. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual,
worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable
(except as stated in this section) patent license to make, have made,
use, offer to sell, sell, import, and otherwise transfer the Work,
where such license applies only to those patent claims licensable
by such Contributor that are necessarily infringed by their
Contribution(s) alone or by combination of their Contribution(s)
with the Work to which such Contribution(s) was submitted. If You
institute patent litigation against any entity (including a
cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that the Work
or a Contribution incorporated within the Work constitutes direct
or contributory patent infringement, then any patent licenses
granted to You under this License for that Work shall terminate
as of the date such litigation is filed.
4. Redistribution. You may reproduce and distribute copies of the
Work or Derivative Works thereof in any medium, with or without
modifications, and in Source or Object form, provided that You
meet the following conditions:
(a) You must give any other recipients of the Work or
Derivative Works a copy of this License; and
(b) You must cause any modified files to carry prominent notices
stating that You changed the files; and
(c) You must retain, in the Source form of any Derivative Works
that You distribute, all copyright, patent, trademark, and
attribution notices from the Source form of the Work,
excluding those notices that do not pertain to any part of
the Derivative Works; and
(d) If the Work includes a "NOTICE" text file as part of its
distribution, then any Derivative Works that You distribute must
include a readable copy of the attribution notices contained
within such NOTICE file, excluding those notices that do not
pertain to any part of the Derivative Works, in at least one
of the following places: within a NOTICE text file distributed
as part of the Derivative Works; within the Source form or
documentation, if provided along with the Derivative Works; or,
within a display generated by the Derivative Works, if and
wherever such third-party notices normally appear. The contents
of the NOTICE file are for informational purposes only and
do not modify the License. You may add Your own attribution
notices within Derivative Works that You distribute, alongside
or as an addendum to the NOTICE text from the Work, provided
that such additional attribution notices cannot be construed
as modifying the License.
You may add Your own copyright statement to Your modifications and
may provide additional or different license terms and conditions
for use, reproduction, or distribution of Your modifications, or
for any such Derivative Works as a whole, provided Your use,
reproduction, and distribution of the Work otherwise complies with
the conditions stated in this License.
5. Submission of Contributions. Unless You explicitly state otherwise,
any Contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the Work
by You to the Licensor shall be under the terms and conditions of
this License, without any additional terms or conditions.
Notwithstanding the above, nothing herein shall supersede or modify
the terms of any separate license agreement you may have executed
with Licensor regarding such Contributions.
6. Trademarks. This License does not grant permission to use the trade
names, trademarks, service marks, or product names of the Licensor,
except as required for reasonable and customary use in describing the
origin of the Work and reproducing the content of the NOTICE file.
7. Disclaimer of Warranty. Unless required by applicable law or
agreed to in writing, Licensor provides the Work (and each
Contributor provides its Contributions) on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or
implied, including, without limitation, any warranties or conditions
of TITLE, NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY, or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE. You are solely responsible for determining the
appropriateness of using or redistributing the Work and assume any
risks associated with Your exercise of permissions under this License.
8. Limitation of Liability. In no event and under no legal theory,
whether in tort (including negligence), contract, or otherwise,
unless required by applicable law (such as deliberate and grossly
negligent acts) or agreed to in writing, shall any Contributor be
liable to You for damages, including any direct, indirect, special,
incidental, or consequential damages of any character arising as a
result of this License or out of the use or inability to use the
Work (including but not limited to damages for loss of goodwill,
work stoppage, computer failure or malfunction, or any and all
other commercial damages or losses), even if such Contributor
has been advised of the possibility of such damages.
9. Accepting Warranty or Additional Liability. While redistributing
the Work or Derivative Works thereof, You may choose to offer,
and charge a fee for, acceptance of support, warranty, indemnity,
or other liability obligations and/or rights consistent with this
License. However, in accepting such obligations, You may act only
on Your own behalf and on Your sole responsibility, not on behalf
of any other Contributor, and only if You agree to indemnify,
defend, and hold each Contributor harmless for any liability
incurred by, or claims asserted against, such Contributor by reason
of your accepting any such warranty or additional liability.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
APPENDIX: How to apply the Apache License to your work.
To apply the Apache License to your work, attach the following
boilerplate notice, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]"
replaced with your own identifying information. (Don't include
the brackets!) The text should be enclosed in the appropriate
comment syntax for the file format. We also recommend that a
file or class name and description of purpose be included on the
same "printed page" as the copyright notice for easier
identification within third-party archives.
Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
= vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/LICENSE 86d3f3a95c324c9479bd8986968f4327
================================================================================
================================================================================
= vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promhttp licensed under: =
@ -85905,6 +86114,215 @@ SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGE.
================================================================================
================================================================================
= vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil licensed under: =
Apache License
Version 2.0, January 2004
http://www.apache.org/licenses/
TERMS AND CONDITIONS FOR USE, REPRODUCTION, AND DISTRIBUTION
1. Definitions.
"License" shall mean the terms and conditions for use, reproduction,
and distribution as defined by Sections 1 through 9 of this document.
"Licensor" shall mean the copyright owner or entity authorized by
the copyright owner that is granting the License.
"Legal Entity" shall mean the union of the acting entity and all
other entities that control, are controlled by, or are under common
control with that entity. For the purposes of this definition,
"control" means (i) the power, direct or indirect, to cause the
direction or management of such entity, whether by contract or
otherwise, or (ii) ownership of fifty percent (50%) or more of the
outstanding shares, or (iii) beneficial ownership of such entity.
"You" (or "Your") shall mean an individual or Legal Entity
exercising permissions granted by this License.
"Source" form shall mean the preferred form for making modifications,
including but not limited to software source code, documentation
source, and configuration files.
"Object" form shall mean any form resulting from mechanical
transformation or translation of a Source form, including but
not limited to compiled object code, generated documentation,
and conversions to other media types.
"Work" shall mean the work of authorship, whether in Source or
Object form, made available under the License, as indicated by a
copyright notice that is included in or attached to the work
(an example is provided in the Appendix below).
"Derivative Works" shall mean any work, whether in Source or Object
form, that is based on (or derived from) the Work and for which the
editorial revisions, annotations, elaborations, or other modifications
represent, as a whole, an original work of authorship. For the purposes
of this License, Derivative Works shall not include works that remain
separable from, or merely link (or bind by name) to the interfaces of,
the Work and Derivative Works thereof.
"Contribution" shall mean any work of authorship, including
the original version of the Work and any modifications or additions
to that Work or Derivative Works thereof, that is intentionally
submitted to Licensor for inclusion in the Work by the copyright owner
or by an individual or Legal Entity authorized to submit on behalf of
the copyright owner. For the purposes of this definition, "submitted"
means any form of electronic, verbal, or written communication sent
to the Licensor or its representatives, including but not limited to
communication on electronic mailing lists, source code control systems,
and issue tracking systems that are managed by, or on behalf of, the
Licensor for the purpose of discussing and improving the Work, but
excluding communication that is conspicuously marked or otherwise
designated in writing by the copyright owner as "Not a Contribution."
"Contributor" shall mean Licensor and any individual or Legal Entity
on behalf of whom a Contribution has been received by Licensor and
subsequently incorporated within the Work.
2. Grant of Copyright License. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual,
worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable
copyright license to reproduce, prepare Derivative Works of,
publicly display, publicly perform, sublicense, and distribute the
Work and such Derivative Works in Source or Object form.
3. Grant of Patent License. Subject to the terms and conditions of
this License, each Contributor hereby grants to You a perpetual,
worldwide, non-exclusive, no-charge, royalty-free, irrevocable
(except as stated in this section) patent license to make, have made,
use, offer to sell, sell, import, and otherwise transfer the Work,
where such license applies only to those patent claims licensable
by such Contributor that are necessarily infringed by their
Contribution(s) alone or by combination of their Contribution(s)
with the Work to which such Contribution(s) was submitted. If You
institute patent litigation against any entity (including a
cross-claim or counterclaim in a lawsuit) alleging that the Work
or a Contribution incorporated within the Work constitutes direct
or contributory patent infringement, then any patent licenses
granted to You under this License for that Work shall terminate
as of the date such litigation is filed.
4. Redistribution. You may reproduce and distribute copies of the
Work or Derivative Works thereof in any medium, with or without
modifications, and in Source or Object form, provided that You
meet the following conditions:
(a) You must give any other recipients of the Work or
Derivative Works a copy of this License; and
(b) You must cause any modified files to carry prominent notices
stating that You changed the files; and
(c) You must retain, in the Source form of any Derivative Works
that You distribute, all copyright, patent, trademark, and
attribution notices from the Source form of the Work,
excluding those notices that do not pertain to any part of
the Derivative Works; and
(d) If the Work includes a "NOTICE" text file as part of its
distribution, then any Derivative Works that You distribute must
include a readable copy of the attribution notices contained
within such NOTICE file, excluding those notices that do not
pertain to any part of the Derivative Works, in at least one
of the following places: within a NOTICE text file distributed
as part of the Derivative Works; within the Source form or
documentation, if provided along with the Derivative Works; or,
within a display generated by the Derivative Works, if and
wherever such third-party notices normally appear. The contents
of the NOTICE file are for informational purposes only and
do not modify the License. You may add Your own attribution
notices within Derivative Works that You distribute, alongside
or as an addendum to the NOTICE text from the Work, provided
that such additional attribution notices cannot be construed
as modifying the License.
You may add Your own copyright statement to Your modifications and
may provide additional or different license terms and conditions
for use, reproduction, or distribution of Your modifications, or
for any such Derivative Works as a whole, provided Your use,
reproduction, and distribution of the Work otherwise complies with
the conditions stated in this License.
5. Submission of Contributions. Unless You explicitly state otherwise,
any Contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in the Work
by You to the Licensor shall be under the terms and conditions of
this License, without any additional terms or conditions.
Notwithstanding the above, nothing herein shall supersede or modify
the terms of any separate license agreement you may have executed
with Licensor regarding such Contributions.
6. Trademarks. This License does not grant permission to use the trade
names, trademarks, service marks, or product names of the Licensor,
except as required for reasonable and customary use in describing the
origin of the Work and reproducing the content of the NOTICE file.
7. Disclaimer of Warranty. Unless required by applicable law or
agreed to in writing, Licensor provides the Work (and each
Contributor provides its Contributions) on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or
implied, including, without limitation, any warranties or conditions
of TITLE, NON-INFRINGEMENT, MERCHANTABILITY, or FITNESS FOR A
PARTICULAR PURPOSE. You are solely responsible for determining the
appropriateness of using or redistributing the Work and assume any
risks associated with Your exercise of permissions under this License.
8. Limitation of Liability. In no event and under no legal theory,
whether in tort (including negligence), contract, or otherwise,
unless required by applicable law (such as deliberate and grossly
negligent acts) or agreed to in writing, shall any Contributor be
liable to You for damages, including any direct, indirect, special,
incidental, or consequential damages of any character arising as a
result of this License or out of the use or inability to use the
Work (including but not limited to damages for loss of goodwill,
work stoppage, computer failure or malfunction, or any and all
other commercial damages or losses), even if such Contributor
has been advised of the possibility of such damages.
9. Accepting Warranty or Additional Liability. While redistributing
the Work or Derivative Works thereof, You may choose to offer,
and charge a fee for, acceptance of support, warranty, indemnity,
or other liability obligations and/or rights consistent with this
License. However, in accepting such obligations, You may act only
on Your own behalf and on Your sole responsibility, not on behalf
of any other Contributor, and only if You agree to indemnify,
defend, and hold each Contributor harmless for any liability
incurred by, or claims asserted against, such Contributor by reason
of your accepting any such warranty or additional liability.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
APPENDIX: How to apply the Apache License to your work.
To apply the Apache License to your work, attach the following
boilerplate notice, with the fields enclosed by brackets "[]"
replaced with your own identifying information. (Don't include
the brackets!) The text should be enclosed in the appropriate
comment syntax for the file format. We also recommend that a
file or class name and description of purpose be included on the
same "printed page" as the copyright notice for easier
identification within third-party archives.
Copyright [yyyy] [name of copyright owner]
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
= vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/LICENSE 86d3f3a95c324c9479bd8986968f4327
================================================================================
================================================================================
= vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_model/go licensed under: =

View File

@ -21,7 +21,6 @@ go_library(
go_test(
name = "go_default_test",
srcs = [
"helper_test.go",
"log_metrics_test.go",
"volume_stats_test.go",
],
@ -31,8 +30,7 @@ go_test(
"//pkg/kubelet/server/stats/testing:go_default_library",
"//staging/src/k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/apis/meta/v1:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_model/go:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil:go_default_library",
],
)

View File

@ -1,182 +0,0 @@
/*
Copyright 2018 The Kubernetes Authors.
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.
*/
// testing helpers copied from k8s.io/kube-state-metrics/collectors/deployment_test.go
// TODO: share in a public package?
package collectors
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"reflect"
"sort"
"strings"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
)
// gatherAndCompare retrieves all metrics exposed by a collector and compares it
// to an expected output in the Prometheus text exposition format.
// metricNames allows only comparing the given metrics. All are compared if it's nil.
func gatherAndCompare(c prometheus.Collector, expected string, metricNames []string) error {
expected = removeUnusedWhitespace(expected)
reg := prometheus.NewPedanticRegistry()
if err := reg.Register(c); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("registering collector failed: %s", err)
}
metrics, err := reg.Gather()
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("gathering metrics failed: %s", err)
}
if metricNames != nil {
metrics = filterMetrics(metrics, metricNames)
}
var tp expfmt.TextParser
expectedMetrics, err := tp.TextToMetricFamilies(bytes.NewReader([]byte(expected)))
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("parsing expected metrics failed: %s", err)
}
if !reflect.DeepEqual(metrics, normalizeMetricFamilies(expectedMetrics)) {
// Encode the gathered output to the readbale text format for comparison.
var buf1 bytes.Buffer
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(&buf1, expfmt.FmtText)
for _, mf := range metrics {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("encoding result failed: %s", err)
}
}
// Encode normalized expected metrics again to generate them in the same ordering
// the registry does to spot differences more easily.
var buf2 bytes.Buffer
enc = expfmt.NewEncoder(&buf2, expfmt.FmtText)
for _, mf := range normalizeMetricFamilies(expectedMetrics) {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("encoding result failed: %s", err)
}
}
return fmt.Errorf(`metric output does not match expectation; want:
%s
got:
%s`, buf2.String(), buf1.String())
}
return nil
}
func filterMetrics(metrics []*dto.MetricFamily, names []string) []*dto.MetricFamily {
var filtered []*dto.MetricFamily
for _, m := range metrics {
drop := true
for _, name := range names {
if m.GetName() == name {
drop = false
break
}
}
if !drop {
filtered = append(filtered, m)
}
}
return filtered
}
func removeUnusedWhitespace(s string) string {
var (
trimmedLine string
trimmedLines []string
lines = strings.Split(s, "\n")
)
for _, l := range lines {
trimmedLine = strings.TrimSpace(l)
if len(trimmedLine) > 0 {
trimmedLines = append(trimmedLines, trimmedLine)
}
}
// The Prometheus metrics representation parser expects an empty line at the
// end otherwise fails with an unexpected EOF error.
return strings.Join(trimmedLines, "\n") + "\n"
}
// The below sorting code is copied form the Prometheus client library modulo the added
// label pair sorting.
// https://github.com/prometheus/client_golang/blob/ea6e1db4cb8127eeb0b6954f7320363e5451820f/prometheus/registry.go#L642-L684
// metricSorter is a sortable slice of *dto.Metric.
type metricSorter []*dto.Metric
func (s metricSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s metricSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s metricSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
sort.Sort(prometheus.LabelPairSorter(s[i].Label))
sort.Sort(prometheus.LabelPairSorter(s[j].Label))
if len(s[i].Label) != len(s[j].Label) {
return len(s[i].Label) < len(s[j].Label)
}
for n, lp := range s[i].Label {
vi := lp.GetValue()
vj := s[j].Label[n].GetValue()
if vi != vj {
return vi < vj
}
}
if s[i].TimestampMs == nil {
return false
}
if s[j].TimestampMs == nil {
return true
}
return s[i].GetTimestampMs() < s[j].GetTimestampMs()
}
// normalizeMetricFamilies returns a MetricFamily slice with empty
// MetricFamilies pruned and the remaining MetricFamilies sorted by name within
// the slice, with the contained Metrics sorted within each MetricFamily.
func normalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName map[string]*dto.MetricFamily) []*dto.MetricFamily {
for _, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
sort.Sort(metricSorter(mf.Metric))
}
names := make([]string, 0, len(metricFamiliesByName))
for name, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
if len(mf.Metric) > 0 {
names = append(names, name)
}
}
sort.Strings(names)
result := make([]*dto.MetricFamily, 0, len(names))
for _, name := range names {
result = append(result, metricFamiliesByName[name])
}
return result
}

View File

@ -17,9 +17,11 @@ limitations under the License.
package collectors
import (
"strings"
"testing"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil"
statsapi "k8s.io/kubernetes/pkg/kubelet/apis/stats/v1alpha1"
)
@ -63,11 +65,11 @@ func TestMetricsCollected(t *testing.T) {
},
}
err := gatherAndCompare(collector, `
err := testutil.CollectAndCompare(collector, strings.NewReader(`
# HELP kubelet_container_log_filesystem_used_bytes Bytes used by the container's logs on the filesystem.
# TYPE kubelet_container_log_filesystem_used_bytes gauge
kubelet_container_log_filesystem_used_bytes{container="containerName1",namespace="some-namespace",pod="podName1"} 18
`, nil)
`), "kubelet_container_log_filesystem_used_bytes")
if err != nil {
t.Fatal(err)
}

View File

@ -17,8 +17,10 @@ limitations under the License.
package collectors
import (
"strings"
"testing"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil"
metav1 "k8s.io/apimachinery/pkg/apis/meta/v1"
statsapi "k8s.io/kubernetes/pkg/kubelet/apis/stats/v1alpha1"
statstest "k8s.io/kubernetes/pkg/kubelet/server/stats/testing"
@ -129,7 +131,7 @@ func TestVolumeStatsCollector(t *testing.T) {
mockStatsProvider := new(statstest.StatsProvider)
mockStatsProvider.On("ListPodStats").Return(podStats, nil)
if err := gatherAndCompare(&volumeStatsCollector{statsProvider: mockStatsProvider}, want, metrics); err != nil {
if err := testutil.CollectAndCompare(&volumeStatsCollector{statsProvider: mockStatsProvider}, strings.NewReader(want), metrics...); err != nil {
t.Errorf("unexpected collecting result:\n%s", err)
}
}

View File

@ -13,6 +13,7 @@ go_library(
"go_collector.go",
"histogram.go",
"http.go",
"labels.go",
"metric.go",
"observer.go",
"process_collector.go",
@ -22,6 +23,7 @@ go_library(
"untyped.go",
"value.go",
"vec.go",
"wrap.go",
],
importmap = "k8s.io/kubernetes/vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus",
importpath = "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus",
@ -29,6 +31,7 @@ go_library(
deps = [
"//vendor/github.com/beorn7/perks/quantile:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/golang/protobuf/proto:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_model/go:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/common/model:go_default_library",
@ -47,7 +50,9 @@ filegroup(
name = "all-srcs",
srcs = [
":package-srcs",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal:all-srcs",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promhttp:all-srcs",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil:all-srcs",
],
tags = ["automanaged"],
visibility = ["//visibility:public"],

View File

@ -29,27 +29,72 @@ type Collector interface {
// collected by this Collector to the provided channel and returns once
// the last descriptor has been sent. The sent descriptors fulfill the
// consistency and uniqueness requirements described in the Desc
// documentation. (It is valid if one and the same Collector sends
// duplicate descriptors. Those duplicates are simply ignored. However,
// two different Collectors must not send duplicate descriptors.) This
// method idempotently sends the same descriptors throughout the
// lifetime of the Collector. If a Collector encounters an error while
// executing this method, it must send an invalid descriptor (created
// with NewInvalidDesc) to signal the error to the registry.
// documentation.
//
// It is valid if one and the same Collector sends duplicate
// descriptors. Those duplicates are simply ignored. However, two
// different Collectors must not send duplicate descriptors.
//
// Sending no descriptor at all marks the Collector as “unchecked”,
// i.e. no checks will be performed at registration time, and the
// Collector may yield any Metric it sees fit in its Collect method.
//
// This method idempotently sends the same descriptors throughout the
// lifetime of the Collector. It may be called concurrently and
// therefore must be implemented in a concurrency safe way.
//
// If a Collector encounters an error while executing this method, it
// must send an invalid descriptor (created with NewInvalidDesc) to
// signal the error to the registry.
Describe(chan<- *Desc)
// Collect is called by the Prometheus registry when collecting
// metrics. The implementation sends each collected metric via the
// provided channel and returns once the last metric has been sent. The
// descriptor of each sent metric is one of those returned by
// Describe. Returned metrics that share the same descriptor must differ
// in their variable label values. This method may be called
// concurrently and must therefore be implemented in a concurrency safe
// way. Blocking occurs at the expense of total performance of rendering
// all registered metrics. Ideally, Collector implementations support
// concurrent readers.
// descriptor of each sent metric is one of those returned by Describe
// (unless the Collector is unchecked, see above). Returned metrics that
// share the same descriptor must differ in their variable label
// values.
//
// This method may be called concurrently and must therefore be
// implemented in a concurrency safe way. Blocking occurs at the expense
// of total performance of rendering all registered metrics. Ideally,
// Collector implementations support concurrent readers.
Collect(chan<- Metric)
}
// DescribeByCollect is a helper to implement the Describe method of a custom
// Collector. It collects the metrics from the provided Collector and sends
// their descriptors to the provided channel.
//
// If a Collector collects the same metrics throughout its lifetime, its
// Describe method can simply be implemented as:
//
// func (c customCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
// DescribeByCollect(c, ch)
// }
//
// However, this will not work if the metrics collected change dynamically over
// the lifetime of the Collector in a way that their combined set of descriptors
// changes as well. The shortcut implementation will then violate the contract
// of the Describe method. If a Collector sometimes collects no metrics at all
// (for example vectors like CounterVec, GaugeVec, etc., which only collect
// metrics after a metric with a fully specified label set has been accessed),
// it might even get registered as an unchecked Collecter (cf. the Register
// method of the Registerer interface). Hence, only use this shortcut
// implementation of Describe if you are certain to fulfill the contract.
//
// The Collector example demonstrates a use of DescribeByCollect.
func DescribeByCollect(c Collector, descs chan<- *Desc) {
metrics := make(chan Metric)
go func() {
c.Collect(metrics)
close(metrics)
}()
for m := range metrics {
descs <- m.Desc()
}
}
// selfCollector implements Collector for a single Metric so that the Metric
// collects itself. Add it as an anonymous field to a struct that implements
// Metric, and call init with the Metric itself as an argument.

View File

@ -15,6 +15,10 @@ package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"math"
"sync/atomic"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// Counter is a Metric that represents a single numerical value that only ever
@ -42,6 +46,14 @@ type Counter interface {
type CounterOpts Opts
// NewCounter creates a new Counter based on the provided CounterOpts.
//
// The returned implementation tracks the counter value in two separate
// variables, a float64 and a uint64. The latter is used to track calls of the
// Inc method and calls of the Add method with a value that can be represented
// as a uint64. This allows atomic increments of the counter with optimal
// performance. (It is common to have an Inc call in very hot execution paths.)
// Both internal tracking values are added up in the Write method. This has to
// be taken into account when it comes to precision and overflow behavior.
func NewCounter(opts CounterOpts) Counter {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
@ -49,20 +61,58 @@ func NewCounter(opts CounterOpts) Counter {
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
result := &counter{value: value{desc: desc, valType: CounterValue, labelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs}}
result := &counter{desc: desc, labelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}
type counter struct {
value
// valBits contains the bits of the represented float64 value, while
// valInt stores values that are exact integers. Both have to go first
// in the struct to guarantee alignment for atomic operations.
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
valBits uint64
valInt uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (c *counter) Desc() *Desc {
return c.desc
}
func (c *counter) Add(v float64) {
if v < 0 {
panic(errors.New("counter cannot decrease in value"))
}
c.value.Add(v)
ival := uint64(v)
if float64(ival) == v {
atomic.AddUint64(&c.valInt, ival)
return
}
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&c.valBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + v)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&c.valBits, oldBits, newBits) {
return
}
}
}
func (c *counter) Inc() {
atomic.AddUint64(&c.valInt, 1)
}
func (c *counter) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
fval := math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&c.valBits))
ival := atomic.LoadUint64(&c.valInt)
val := fval + float64(ival)
return populateMetric(CounterValue, val, c.labelPairs, out)
}
// CounterVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Counters that all share the
@ -70,16 +120,12 @@ func (c *counter) Add(v float64) {
// if you want to count the same thing partitioned by various dimensions
// (e.g. number of HTTP requests, partitioned by response code and
// method). Create instances with NewCounterVec.
//
// CounterVec embeds MetricVec. See there for a full list of methods with
// detailed documentation.
type CounterVec struct {
*MetricVec
*metricVec
}
// NewCounterVec creates a new CounterVec based on the provided CounterOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names. At least one label name must be
// provided.
// partitioned by the given label names.
func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
@ -88,34 +134,62 @@ func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &CounterVec{
MetricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
result := &counter{value: value{
desc: desc,
valType: CounterValue,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, lvs),
}}
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
if len(lvs) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, lvs))
}
result := &counter{desc: desc, labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, lvs)}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues replaces the method of the same name in
// MetricVec. The difference is that this method returns a Counter and not a
// Metric so that no type conversion is required.
func (m *CounterVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Counter for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Counter is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Counter to only
// create the new Counter but leave it at its starting value 0. See also the
// SummaryVec example.
//
// Keeping the Counter for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Counter from the CounterVec. In that case,
// the Counter will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Counter with the same label values is created later.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Counter), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith replaces the method of the same name in MetricVec. The
// difference is that this method returns a Counter and not a Metric so that no
// type conversion is required.
func (m *CounterVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
// GetMetricWith returns the Counter for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Counter is created. Implications of
// creating a Counter without using it and keeping the Counter for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Counter), err
}
@ -123,18 +197,57 @@ func (m *CounterVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Counter, error) {
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. By not returning an
// error, WithLabelValues allows shortcuts like
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Add(42)
func (m *CounterVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Counter {
return m.MetricVec.WithLabelValues(lvs...).(Counter)
func (v *CounterVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Counter {
c, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return c
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. By not returning an error, With allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (m *CounterVec) With(labels Labels) Counter {
return m.MetricVec.With(labels).(Counter)
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (v *CounterVec) With(labels Labels) Counter {
c, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return c
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the CounterVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *CounterVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*CounterVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &CounterVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *CounterVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) *CounterVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
// CounterFunc is a Counter whose value is determined at collect time by calling a

View File

@ -25,19 +25,6 @@ import (
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// reservedLabelPrefix is a prefix which is not legal in user-supplied
// label names.
const reservedLabelPrefix = "__"
// Labels represents a collection of label name -> value mappings. This type is
// commonly used with the With(Labels) and GetMetricWith(Labels) methods of
// metric vector Collectors, e.g.:
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
//
// The other use-case is the specification of constant label pairs in Opts or to
// create a Desc.
type Labels map[string]string
// Desc is the descriptor used by every Prometheus Metric. It is essentially
// the immutable meta-data of a Metric. The normal Metric implementations
// included in this package manage their Desc under the hood. Users only have to
@ -80,24 +67,19 @@ type Desc struct {
// NewDesc allocates and initializes a new Desc. Errors are recorded in the Desc
// and will be reported on registration time. variableLabels and constLabels can
// be nil if no such labels should be set. fqName and help must not be empty.
// be nil if no such labels should be set. fqName must not be empty.
//
// variableLabels only contain the label names. Their label values are variable
// and therefore not part of the Desc. (They are managed within the Metric.)
//
// For constLabels, the label values are constant. Therefore, they are fully
// specified in the Desc. See the Opts documentation for the implications of
// constant labels.
// specified in the Desc. See the Collector example for a usage pattern.
func NewDesc(fqName, help string, variableLabels []string, constLabels Labels) *Desc {
d := &Desc{
fqName: fqName,
help: help,
variableLabels: variableLabels,
}
if help == "" {
d.err = errors.New("empty help string")
return d
}
if !model.IsValidMetricName(model.LabelValue(fqName)) {
d.err = fmt.Errorf("%q is not a valid metric name", fqName)
return d
@ -122,6 +104,12 @@ func NewDesc(fqName, help string, variableLabels []string, constLabels Labels) *
for _, labelName := range labelNames {
labelValues = append(labelValues, constLabels[labelName])
}
// Validate the const label values. They can't have a wrong cardinality, so
// use in len(labelValues) as expectedNumberOfValues.
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(labelValues)); err != nil {
d.err = err
return d
}
// Now add the variable label names, but prefix them with something that
// cannot be in a regular label name. That prevents matching the label
// dimension with a different mix between preset and variable labels.
@ -137,6 +125,7 @@ func NewDesc(fqName, help string, variableLabels []string, constLabels Labels) *
d.err = errors.New("duplicate label names")
return d
}
vh := hashNew()
for _, val := range labelValues {
vh = hashAdd(vh, val)
@ -163,7 +152,7 @@ func NewDesc(fqName, help string, variableLabels []string, constLabels Labels) *
Value: proto.String(v),
})
}
sort.Sort(LabelPairSorter(d.constLabelPairs))
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(d.constLabelPairs))
return d
}
@ -193,8 +182,3 @@ func (d *Desc) String() string {
d.variableLabels,
)
}
func checkLabelName(l string) bool {
return model.LabelName(l).IsValid() &&
!strings.HasPrefix(l, reservedLabelPrefix)
}

View File

@ -11,10 +11,12 @@
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
// Package prometheus provides metrics primitives to instrument code for
// monitoring. It also offers a registry for metrics. Sub-packages allow to
// expose the registered metrics via HTTP (package promhttp) or push them to a
// Pushgateway (package push).
// Package prometheus is the core instrumentation package. It provides metrics
// primitives to instrument code for monitoring. It also offers a registry for
// metrics. Sub-packages allow to expose the registered metrics via HTTP
// (package promhttp) or push them to a Pushgateway (package push). There is
// also a sub-package promauto, which provides metrics constructors with
// automatic registration.
//
// All exported functions and methods are safe to be used concurrently unless
// specified otherwise.
@ -60,7 +62,7 @@
// // The Handler function provides a default handler to expose metrics
// // via an HTTP server. "/metrics" is the usual endpoint for that.
// http.Handle("/metrics", promhttp.Handler())
// log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil))
// log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil))
// }
//
//
@ -72,7 +74,10 @@
// The number of exported identifiers in this package might appear a bit
// overwhelming. However, in addition to the basic plumbing shown in the example
// above, you only need to understand the different metric types and their
// vector versions for basic usage.
// vector versions for basic usage. Furthermore, if you are not concerned with
// fine-grained control of when and how to register metrics with the registry,
// have a look at the promauto package, which will effectively allow you to
// ignore registration altogether in simple cases.
//
// Above, you have already touched the Counter and the Gauge. There are two more
// advanced metric types: the Summary and Histogram. A more thorough description
@ -116,7 +121,17 @@
// NewConstSummary (and their respective Must… versions). That will happen in
// the Collect method. The Describe method has to return separate Desc
// instances, representative of the “throw-away” metrics to be created later.
// NewDesc comes in handy to create those Desc instances.
// NewDesc comes in handy to create those Desc instances. Alternatively, you
// could return no Desc at all, which will marke the Collector “unchecked”. No
// checks are porformed at registration time, but metric consistency will still
// be ensured at scrape time, i.e. any inconsistencies will lead to scrape
// errors. Thus, with unchecked Collectors, the responsibility to not collect
// metrics that lead to inconsistencies in the total scrape result lies with the
// implementer of the Collector. While this is not a desirable state, it is
// sometimes necessary. The typical use case is a situatios where the exact
// metrics to be returned by a Collector cannot be predicted at registration
// time, but the implementer has sufficient knowledge of the whole system to
// guarantee metric consistency.
//
// The Collector example illustrates the use case. You can also look at the
// source code of the processCollector (mirroring process metrics), the
@ -145,7 +160,7 @@
// registry.
//
// So far, everything we did operated on the so-called default registry, as it
// can be found in the global DefaultRegistry variable. With NewRegistry, you
// can be found in the global DefaultRegisterer variable. With NewRegistry, you
// can create a custom registry, or you can even implement the Registerer or
// Gatherer interfaces yourself. The methods Register and Unregister work in the
// same way on a custom registry as the global functions Register and Unregister
@ -153,11 +168,11 @@
//
// There are a number of uses for custom registries: You can use registries with
// special properties, see NewPedanticRegistry. You can avoid global state, as
// it is imposed by the DefaultRegistry. You can use multiple registries at the
// same time to expose different metrics in different ways. You can use separate
// registries for testing purposes.
// it is imposed by the DefaultRegisterer. You can use multiple registries at
// the same time to expose different metrics in different ways. You can use
// separate registries for testing purposes.
//
// Also note that the DefaultRegistry comes registered with a Collector for Go
// Also note that the DefaultRegisterer comes registered with a Collector for Go
// runtime metrics (via NewGoCollector) and a Collector for process metrics (via
// NewProcessCollector). With a custom registry, you are in control and decide
// yourself about the Collectors to register.

View File

@ -1,3 +1,16 @@
// Copyright 2018 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package prometheus
// Inline and byte-free variant of hash/fnv's fnv64a.

View File

@ -13,6 +13,14 @@
package prometheus
import (
"math"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// Gauge is a Metric that represents a single numerical value that can
// arbitrarily go up and down.
//
@ -48,13 +56,74 @@ type Gauge interface {
type GaugeOpts Opts
// NewGauge creates a new Gauge based on the provided GaugeOpts.
//
// The returned implementation is optimized for a fast Set method. If you have a
// choice for managing the value of a Gauge via Set vs. Inc/Dec/Add/Sub, pick
// the former. For example, the Inc method of the returned Gauge is slower than
// the Inc method of a Counter returned by NewCounter. This matches the typical
// scenarios for Gauges and Counters, where the former tends to be Set-heavy and
// the latter Inc-heavy.
func NewGauge(opts GaugeOpts) Gauge {
return newValue(NewDesc(
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
), GaugeValue, 0)
)
result := &gauge{desc: desc, labelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}
type gauge struct {
// valBits contains the bits of the represented float64 value. It has
// to go first in the struct to guarantee alignment for atomic
// operations. http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
valBits uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (g *gauge) Desc() *Desc {
return g.desc
}
func (g *gauge) Set(val float64) {
atomic.StoreUint64(&g.valBits, math.Float64bits(val))
}
func (g *gauge) SetToCurrentTime() {
g.Set(float64(time.Now().UnixNano()) / 1e9)
}
func (g *gauge) Inc() {
g.Add(1)
}
func (g *gauge) Dec() {
g.Add(-1)
}
func (g *gauge) Add(val float64) {
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&g.valBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + val)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&g.valBits, oldBits, newBits) {
return
}
}
}
func (g *gauge) Sub(val float64) {
g.Add(val * -1)
}
func (g *gauge) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
val := math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&g.valBits))
return populateMetric(GaugeValue, val, g.labelPairs, out)
}
// GaugeVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Gauges that all share the same
@ -63,12 +132,11 @@ func NewGauge(opts GaugeOpts) Gauge {
// (e.g. number of operations queued, partitioned by user and operation
// type). Create instances with NewGaugeVec.
type GaugeVec struct {
*MetricVec
*metricVec
}
// NewGaugeVec creates a new GaugeVec based on the provided GaugeOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names. At least one label name must be
// provided.
// partitioned by the given label names.
func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
@ -77,28 +145,62 @@ func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &GaugeVec{
MetricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newValue(desc, GaugeValue, 0, lvs...)
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
if len(lvs) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, lvs))
}
result := &gauge{desc: desc, labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, lvs)}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues replaces the method of the same name in
// MetricVec. The difference is that this method returns a Gauge and not a
// Metric so that no type conversion is required.
func (m *GaugeVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Gauge for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Gauge is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Gauge to only
// create the new Gauge but leave it at its starting value 0. See also the
// SummaryVec example.
//
// Keeping the Gauge for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Gauge from the GaugeVec. In that case, the
// Gauge will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Gauge with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Gauge), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith replaces the method of the same name in MetricVec. The
// difference is that this method returns a Gauge and not a Metric so that no
// type conversion is required.
func (m *GaugeVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
// GetMetricWith returns the Gauge for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Gauge is created. Implications of
// creating a Gauge without using it and keeping the Gauge for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Gauge), err
}
@ -106,18 +208,57 @@ func (m *GaugeVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Gauge, error) {
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. By not returning an
// error, WithLabelValues allows shortcuts like
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Add(42)
func (m *GaugeVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Gauge {
return m.MetricVec.WithLabelValues(lvs...).(Gauge)
func (v *GaugeVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Gauge {
g, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return g
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. By not returning an error, With allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (m *GaugeVec) With(labels Labels) Gauge {
return m.MetricVec.With(labels).(Gauge)
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (v *GaugeVec) With(labels Labels) Gauge {
g, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return g
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the GaugeVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *GaugeVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*GaugeVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &GaugeVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *GaugeVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) *GaugeVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
// GaugeFunc is a Gauge whose value is determined at collect time by calling a

View File

@ -1,3 +1,16 @@
// Copyright 2018 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package prometheus
import (
@ -11,13 +24,18 @@ type goCollector struct {
goroutinesDesc *Desc
threadsDesc *Desc
gcDesc *Desc
goInfoDesc *Desc
// metrics to describe and collect
metrics memStatsMetrics
}
// NewGoCollector returns a collector which exports metrics about the current
// go process.
// NewGoCollector returns a collector which exports metrics about the current Go
// process. This includes memory stats. To collect those, runtime.ReadMemStats
// is called. This causes a stop-the-world, which is very short with Go1.9+
// (~25µs). However, with older Go versions, the stop-the-world duration depends
// on the heap size and can be quite significant (~1.7 ms/GiB as per
// https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/34937).
func NewGoCollector() Collector {
return &goCollector{
goroutinesDesc: NewDesc(
@ -26,12 +44,16 @@ func NewGoCollector() Collector {
nil, nil),
threadsDesc: NewDesc(
"go_threads",
"Number of OS threads created",
"Number of OS threads created.",
nil, nil),
gcDesc: NewDesc(
"go_gc_duration_seconds",
"A summary of the GC invocation durations.",
nil, nil),
goInfoDesc: NewDesc(
"go_info",
"Information about the Go environment.",
nil, Labels{"version": runtime.Version()}),
metrics: memStatsMetrics{
{
desc: NewDesc(
@ -239,6 +261,7 @@ func (c *goCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- c.goroutinesDesc
ch <- c.threadsDesc
ch <- c.gcDesc
ch <- c.goInfoDesc
for _, i := range c.metrics {
ch <- i.desc
}
@ -259,7 +282,9 @@ func (c *goCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
quantiles[float64(idx+1)/float64(len(stats.PauseQuantiles)-1)] = pq.Seconds()
}
quantiles[0.0] = stats.PauseQuantiles[0].Seconds()
ch <- MustNewConstSummary(c.gcDesc, uint64(stats.NumGC), float64(stats.PauseTotal.Seconds()), quantiles)
ch <- MustNewConstSummary(c.gcDesc, uint64(stats.NumGC), stats.PauseTotal.Seconds(), quantiles)
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.goInfoDesc, GaugeValue, 1)
ms := &runtime.MemStats{}
runtime.ReadMemStats(ms)

View File

@ -16,7 +16,9 @@ package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"math"
"runtime"
"sort"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
@ -108,8 +110,9 @@ func ExponentialBuckets(start, factor float64, count int) []float64 {
}
// HistogramOpts bundles the options for creating a Histogram metric. It is
// mandatory to set Name and Help to a non-empty string. All other fields are
// optional and can safely be left at their zero value.
// mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. All other fields are optional
// and can safely be left at their zero value, although it is strongly
// encouraged to set a Help string.
type HistogramOpts struct {
// Namespace, Subsystem, and Name are components of the fully-qualified
// name of the Histogram (created by joining these components with
@ -120,29 +123,22 @@ type HistogramOpts struct {
Subsystem string
Name string
// Help provides information about this Histogram. Mandatory!
// Help provides information about this Histogram.
//
// Metrics with the same fully-qualified name must have the same Help
// string.
Help string
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this
// Histogram. Histograms with the same fully-qualified name must have the
// same label names in their ConstLabels.
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this metric. Metrics
// with the same fully-qualified name must have the same label names in
// their ConstLabels.
//
// Note that in most cases, labels have a value that varies during the
// lifetime of a process. Those labels are usually managed with a
// HistogramVec. ConstLabels serve only special purposes. One is for the
// special case where the value of a label does not change during the
// lifetime of a process, e.g. if the revision of the running binary is
// put into a label. Another, more advanced purpose is if more than one
// Collector needs to collect Histograms with the same fully-qualified
// name. In that case, those Summaries must differ in the values of
// their ConstLabels. See the Collector examples.
//
// If the value of a label never changes (not even between binaries),
// that label most likely should not be a label at all (but part of the
// metric name).
// ConstLabels are only used rarely. In particular, do not use them to
// attach the same labels to all your metrics. Those use cases are
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels,-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
// Buckets defines the buckets into which observations are counted. Each
@ -169,7 +165,7 @@ func NewHistogram(opts HistogramOpts) Histogram {
func newHistogram(desc *Desc, opts HistogramOpts, labelValues ...string) Histogram {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
panic(errInconsistentCardinality)
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, labelValues))
}
for _, n := range desc.variableLabels {
@ -191,6 +187,7 @@ func newHistogram(desc *Desc, opts HistogramOpts, labelValues ...string) Histogr
desc: desc,
upperBounds: opts.Buckets,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
counts: [2]*histogramCounts{&histogramCounts{}, &histogramCounts{}},
}
for i, upperBound := range h.upperBounds {
if i < len(h.upperBounds)-1 {
@ -207,28 +204,53 @@ func newHistogram(desc *Desc, opts HistogramOpts, labelValues ...string) Histogr
}
}
}
// Finally we know the final length of h.upperBounds and can make counts.
h.counts = make([]uint64, len(h.upperBounds))
// Finally we know the final length of h.upperBounds and can make counts
// for both states:
h.counts[0].buckets = make([]uint64, len(h.upperBounds))
h.counts[1].buckets = make([]uint64, len(h.upperBounds))
h.init(h) // Init self-collection.
return h
}
type histogram struct {
type histogramCounts struct {
// sumBits contains the bits of the float64 representing the sum of all
// observations. sumBits and count have to go first in the struct to
// guarantee alignment for atomic operations.
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
sumBits uint64
count uint64
buckets []uint64
}
type histogram struct {
// countAndHotIdx is a complicated one. For lock-free yet atomic
// observations, we need to save the total count of observations again,
// combined with the index of the currently-hot counts struct, so that
// we can perform the operation on both values atomically. The least
// significant bit defines the hot counts struct. The remaining 63 bits
// represent the total count of observations. This happens under the
// assumption that the 63bit count will never overflow. Rationale: An
// observations takes about 30ns. Let's assume it could happen in
// 10ns. Overflowing the counter will then take at least (2^63)*10ns,
// which is about 3000 years.
//
// This has to be first in the struct for 64bit alignment. See
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
countAndHotIdx uint64
selfCollector
// Note that there is no mutex required.
desc *Desc
desc *Desc
writeMtx sync.Mutex // Only used in the Write method.
upperBounds []float64
counts []uint64
// Two counts, one is "hot" for lock-free observations, the other is
// "cold" for writing out a dto.Metric. It has to be an array of
// pointers to guarantee 64bit alignment of the histogramCounts, see
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG.
counts [2]*histogramCounts
hotIdx int // Index of currently-hot counts. Only used within Write.
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
@ -248,36 +270,113 @@ func (h *histogram) Observe(v float64) {
// 100 buckets: 78.1 ns/op linear - binary 54.9 ns/op
// 300 buckets: 154 ns/op linear - binary 61.6 ns/op
i := sort.SearchFloat64s(h.upperBounds, v)
if i < len(h.counts) {
atomic.AddUint64(&h.counts[i], 1)
// We increment h.countAndHotIdx by 2 so that the counter in the upper
// 63 bits gets incremented by 1. At the same time, we get the new value
// back, which we can use to find the currently-hot counts.
n := atomic.AddUint64(&h.countAndHotIdx, 2)
hotCounts := h.counts[n%2]
if i < len(h.upperBounds) {
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.buckets[i], 1)
}
atomic.AddUint64(&h.count, 1)
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&h.sumBits)
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + v)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&h.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
break
}
}
// Increment count last as we take it as a signal that the observation
// is complete.
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.count, 1)
}
func (h *histogram) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
his := &dto.Histogram{}
buckets := make([]*dto.Bucket, len(h.upperBounds))
var (
his = &dto.Histogram{}
buckets = make([]*dto.Bucket, len(h.upperBounds))
hotCounts, coldCounts *histogramCounts
count uint64
)
his.SampleSum = proto.Float64(math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&h.sumBits)))
his.SampleCount = proto.Uint64(atomic.LoadUint64(&h.count))
var count uint64
// For simplicity, we mutex the rest of this method. It is not in the
// hot path, i.e. Observe is called much more often than Write. The
// complication of making Write lock-free isn't worth it.
h.writeMtx.Lock()
defer h.writeMtx.Unlock()
// This is a bit arcane, which is why the following spells out this if
// clause in English:
//
// If the currently-hot counts struct is #0, we atomically increment
// h.countAndHotIdx by 1 so that from now on Observe will use the counts
// struct #1. Furthermore, the atomic increment gives us the new value,
// which, in its most significant 63 bits, tells us the count of
// observations done so far up to and including currently ongoing
// observations still using the counts struct just changed from hot to
// cold. To have a normal uint64 for the count, we bitshift by 1 and
// save the result in count. We also set h.hotIdx to 1 for the next
// Write call, and we will refer to counts #1 as hotCounts and to counts
// #0 as coldCounts.
//
// If the currently-hot counts struct is #1, we do the corresponding
// things the other way round. We have to _decrement_ h.countAndHotIdx
// (which is a bit arcane in itself, as we have to express -1 with an
// unsigned int...).
if h.hotIdx == 0 {
count = atomic.AddUint64(&h.countAndHotIdx, 1) >> 1
h.hotIdx = 1
hotCounts = h.counts[1]
coldCounts = h.counts[0]
} else {
count = atomic.AddUint64(&h.countAndHotIdx, ^uint64(0)) >> 1 // Decrement.
h.hotIdx = 0
hotCounts = h.counts[0]
coldCounts = h.counts[1]
}
// Now we have to wait for the now-declared-cold counts to actually cool
// down, i.e. wait for all observations still using it to finish. That's
// the case once the count in the cold counts struct is the same as the
// one atomically retrieved from the upper 63bits of h.countAndHotIdx.
for {
if count == atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.count) {
break
}
runtime.Gosched() // Let observations get work done.
}
his.SampleCount = proto.Uint64(count)
his.SampleSum = proto.Float64(math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.sumBits)))
var cumCount uint64
for i, upperBound := range h.upperBounds {
count += atomic.LoadUint64(&h.counts[i])
cumCount += atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.buckets[i])
buckets[i] = &dto.Bucket{
CumulativeCount: proto.Uint64(count),
CumulativeCount: proto.Uint64(cumCount),
UpperBound: proto.Float64(upperBound),
}
}
his.Bucket = buckets
out.Histogram = his
out.Label = h.labelPairs
// Finally add all the cold counts to the new hot counts and reset the cold counts.
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.count, count)
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.count, 0)
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + his.GetSampleSum())
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.sumBits, 0)
break
}
}
for i := range h.upperBounds {
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.buckets[i], atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.buckets[i]))
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.buckets[i], 0)
}
return nil
}
@ -287,12 +386,11 @@ func (h *histogram) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// (e.g. HTTP request latencies, partitioned by status code and method). Create
// instances with NewHistogramVec.
type HistogramVec struct {
*MetricVec
*metricVec
}
// NewHistogramVec creates a new HistogramVec based on the provided HistogramOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names. At least one label name must be
// provided.
// partitioned by the given label names.
func NewHistogramVec(opts HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *HistogramVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
@ -301,28 +399,58 @@ func NewHistogramVec(opts HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *HistogramVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &HistogramVec{
MetricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newHistogram(desc, opts, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues replaces the method of the same name in
// MetricVec. The difference is that this method returns an Observer and not a
// Metric so that no type conversion to an Observer is required.
func (m *HistogramVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Histogram for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Histogram is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Histogram to only
// create the new Histogram but leave it at its starting value, a Histogram without
// any observations.
//
// Keeping the Histogram for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Histogram from the HistogramVec. In that case, the
// Histogram will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Histogram with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith replaces the method of the same name in MetricVec. The
// difference is that this method returns an Observer and not a Metric so that no
// type conversion to an Observer is required.
func (m *HistogramVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
// GetMetricWith returns the Histogram for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Histogram is created. Implications of
// creating a Histogram without using it and keeping the Histogram for later use
// are the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
@ -330,18 +458,57 @@ func (m *HistogramVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. By not returning an
// error, WithLabelValues allows shortcuts like
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Observe(42.21)
func (m *HistogramVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Observer {
return m.MetricVec.WithLabelValues(lvs...).(Observer)
func (v *HistogramVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Observer {
h, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return h
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. By not returning an error, With allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Observe(42.21)
func (m *HistogramVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
return m.MetricVec.With(labels).(Observer)
// With works as GetMetricWith but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Observe(42.21)
func (v *HistogramVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
h, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return h
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the HistogramVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *HistogramVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (ObserverVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &HistogramVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *HistogramVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) ObserverVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
type constHistogram struct {
@ -393,7 +560,7 @@ func (h *constHistogram) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// bucket.
//
// NewConstHistogram returns an error if the length of labelValues is not
// consistent with the variable labels in Desc.
// consistent with the variable labels in Desc or if Desc is invalid.
func NewConstHistogram(
desc *Desc,
count uint64,
@ -401,8 +568,11 @@ func NewConstHistogram(
buckets map[float64]uint64,
labelValues ...string,
) (Metric, error) {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
return nil, errInconsistentCardinality
if desc.err != nil {
return nil, desc.err
}
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(desc.variableLabels)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &constHistogram{
desc: desc,

View File

@ -15,9 +15,7 @@ package prometheus
import (
"bufio"
"bytes"
"compress/gzip"
"fmt"
"io"
"net"
"net/http"
@ -41,19 +39,10 @@ const (
acceptEncodingHeader = "Accept-Encoding"
)
var bufPool sync.Pool
func getBuf() *bytes.Buffer {
buf := bufPool.Get()
if buf == nil {
return &bytes.Buffer{}
}
return buf.(*bytes.Buffer)
}
func giveBuf(buf *bytes.Buffer) {
buf.Reset()
bufPool.Put(buf)
var gzipPool = sync.Pool{
New: func() interface{} {
return gzip.NewWriter(nil)
},
}
// Handler returns an HTTP handler for the DefaultGatherer. It is
@ -61,69 +50,50 @@ func giveBuf(buf *bytes.Buffer) {
// name).
//
// Deprecated: Please note the issues described in the doc comment of
// InstrumentHandler. You might want to consider using promhttp.Handler instead
// (which is not instrumented, but can be instrumented with the tooling provided
// in package promhttp).
// InstrumentHandler. You might want to consider using promhttp.Handler instead.
func Handler() http.Handler {
return InstrumentHandler("prometheus", UninstrumentedHandler())
}
// UninstrumentedHandler returns an HTTP handler for the DefaultGatherer.
//
// Deprecated: Use promhttp.Handler instead. See there for further documentation.
// Deprecated: Use promhttp.HandlerFor(DefaultGatherer, promhttp.HandlerOpts{})
// instead. See there for further documentation.
func UninstrumentedHandler() http.Handler {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(rsp http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
mfs, err := DefaultGatherer.Gather()
if err != nil {
http.Error(w, "An error has occurred during metrics collection:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
contentType := expfmt.Negotiate(req.Header)
buf := getBuf()
defer giveBuf(buf)
writer, encoding := decorateWriter(req, buf)
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(writer, contentType)
var lastErr error
header := rsp.Header()
header.Set(contentTypeHeader, string(contentType))
w := io.Writer(rsp)
if gzipAccepted(req.Header) {
header.Set(contentEncodingHeader, "gzip")
gz := gzipPool.Get().(*gzip.Writer)
defer gzipPool.Put(gz)
gz.Reset(w)
defer gz.Close()
w = gz
}
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(w, contentType)
for _, mf := range mfs {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
lastErr = err
http.Error(w, "An error has occurred during metrics encoding:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
}
if closer, ok := writer.(io.Closer); ok {
closer.Close()
}
if lastErr != nil && buf.Len() == 0 {
http.Error(w, "No metrics encoded, last error:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
header := w.Header()
header.Set(contentTypeHeader, string(contentType))
header.Set(contentLengthHeader, fmt.Sprint(buf.Len()))
if encoding != "" {
header.Set(contentEncodingHeader, encoding)
}
w.Write(buf.Bytes())
})
}
// decorateWriter wraps a writer to handle gzip compression if requested. It
// returns the decorated writer and the appropriate "Content-Encoding" header
// (which is empty if no compression is enabled).
func decorateWriter(request *http.Request, writer io.Writer) (io.Writer, string) {
header := request.Header.Get(acceptEncodingHeader)
parts := strings.Split(header, ",")
for _, part := range parts {
part := strings.TrimSpace(part)
if part == "gzip" || strings.HasPrefix(part, "gzip;") {
return gzip.NewWriter(writer), "gzip"
}
}
return writer, ""
}
var instLabels = []string{"method", "code"}
type nower interface {
@ -140,16 +110,6 @@ var now nower = nowFunc(func() time.Time {
return time.Now()
})
func nowSeries(t ...time.Time) nower {
return nowFunc(func() time.Time {
defer func() {
t = t[1:]
}()
return t[0]
})
}
// InstrumentHandler wraps the given HTTP handler for instrumentation. It
// registers four metric collectors (if not already done) and reports HTTP
// metrics to the (newly or already) registered collectors: http_requests_total
@ -160,21 +120,14 @@ func nowSeries(t ...time.Time) nower {
// (label name "method") and HTTP status code (label name "code").
//
// Deprecated: InstrumentHandler has several issues. Use the tooling provided in
// package promhttp instead. The issues are the following:
//
// - It uses Summaries rather than Histograms. Summaries are not useful if
// aggregation across multiple instances is required.
//
// - It uses microseconds as unit, which is deprecated and should be replaced by
// seconds.
//
// - The size of the request is calculated in a separate goroutine. Since this
// calculator requires access to the request header, it creates a race with
// any writes to the header performed during request handling.
// httputil.ReverseProxy is a prominent example for a handler
// performing such writes.
//
// - It has additional issues with HTTP/2, cf.
// package promhttp instead. The issues are the following: (1) It uses Summaries
// rather than Histograms. Summaries are not useful if aggregation across
// multiple instances is required. (2) It uses microseconds as unit, which is
// deprecated and should be replaced by seconds. (3) The size of the request is
// calculated in a separate goroutine. Since this calculator requires access to
// the request header, it creates a race with any writes to the header performed
// during request handling. httputil.ReverseProxy is a prominent example for a
// handler performing such writes. (4) It has additional issues with HTTP/2, cf.
// https://github.com/prometheus/client_golang/issues/272.
func InstrumentHandler(handlerName string, handler http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
return InstrumentHandlerFunc(handlerName, handler.ServeHTTP)
@ -318,7 +271,7 @@ func InstrumentHandlerFuncWithOpts(opts SummaryOpts, handlerFunc func(http.Respo
}
func computeApproximateRequestSize(r *http.Request) <-chan int {
// Get URL length in current go routine for avoiding a race condition.
// Get URL length in current goroutine for avoiding a race condition.
// HandlerFunc that runs in parallel may modify the URL.
s := 0
if r.URL != nil {
@ -353,10 +306,9 @@ func computeApproximateRequestSize(r *http.Request) <-chan int {
type responseWriterDelegator struct {
http.ResponseWriter
handler, method string
status int
written int64
wroteHeader bool
status int
written int64
wroteHeader bool
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) WriteHeader(code int) {
@ -522,3 +474,31 @@ func sanitizeCode(s int) string {
return strconv.Itoa(s)
}
}
// gzipAccepted returns whether the client will accept gzip-encoded content.
func gzipAccepted(header http.Header) bool {
a := header.Get(acceptEncodingHeader)
parts := strings.Split(a, ",")
for _, part := range parts {
part = strings.TrimSpace(part)
if part == "gzip" || strings.HasPrefix(part, "gzip;") {
return true
}
}
return false
}
// httpError removes any content-encoding header and then calls http.Error with
// the provided error and http.StatusInternalServerErrer. Error contents is
// supposed to be uncompressed plain text. However, same as with a plain
// http.Error, any header settings will be void if the header has already been
// sent. The error message will still be written to the writer, but it will
// probably be of limited use.
func httpError(rsp http.ResponseWriter, err error) {
rsp.Header().Del(contentEncodingHeader)
http.Error(
rsp,
"An error has occurred while serving metrics:\n\n"+err.Error(),
http.StatusInternalServerError,
)
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
load("@io_bazel_rules_go//go:def.bzl", "go_library")
go_library(
name = "go_default_library",
srcs = ["metric.go"],
importmap = "k8s.io/kubernetes/vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal",
importpath = "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal",
visibility = ["//visibility:public"],
deps = ["//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_model/go:go_default_library"],
)
filegroup(
name = "package-srcs",
srcs = glob(["**"]),
tags = ["automanaged"],
visibility = ["//visibility:private"],
)
filegroup(
name = "all-srcs",
srcs = [":package-srcs"],
tags = ["automanaged"],
visibility = ["//visibility:public"],
)

View File

@ -0,0 +1,85 @@
// Copyright 2018 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package internal
import (
"sort"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// metricSorter is a sortable slice of *dto.Metric.
type metricSorter []*dto.Metric
func (s metricSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s metricSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s metricSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
if len(s[i].Label) != len(s[j].Label) {
// This should not happen. The metrics are
// inconsistent. However, we have to deal with the fact, as
// people might use custom collectors or metric family injection
// to create inconsistent metrics. So let's simply compare the
// number of labels in this case. That will still yield
// reproducible sorting.
return len(s[i].Label) < len(s[j].Label)
}
for n, lp := range s[i].Label {
vi := lp.GetValue()
vj := s[j].Label[n].GetValue()
if vi != vj {
return vi < vj
}
}
// We should never arrive here. Multiple metrics with the same
// label set in the same scrape will lead to undefined ingestion
// behavior. However, as above, we have to provide stable sorting
// here, even for inconsistent metrics. So sort equal metrics
// by their timestamp, with missing timestamps (implying "now")
// coming last.
if s[i].TimestampMs == nil {
return false
}
if s[j].TimestampMs == nil {
return true
}
return s[i].GetTimestampMs() < s[j].GetTimestampMs()
}
// NormalizeMetricFamilies returns a MetricFamily slice with empty
// MetricFamilies pruned and the remaining MetricFamilies sorted by name within
// the slice, with the contained Metrics sorted within each MetricFamily.
func NormalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName map[string]*dto.MetricFamily) []*dto.MetricFamily {
for _, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
sort.Sort(metricSorter(mf.Metric))
}
names := make([]string, 0, len(metricFamiliesByName))
for name, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
if len(mf.Metric) > 0 {
names = append(names, name)
}
}
sort.Strings(names)
result := make([]*dto.MetricFamily, 0, len(names))
for _, name := range names {
result = append(result, metricFamiliesByName[name])
}
return result
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,87 @@
// Copyright 2018 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"strings"
"unicode/utf8"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
)
// Labels represents a collection of label name -> value mappings. This type is
// commonly used with the With(Labels) and GetMetricWith(Labels) methods of
// metric vector Collectors, e.g.:
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
//
// The other use-case is the specification of constant label pairs in Opts or to
// create a Desc.
type Labels map[string]string
// reservedLabelPrefix is a prefix which is not legal in user-supplied
// label names.
const reservedLabelPrefix = "__"
var errInconsistentCardinality = errors.New("inconsistent label cardinality")
func makeInconsistentCardinalityError(fqName string, labels, labelValues []string) error {
return fmt.Errorf(
"%s: %q has %d variable labels named %q but %d values %q were provided",
errInconsistentCardinality, fqName,
len(labels), labels,
len(labelValues), labelValues,
)
}
func validateValuesInLabels(labels Labels, expectedNumberOfValues int) error {
if len(labels) != expectedNumberOfValues {
return fmt.Errorf(
"%s: expected %d label values but got %d in %#v",
errInconsistentCardinality, expectedNumberOfValues,
len(labels), labels,
)
}
for name, val := range labels {
if !utf8.ValidString(val) {
return fmt.Errorf("label %s: value %q is not valid UTF-8", name, val)
}
}
return nil
}
func validateLabelValues(vals []string, expectedNumberOfValues int) error {
if len(vals) != expectedNumberOfValues {
return fmt.Errorf(
"%s: expected %d label values but got %d in %#v",
errInconsistentCardinality, expectedNumberOfValues,
len(vals), vals,
)
}
for _, val := range vals {
if !utf8.ValidString(val) {
return fmt.Errorf("label value %q is not valid UTF-8", val)
}
}
return nil
}
func checkLabelName(l string) bool {
return model.LabelName(l).IsValid() && !strings.HasPrefix(l, reservedLabelPrefix)
}

View File

@ -15,6 +15,9 @@ package prometheus
import (
"strings"
"time"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
@ -43,9 +46,8 @@ type Metric interface {
// While populating dto.Metric, it is the responsibility of the
// implementation to ensure validity of the Metric protobuf (like valid
// UTF-8 strings or syntactically valid metric and label names). It is
// recommended to sort labels lexicographically. (Implementers may find
// LabelPairSorter useful for that.) Callers of Write should still make
// sure of sorting if they depend on it.
// recommended to sort labels lexicographically. Callers of Write should
// still make sure of sorting if they depend on it.
Write(*dto.Metric) error
// TODO(beorn7): The original rationale of passing in a pre-allocated
// dto.Metric protobuf to save allocations has disappeared. The
@ -57,8 +59,9 @@ type Metric interface {
// implementation XXX has its own XXXOpts type, but in most cases, it is just be
// an alias of this type (which might change when the requirement arises.)
//
// It is mandatory to set Name and Help to a non-empty string. All other fields
// are optional and can safely be left at their zero value.
// It is mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. All other fields are
// optional and can safely be left at their zero value, although it is strongly
// encouraged to set a Help string.
type Opts struct {
// Namespace, Subsystem, and Name are components of the fully-qualified
// name of the Metric (created by joining these components with
@ -69,7 +72,7 @@ type Opts struct {
Subsystem string
Name string
// Help provides information about this metric. Mandatory!
// Help provides information about this metric.
//
// Metrics with the same fully-qualified name must have the same Help
// string.
@ -79,20 +82,12 @@ type Opts struct {
// with the same fully-qualified name must have the same label names in
// their ConstLabels.
//
// Note that in most cases, labels have a value that varies during the
// lifetime of a process. Those labels are usually managed with a metric
// vector collector (like CounterVec, GaugeVec, UntypedVec). ConstLabels
// serve only special purposes. One is for the special case where the
// value of a label does not change during the lifetime of a process,
// e.g. if the revision of the running binary is put into a
// label. Another, more advanced purpose is if more than one Collector
// needs to collect Metrics with the same fully-qualified name. In that
// case, those Metrics must differ in the values of their
// ConstLabels. See the Collector examples.
//
// If the value of a label never changes (not even between binaries),
// that label most likely should not be a label at all (but part of the
// metric name).
// ConstLabels are only used rarely. In particular, do not use them to
// attach the same labels to all your metrics. Those use cases are
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels,-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
}
@ -118,37 +113,22 @@ func BuildFQName(namespace, subsystem, name string) string {
return name
}
// LabelPairSorter implements sort.Interface. It is used to sort a slice of
// dto.LabelPair pointers. This is useful for implementing the Write method of
// custom metrics.
type LabelPairSorter []*dto.LabelPair
// labelPairSorter implements sort.Interface. It is used to sort a slice of
// dto.LabelPair pointers.
type labelPairSorter []*dto.LabelPair
func (s LabelPairSorter) Len() int {
func (s labelPairSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s LabelPairSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
func (s labelPairSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s LabelPairSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
func (s labelPairSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
return s[i].GetName() < s[j].GetName()
}
type hashSorter []uint64
func (s hashSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s hashSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s hashSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
return s[i] < s[j]
}
type invalidMetric struct {
desc *Desc
err error
@ -164,3 +144,31 @@ func NewInvalidMetric(desc *Desc, err error) Metric {
func (m *invalidMetric) Desc() *Desc { return m.desc }
func (m *invalidMetric) Write(*dto.Metric) error { return m.err }
type timestampedMetric struct {
Metric
t time.Time
}
func (m timestampedMetric) Write(pb *dto.Metric) error {
e := m.Metric.Write(pb)
pb.TimestampMs = proto.Int64(m.t.Unix()*1000 + int64(m.t.Nanosecond()/1000000))
return e
}
// NewMetricWithTimestamp returns a new Metric wrapping the provided Metric in a
// way that it has an explicit timestamp set to the provided Time. This is only
// useful in rare cases as the timestamp of a Prometheus metric should usually
// be set by the Prometheus server during scraping. Exceptions include mirroring
// metrics with given timestamps from other metric
// sources.
//
// NewMetricWithTimestamp works best with MustNewConstMetric,
// MustNewConstHistogram, and MustNewConstSummary, see example.
//
// Currently, the exposition formats used by Prometheus are limited to
// millisecond resolution. Thus, the provided time will be rounded down to the
// next full millisecond value.
func NewMetricWithTimestamp(t time.Time, m Metric) Metric {
return timestampedMetric{Metric: m, t: t}
}

View File

@ -45,6 +45,8 @@ type ObserverVec interface {
GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error)
With(Labels) Observer
WithLabelValues(...string) Observer
CurryWith(Labels) (ObserverVec, error)
MustCurryWith(Labels) ObserverVec
Collector
}

View File

@ -13,46 +13,74 @@
package prometheus
import "github.com/prometheus/procfs"
import (
"errors"
"os"
"github.com/prometheus/procfs"
)
type processCollector struct {
pid int
collectFn func(chan<- Metric)
pidFn func() (int, error)
reportErrors bool
cpuTotal *Desc
openFDs, maxFDs *Desc
vsize, rss *Desc
vsize, maxVsize *Desc
rss *Desc
startTime *Desc
}
// NewProcessCollector returns a collector which exports the current state of
// process metrics including cpu, memory and file descriptor usage as well as
// the process start time for the given process id under the given namespace.
func NewProcessCollector(pid int, namespace string) Collector {
return NewProcessCollectorPIDFn(
func() (int, error) { return pid, nil },
namespace,
)
// ProcessCollectorOpts defines the behavior of a process metrics collector
// created with NewProcessCollector.
type ProcessCollectorOpts struct {
// PidFn returns the PID of the process the collector collects metrics
// for. It is called upon each collection. By default, the PID of the
// current process is used, as determined on construction time by
// calling os.Getpid().
PidFn func() (int, error)
// If non-empty, each of the collected metrics is prefixed by the
// provided string and an underscore ("_").
Namespace string
// If true, any error encountered during collection is reported as an
// invalid metric (see NewInvalidMetric). Otherwise, errors are ignored
// and the collected metrics will be incomplete. (Possibly, no metrics
// will be collected at all.) While that's usually not desired, it is
// appropriate for the common "mix-in" of process metrics, where process
// metrics are nice to have, but failing to collect them should not
// disrupt the collection of the remaining metrics.
ReportErrors bool
}
// NewProcessCollectorPIDFn returns a collector which exports the current state
// of process metrics including cpu, memory and file descriptor usage as well
// as the process start time under the given namespace. The given pidFn is
// called on each collect and is used to determine the process to export
// metrics for.
func NewProcessCollectorPIDFn(
pidFn func() (int, error),
namespace string,
) Collector {
// NewProcessCollector returns a collector which exports the current state of
// process metrics including CPU, memory and file descriptor usage as well as
// the process start time. The detailed behavior is defined by the provided
// ProcessCollectorOpts. The zero value of ProcessCollectorOpts creates a
// collector for the current process with an empty namespace string and no error
// reporting.
//
// Currently, the collector depends on a Linux-style proc filesystem and
// therefore only exports metrics for Linux.
//
// Note: An older version of this function had the following signature:
//
// NewProcessCollector(pid int, namespace string) Collector
//
// Most commonly, it was called as
//
// NewProcessCollector(os.Getpid(), "")
//
// The following call of the current version is equivalent to the above:
//
// NewProcessCollector(ProcessCollectorOpts{})
func NewProcessCollector(opts ProcessCollectorOpts) Collector {
ns := ""
if len(namespace) > 0 {
ns = namespace + "_"
if len(opts.Namespace) > 0 {
ns = opts.Namespace + "_"
}
c := processCollector{
pidFn: pidFn,
collectFn: func(chan<- Metric) {},
c := &processCollector{
reportErrors: opts.ReportErrors,
cpuTotal: NewDesc(
ns+"process_cpu_seconds_total",
"Total user and system CPU time spent in seconds.",
@ -73,6 +101,11 @@ func NewProcessCollectorPIDFn(
"Virtual memory size in bytes.",
nil, nil,
),
maxVsize: NewDesc(
ns+"process_virtual_memory_max_bytes",
"Maximum amount of virtual memory available in bytes.",
nil, nil,
),
rss: NewDesc(
ns+"process_resident_memory_bytes",
"Resident memory size in bytes.",
@ -85,12 +118,23 @@ func NewProcessCollectorPIDFn(
),
}
if opts.PidFn == nil {
pid := os.Getpid()
c.pidFn = func() (int, error) { return pid, nil }
} else {
c.pidFn = opts.PidFn
}
// Set up process metric collection if supported by the runtime.
if _, err := procfs.NewStat(); err == nil {
c.collectFn = c.processCollect
} else {
c.collectFn = func(ch chan<- Metric) {
c.reportError(ch, nil, errors.New("process metrics not supported on this platform"))
}
}
return &c
return c
}
// Describe returns all descriptions of the collector.
@ -99,6 +143,7 @@ func (c *processCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- c.openFDs
ch <- c.maxFDs
ch <- c.vsize
ch <- c.maxVsize
ch <- c.rss
ch <- c.startTime
}
@ -108,16 +153,16 @@ func (c *processCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
c.collectFn(ch)
}
// TODO(ts): Bring back error reporting by reverting 7faf9e7 as soon as the
// client allows users to configure the error behavior.
func (c *processCollector) processCollect(ch chan<- Metric) {
pid, err := c.pidFn()
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
p, err := procfs.NewProc(pid)
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
@ -127,14 +172,33 @@ func (c *processCollector) processCollect(ch chan<- Metric) {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.rss, GaugeValue, float64(stat.ResidentMemory()))
if startTime, err := stat.StartTime(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.startTime, GaugeValue, startTime)
} else {
c.reportError(ch, c.startTime, err)
}
} else {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
}
if fds, err := p.FileDescriptorsLen(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.openFDs, GaugeValue, float64(fds))
} else {
c.reportError(ch, c.openFDs, err)
}
if limits, err := p.NewLimits(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.maxFDs, GaugeValue, float64(limits.OpenFiles))
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.maxVsize, GaugeValue, float64(limits.AddressSpace))
} else {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
}
}
func (c *processCollector) reportError(ch chan<- Metric, desc *Desc, err error) {
if !c.reportErrors {
return
}
if desc == nil {
desc = NewInvalidDesc(err)
}
ch <- NewInvalidMetric(desc, err)
}

View File

@ -3,8 +3,9 @@ load("@io_bazel_rules_go//go:def.bzl", "go_library")
go_library(
name = "go_default_library",
srcs = [
"delegator_1_7.go",
"delegator.go",
"delegator_1_8.go",
"delegator_pre_1_8.go",
"http.go",
"instrument_client.go",
"instrument_client_1_8.go",

View File

@ -0,0 +1,199 @@
// Copyright 2017 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package promhttp
import (
"bufio"
"io"
"net"
"net/http"
)
const (
closeNotifier = 1 << iota
flusher
hijacker
readerFrom
pusher
)
type delegator interface {
http.ResponseWriter
Status() int
Written() int64
}
type responseWriterDelegator struct {
http.ResponseWriter
handler, method string
status int
written int64
wroteHeader bool
observeWriteHeader func(int)
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Status() int {
return r.status
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Written() int64 {
return r.written
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) WriteHeader(code int) {
r.status = code
r.wroteHeader = true
r.ResponseWriter.WriteHeader(code)
if r.observeWriteHeader != nil {
r.observeWriteHeader(code)
}
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Write(b []byte) (int, error) {
if !r.wroteHeader {
r.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
n, err := r.ResponseWriter.Write(b)
r.written += int64(n)
return n, err
}
type closeNotifierDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type flusherDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type hijackerDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type readerFromDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
func (d closeNotifierDelegator) CloseNotify() <-chan bool {
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.CloseNotifier).CloseNotify()
}
func (d flusherDelegator) Flush() {
d.ResponseWriter.(http.Flusher).Flush()
}
func (d hijackerDelegator) Hijack() (net.Conn, *bufio.ReadWriter, error) {
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.Hijacker).Hijack()
}
func (d readerFromDelegator) ReadFrom(re io.Reader) (int64, error) {
if !d.wroteHeader {
d.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
n, err := d.ResponseWriter.(io.ReaderFrom).ReadFrom(re)
d.written += n
return n, err
}
var pickDelegator = make([]func(*responseWriterDelegator) delegator, 32)
func init() {
// TODO(beorn7): Code generation would help here.
pickDelegator[0] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 0
return d
}
pickDelegator[closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 1
return closeNotifierDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 2
return flusherDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 3
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 4
return hijackerDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 5
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 6
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 7
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 8
return readerFromDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 9
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 10
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 11
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 12
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 13
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 14
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 15
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
}

View File

@ -20,54 +20,162 @@ import (
"net/http"
)
// newDelegator handles the four different methods of upgrading a
// http.ResponseWriter to delegator.
type pusherDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
func (d pusherDelegator) Push(target string, opts *http.PushOptions) error {
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.Pusher).Push(target, opts)
}
func init() {
pickDelegator[pusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 16
return pusherDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 17
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 18
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 19
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 20
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 21
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 22
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { //23
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 24
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 25
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 26
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 27
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 28
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 29
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 30
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 31
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
}
func newDelegator(w http.ResponseWriter, observeWriteHeaderFunc func(int)) delegator {
d := &responseWriterDelegator{
ResponseWriter: w,
observeWriteHeader: observeWriteHeaderFunc,
}
_, cn := w.(http.CloseNotifier)
_, fl := w.(http.Flusher)
_, hj := w.(http.Hijacker)
_, ps := w.(http.Pusher)
_, rf := w.(io.ReaderFrom)
// Check for the four most common combination of interfaces a
// http.ResponseWriter might implement.
switch {
case cn && fl && hj && rf && ps:
// All interfaces.
return &fancyPushDelegator{
fancyDelegator: &fancyDelegator{d},
p: &pushDelegator{d},
}
case cn && fl && hj && rf:
// All interfaces, except http.Pusher.
return &fancyDelegator{d}
case ps:
// Just http.Pusher.
return &pushDelegator{d}
id := 0
if _, ok := w.(http.CloseNotifier); ok {
id += closeNotifier
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Flusher); ok {
id += flusher
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Hijacker); ok {
id += hijacker
}
if _, ok := w.(io.ReaderFrom); ok {
id += readerFrom
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Pusher); ok {
id += pusher
}
return d
}
type fancyPushDelegator struct {
p *pushDelegator
*fancyDelegator
}
func (f *fancyPushDelegator) Push(target string, opts *http.PushOptions) error {
return f.p.Push(target, opts)
}
type pushDelegator struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
}
func (f *pushDelegator) Push(target string, opts *http.PushOptions) error {
return f.ResponseWriter.(http.Pusher).Push(target, opts)
return pickDelegator[id](d)
}

View File

@ -26,13 +26,19 @@ func newDelegator(w http.ResponseWriter, observeWriteHeaderFunc func(int)) deleg
observeWriteHeader: observeWriteHeaderFunc,
}
_, cn := w.(http.CloseNotifier)
_, fl := w.(http.Flusher)
_, hj := w.(http.Hijacker)
_, rf := w.(io.ReaderFrom)
if cn && fl && hj && rf {
return &fancyDelegator{d}
id := 0
if _, ok := w.(http.CloseNotifier); ok {
id += closeNotifier
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Flusher); ok {
id += flusher
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Hijacker); ok {
id += hijacker
}
if _, ok := w.(io.ReaderFrom); ok {
id += readerFrom
}
return d
return pickDelegator[id](d)
}

View File

@ -32,13 +32,13 @@
package promhttp
import (
"bytes"
"compress/gzip"
"fmt"
"io"
"net/http"
"strings"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
@ -52,36 +52,56 @@ const (
acceptEncodingHeader = "Accept-Encoding"
)
var bufPool sync.Pool
func getBuf() *bytes.Buffer {
buf := bufPool.Get()
if buf == nil {
return &bytes.Buffer{}
}
return buf.(*bytes.Buffer)
var gzipPool = sync.Pool{
New: func() interface{} {
return gzip.NewWriter(nil)
},
}
func giveBuf(buf *bytes.Buffer) {
buf.Reset()
bufPool.Put(buf)
}
// Handler returns an HTTP handler for the prometheus.DefaultGatherer. The
// Handler uses the default HandlerOpts, i.e. report the first error as an HTTP
// error, no error logging, and compression if requested by the client.
// Handler returns an http.Handler for the prometheus.DefaultGatherer, using
// default HandlerOpts, i.e. it reports the first error as an HTTP error, it has
// no error logging, and it applies compression if requested by the client.
//
// If you want to create a Handler for the DefaultGatherer with different
// HandlerOpts, create it with HandlerFor with prometheus.DefaultGatherer and
// your desired HandlerOpts.
// The returned http.Handler is already instrumented using the
// InstrumentMetricHandler function and the prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If you
// create multiple http.Handlers by separate calls of the Handler function, the
// metrics used for instrumentation will be shared between them, providing
// global scrape counts.
//
// This function is meant to cover the bulk of basic use cases. If you are doing
// anything that requires more customization (including using a non-default
// Gatherer, different instrumentation, and non-default HandlerOpts), use the
// HandlerFor function. See there for details.
func Handler() http.Handler {
return HandlerFor(prometheus.DefaultGatherer, HandlerOpts{})
return InstrumentMetricHandler(
prometheus.DefaultRegisterer, HandlerFor(prometheus.DefaultGatherer, HandlerOpts{}),
)
}
// HandlerFor returns an http.Handler for the provided Gatherer. The behavior
// of the Handler is defined by the provided HandlerOpts.
// HandlerFor returns an uninstrumented http.Handler for the provided
// Gatherer. The behavior of the Handler is defined by the provided
// HandlerOpts. Thus, HandlerFor is useful to create http.Handlers for custom
// Gatherers, with non-default HandlerOpts, and/or with custom (or no)
// instrumentation. Use the InstrumentMetricHandler function to apply the same
// kind of instrumentation as it is used by the Handler function.
func HandlerFor(reg prometheus.Gatherer, opts HandlerOpts) http.Handler {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
var inFlightSem chan struct{}
if opts.MaxRequestsInFlight > 0 {
inFlightSem = make(chan struct{}, opts.MaxRequestsInFlight)
}
h := http.HandlerFunc(func(rsp http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
if inFlightSem != nil {
select {
case inFlightSem <- struct{}{}: // All good, carry on.
defer func() { <-inFlightSem }()
default:
http.Error(rsp, fmt.Sprintf(
"Limit of concurrent requests reached (%d), try again later.", opts.MaxRequestsInFlight,
), http.StatusServiceUnavailable)
return
}
}
mfs, err := reg.Gather()
if err != nil {
if opts.ErrorLog != nil {
@ -92,26 +112,40 @@ func HandlerFor(reg prometheus.Gatherer, opts HandlerOpts) http.Handler {
panic(err)
case ContinueOnError:
if len(mfs) == 0 {
http.Error(w, "No metrics gathered, last error:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
// Still report the error if no metrics have been gathered.
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
case HTTPErrorOnError:
http.Error(w, "An error has occurred during metrics gathering:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
}
contentType := expfmt.Negotiate(req.Header)
buf := getBuf()
defer giveBuf(buf)
writer, encoding := decorateWriter(req, buf, opts.DisableCompression)
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(writer, contentType)
header := rsp.Header()
header.Set(contentTypeHeader, string(contentType))
w := io.Writer(rsp)
if !opts.DisableCompression && gzipAccepted(req.Header) {
header.Set(contentEncodingHeader, "gzip")
gz := gzipPool.Get().(*gzip.Writer)
defer gzipPool.Put(gz)
gz.Reset(w)
defer gz.Close()
w = gz
}
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(w, contentType)
var lastErr error
for _, mf := range mfs {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
lastErr = err
if opts.ErrorLog != nil {
opts.ErrorLog.Println("error encoding metric family:", err)
opts.ErrorLog.Println("error encoding and sending metric family:", err)
}
switch opts.ErrorHandling {
case PanicOnError:
@ -119,27 +153,75 @@ func HandlerFor(reg prometheus.Gatherer, opts HandlerOpts) http.Handler {
case ContinueOnError:
// Handled later.
case HTTPErrorOnError:
http.Error(w, "An error has occurred during metrics encoding:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
}
}
if closer, ok := writer.(io.Closer); ok {
closer.Close()
if lastErr != nil {
httpError(rsp, lastErr)
}
if lastErr != nil && buf.Len() == 0 {
http.Error(w, "No metrics encoded, last error:\n\n"+err.Error(), http.StatusInternalServerError)
return
}
header := w.Header()
header.Set(contentTypeHeader, string(contentType))
header.Set(contentLengthHeader, fmt.Sprint(buf.Len()))
if encoding != "" {
header.Set(contentEncodingHeader, encoding)
}
w.Write(buf.Bytes())
// TODO(beorn7): Consider streaming serving of metrics.
})
if opts.Timeout <= 0 {
return h
}
return http.TimeoutHandler(h, opts.Timeout, fmt.Sprintf(
"Exceeded configured timeout of %v.\n",
opts.Timeout,
))
}
// InstrumentMetricHandler is usually used with an http.Handler returned by the
// HandlerFor function. It instruments the provided http.Handler with two
// metrics: A counter vector "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_total" to count
// scrapes partitioned by HTTP status code, and a gauge
// "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_in_flight" to track the number of
// simultaneous scrapes. This function idempotently registers collectors for
// both metrics with the provided Registerer. It panics if the registration
// fails. The provided metrics are useful to see how many scrapes hit the
// monitored target (which could be from different Prometheus servers or other
// scrapers), and how often they overlap (which would result in more than one
// scrape in flight at the same time). Note that the scrapes-in-flight gauge
// will contain the scrape by which it is exposed, while the scrape counter will
// only get incremented after the scrape is complete (as only then the status
// code is known). For tracking scrape durations, use the
// "scrape_duration_seconds" gauge created by the Prometheus server upon each
// scrape.
func InstrumentMetricHandler(reg prometheus.Registerer, handler http.Handler) http.Handler {
cnt := prometheus.NewCounterVec(
prometheus.CounterOpts{
Name: "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_total",
Help: "Total number of scrapes by HTTP status code.",
},
[]string{"code"},
)
// Initialize the most likely HTTP status codes.
cnt.WithLabelValues("200")
cnt.WithLabelValues("500")
cnt.WithLabelValues("503")
if err := reg.Register(cnt); err != nil {
if are, ok := err.(prometheus.AlreadyRegisteredError); ok {
cnt = are.ExistingCollector.(*prometheus.CounterVec)
} else {
panic(err)
}
}
gge := prometheus.NewGauge(prometheus.GaugeOpts{
Name: "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_in_flight",
Help: "Current number of scrapes being served.",
})
if err := reg.Register(gge); err != nil {
if are, ok := err.(prometheus.AlreadyRegisteredError); ok {
gge = are.ExistingCollector.(prometheus.Gauge)
} else {
panic(err)
}
}
return InstrumentHandlerCounter(cnt, InstrumentHandlerInFlight(gge, handler))
}
// HandlerErrorHandling defines how a Handler serving metrics will handle
@ -183,22 +265,47 @@ type HandlerOpts struct {
// If DisableCompression is true, the handler will never compress the
// response, even if requested by the client.
DisableCompression bool
// The number of concurrent HTTP requests is limited to
// MaxRequestsInFlight. Additional requests are responded to with 503
// Service Unavailable and a suitable message in the body. If
// MaxRequestsInFlight is 0 or negative, no limit is applied.
MaxRequestsInFlight int
// If handling a request takes longer than Timeout, it is responded to
// with 503 ServiceUnavailable and a suitable Message. No timeout is
// applied if Timeout is 0 or negative. Note that with the current
// implementation, reaching the timeout simply ends the HTTP requests as
// described above (and even that only if sending of the body hasn't
// started yet), while the bulk work of gathering all the metrics keeps
// running in the background (with the eventual result to be thrown
// away). Until the implementation is improved, it is recommended to
// implement a separate timeout in potentially slow Collectors.
Timeout time.Duration
}
// decorateWriter wraps a writer to handle gzip compression if requested. It
// returns the decorated writer and the appropriate "Content-Encoding" header
// (which is empty if no compression is enabled).
func decorateWriter(request *http.Request, writer io.Writer, compressionDisabled bool) (io.Writer, string) {
if compressionDisabled {
return writer, ""
}
header := request.Header.Get(acceptEncodingHeader)
parts := strings.Split(header, ",")
// gzipAccepted returns whether the client will accept gzip-encoded content.
func gzipAccepted(header http.Header) bool {
a := header.Get(acceptEncodingHeader)
parts := strings.Split(a, ",")
for _, part := range parts {
part := strings.TrimSpace(part)
part = strings.TrimSpace(part)
if part == "gzip" || strings.HasPrefix(part, "gzip;") {
return gzip.NewWriter(writer), "gzip"
return true
}
}
return writer, ""
return false
}
// httpError removes any content-encoding header and then calls http.Error with
// the provided error and http.StatusInternalServerErrer. Error contents is
// supposed to be uncompressed plain text. However, same as with a plain
// http.Error, any header settings will be void if the header has already been
// sent. The error message will still be written to the writer, but it will
// probably be of limited use.
func httpError(rsp http.ResponseWriter, err error) {
rsp.Header().Del(contentEncodingHeader)
http.Error(
rsp,
"An error has occurred while serving metrics:\n\n"+err.Error(),
http.StatusInternalServerError,
)
}

View File

@ -45,12 +45,11 @@ func InstrumentRoundTripperInFlight(gauge prometheus.Gauge, next http.RoundTripp
// InstrumentRoundTripperCounter is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.RoundTripper to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec.
// The CounterVec must have zero, one, or two labels. The only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics if any other instance
// labels are provided. Partitioning of the CounterVec happens by HTTP status
// code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present
// in the CounterVec. For unpartitioned counting, use a CounterVec with
// zero labels.
// The CounterVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. Partitioning of the CounterVec happens by HTTP status code
// and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in the
// CounterVec. For unpartitioned counting, use a CounterVec with zero labels.
//
// If the wrapped RoundTripper panics or returns a non-nil error, the Counter
// is not incremented.
@ -69,18 +68,21 @@ func InstrumentRoundTripperCounter(counter *prometheus.CounterVec, next http.Rou
}
// InstrumentRoundTripperDuration is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.RoundTripper to observe the request duration with the provided ObserverVec.
// The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two labels. The only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics if any other instance
// labels are provided. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec
// is called with the request duration in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP
// status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are
// present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an
// ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
// expensive and should be used judiciously.
// http.RoundTripper to observe the request duration with the provided
// ObserverVec. The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const
// non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names are "code" and
// "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer
// in the ObserverVec is called with the request duration in
// seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped RoundTripper panics or returns a non-nil error, no values are
// reported.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
func InstrumentRoundTripperDuration(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.RoundTripper) RoundTripperFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)

View File

@ -48,8 +48,10 @@ type InstrumentTrace struct {
// RoundTripper and reports times to hook functions provided in the
// InstrumentTrace struct. Hook functions that are not present in the provided
// InstrumentTrace struct are ignored. Times reported to the hook functions are
// time since the start of the request. Note that partitioning of Histograms
// is expensive and should be used judiciously.
// time since the start of the request. Only with Go1.9+, those times are
// guaranteed to never be negative. (Earlier Go versions are not using a
// monotonic clock.) Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and
// should be used judiciously.
//
// For hook functions that receive an error as an argument, no observations are
// made in the event of a non-nil error value.
@ -79,8 +81,8 @@ func InstrumentRoundTripperTrace(it *InstrumentTrace, next http.RoundTripper) Ro
}
},
DNSDone: func(_ httptrace.DNSDoneInfo) {
if it.DNSStart != nil {
it.DNSStart(time.Since(start).Seconds())
if it.DNSDone != nil {
it.DNSDone(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
ConnectStart: func(_, _ string) {

View File

@ -14,9 +14,7 @@
package promhttp
import (
"bufio"
"io"
"net"
"errors"
"net/http"
"strconv"
"strings"
@ -45,10 +43,10 @@ func InstrumentHandlerInFlight(g prometheus.Gauge, next http.Handler) http.Handl
// InstrumentHandlerDuration is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request duration with the provided ObserverVec.
// The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two labels. The only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics if any other instance
// labels are provided. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec
// is called with the request duration in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP
// The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is
// called with the request duration in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP
// status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are
// present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an
// ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
@ -57,6 +55,9 @@ func InstrumentHandlerInFlight(g prometheus.Gauge, next http.Handler) http.Handl
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics, no values are reported.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
func InstrumentHandlerDuration(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
@ -77,14 +78,13 @@ func InstrumentHandlerDuration(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) ht
})
}
// InstrumentHandlerCounter is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec.
// The CounterVec must have zero, one, or two labels. The only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics if any other instance
// labels are provided. Partitioning of the CounterVec happens by HTTP status
// code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present
// in the CounterVec. For unpartitioned counting, use a CounterVec with
// zero labels.
// InstrumentHandlerCounter is a middleware that wraps the provided http.Handler
// to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec. The CounterVec
// must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only
// allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function panics
// otherwise. Partitioning of the CounterVec happens by HTTP status code and/or
// HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in the
// CounterVec. For unpartitioned counting, use a CounterVec with zero labels.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -111,18 +111,20 @@ func InstrumentHandlerCounter(counter *prometheus.CounterVec, next http.Handler)
// InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe with the provided ObserverVec the request duration
// until the response headers are written. The ObserverVec must have zero, one,
// or two labels. The only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The
// function panics if any other instance labels are provided. The Observe
// method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request
// duration in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP
// method if the respective instance label names are present in the
// ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero
// labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used
// judiciously.
// or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names
// are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of
// the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request duration in
// seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics before calling WriteHeader, no value is
// reported.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
//
// See the example for InstrumentHandlerDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
@ -137,15 +139,15 @@ func InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Ha
}
// InstrumentHandlerRequestSize is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request size with the provided ObserverVec.
// The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two labels. The only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics if any other instance
// labels are provided. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec
// is called with the request size in bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP
// status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are
// present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an
// ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
// expensive and should be used judiciously.
// http.Handler to observe the request size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is
// called with the request size in bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status
// code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in
// the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero
// labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used
// judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -172,15 +174,15 @@ func InstrumentHandlerRequestSize(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler)
}
// InstrumentHandlerResponseSize is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the response size with the provided ObserverVec.
// The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two labels. The only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics if any other instance
// labels are provided. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec
// is called with the response size in bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP
// status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are
// present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an
// ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
// expensive and should be used judiciously.
// http.Handler to observe the response size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is
// called with the response size in bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status
// code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in
// the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero
// labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used
// judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -201,9 +203,12 @@ func checkLabels(c prometheus.Collector) (code bool, method bool) {
// once Descriptors can have their dimensionality queried.
var (
desc *prometheus.Desc
m prometheus.Metric
pm dto.Metric
lvs []string
)
// Get the Desc from the Collector.
descc := make(chan *prometheus.Desc, 1)
c.Describe(descc)
@ -220,49 +225,54 @@ func checkLabels(c prometheus.Collector) (code bool, method bool) {
close(descc)
if _, err := prometheus.NewConstMetric(desc, prometheus.UntypedValue, 0); err == nil {
return
// Create a ConstMetric with the Desc. Since we don't know how many
// variable labels there are, try for as long as it needs.
for err := errors.New("dummy"); err != nil; lvs = append(lvs, magicString) {
m, err = prometheus.NewConstMetric(desc, prometheus.UntypedValue, 0, lvs...)
}
if m, err := prometheus.NewConstMetric(desc, prometheus.UntypedValue, 0, magicString); err == nil {
if err := m.Write(&pm); err != nil {
panic("error checking metric for labels")
}
for _, label := range pm.Label {
name, value := label.GetName(), label.GetValue()
if value != magicString {
continue
}
switch name {
case "code":
code = true
case "method":
method = true
default:
panic("metric partitioned with non-supported labels")
}
return
}
panic("previously set label not found this must never happen")
// Write out the metric into a proto message and look at the labels.
// If the value is not the magicString, it is a constLabel, which doesn't interest us.
// If the label is curried, it doesn't interest us.
// In all other cases, only "code" or "method" is allowed.
if err := m.Write(&pm); err != nil {
panic("error checking metric for labels")
}
if m, err := prometheus.NewConstMetric(desc, prometheus.UntypedValue, 0, magicString, magicString); err == nil {
if err := m.Write(&pm); err != nil {
panic("error checking metric for labels")
for _, label := range pm.Label {
name, value := label.GetName(), label.GetValue()
if value != magicString || isLabelCurried(c, name) {
continue
}
for _, label := range pm.Label {
name, value := label.GetName(), label.GetValue()
if value != magicString {
continue
}
if name == "code" || name == "method" {
continue
}
switch name {
case "code":
code = true
case "method":
method = true
default:
panic("metric partitioned with non-supported labels")
}
code = true
method = true
return
}
panic("metric partitioned with non-supported labels")
return
}
func isLabelCurried(c prometheus.Collector, label string) bool {
// This is even hackier than the label test above.
// We essentially try to curry again and see if it works.
// But for that, we need to type-convert to the two
// types we use here, ObserverVec or *CounterVec.
switch v := c.(type) {
case *prometheus.CounterVec:
if _, err := v.CurryWith(prometheus.Labels{label: "dummy"}); err == nil {
return false
}
case prometheus.ObserverVec:
if _, err := v.CurryWith(prometheus.Labels{label: "dummy"}); err == nil {
return false
}
default:
panic("unsupported metric vec type")
}
return true
}
// emptyLabels is a one-time allocation for non-partitioned metrics to avoid
@ -435,71 +445,3 @@ func sanitizeCode(s int) string {
return strconv.Itoa(s)
}
}
type delegator interface {
Status() int
Written() int64
http.ResponseWriter
}
type responseWriterDelegator struct {
http.ResponseWriter
handler, method string
status int
written int64
wroteHeader bool
observeWriteHeader func(int)
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Status() int {
return r.status
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Written() int64 {
return r.written
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) WriteHeader(code int) {
r.status = code
r.wroteHeader = true
r.ResponseWriter.WriteHeader(code)
if r.observeWriteHeader != nil {
r.observeWriteHeader(code)
}
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Write(b []byte) (int, error) {
if !r.wroteHeader {
r.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
n, err := r.ResponseWriter.Write(b)
r.written += int64(n)
return n, err
}
type fancyDelegator struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
}
func (r *fancyDelegator) CloseNotify() <-chan bool {
return r.ResponseWriter.(http.CloseNotifier).CloseNotify()
}
func (r *fancyDelegator) Hijack() (net.Conn, *bufio.ReadWriter, error) {
return r.ResponseWriter.(http.Hijacker).Hijack()
}
func (r *fancyDelegator) Flush() {
r.ResponseWriter.(http.Flusher).Flush()
}
func (r *fancyDelegator) ReadFrom(re io.Reader) (int64, error) {
if !r.wroteHeader {
r.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
n, err := r.ResponseWriter.(io.ReaderFrom).ReadFrom(re)
r.written += n
return n, err
}

View File

@ -15,15 +15,22 @@ package prometheus
import (
"bytes"
"errors"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"runtime"
"sort"
"strings"
"sync"
"unicode/utf8"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal"
)
const (
@ -35,13 +42,14 @@ const (
// DefaultRegisterer and DefaultGatherer are the implementations of the
// Registerer and Gatherer interface a number of convenience functions in this
// package act on. Initially, both variables point to the same Registry, which
// has a process collector (see NewProcessCollector) and a Go collector (see
// NewGoCollector) already registered. This approach to keep default instances
// as global state mirrors the approach of other packages in the Go standard
// library. Note that there are caveats. Change the variables with caution and
// only if you understand the consequences. Users who want to avoid global state
// altogether should not use the convenience function and act on custom
// instances instead.
// has a process collector (currently on Linux only, see NewProcessCollector)
// and a Go collector (see NewGoCollector, in particular the note about
// stop-the-world implication with Go versions older than 1.9) already
// registered. This approach to keep default instances as global state mirrors
// the approach of other packages in the Go standard library. Note that there
// are caveats. Change the variables with caution and only if you understand the
// consequences. Users who want to avoid global state altogether should not use
// the convenience functions and act on custom instances instead.
var (
defaultRegistry = NewRegistry()
DefaultRegisterer Registerer = defaultRegistry
@ -49,7 +57,7 @@ var (
)
func init() {
MustRegister(NewProcessCollector(os.Getpid(), ""))
MustRegister(NewProcessCollector(ProcessCollectorOpts{}))
MustRegister(NewGoCollector())
}
@ -65,7 +73,8 @@ func NewRegistry() *Registry {
// NewPedanticRegistry returns a registry that checks during collection if each
// collected Metric is consistent with its reported Desc, and if the Desc has
// actually been registered with the registry.
// actually been registered with the registry. Unchecked Collectors (those whose
// Describe methed does not yield any descriptors) are excluded from the check.
//
// Usually, a Registry will be happy as long as the union of all collected
// Metrics is consistent and valid even if some metrics are not consistent with
@ -80,7 +89,7 @@ func NewPedanticRegistry() *Registry {
// Registerer is the interface for the part of a registry in charge of
// registering and unregistering. Users of custom registries should use
// Registerer as type for registration purposes (rather then the Registry type
// Registerer as type for registration purposes (rather than the Registry type
// directly). In that way, they are free to use custom Registerer implementation
// (e.g. for testing purposes).
type Registerer interface {
@ -95,8 +104,13 @@ type Registerer interface {
// returned error is an instance of AlreadyRegisteredError, which
// contains the previously registered Collector.
//
// It is in general not safe to register the same Collector multiple
// times concurrently.
// A Collector whose Describe method does not yield any Desc is treated
// as unchecked. Registration will always succeed. No check for
// re-registering (see previous paragraph) is performed. Thus, the
// caller is responsible for not double-registering the same unchecked
// Collector, and for providing a Collector that will not cause
// inconsistent metrics on collection. (This would lead to scrape
// errors.)
Register(Collector) error
// MustRegister works like Register but registers any number of
// Collectors and panics upon the first registration that causes an
@ -105,7 +119,9 @@ type Registerer interface {
// Unregister unregisters the Collector that equals the Collector passed
// in as an argument. (Two Collectors are considered equal if their
// Describe method yields the same set of descriptors.) The function
// returns whether a Collector was unregistered.
// returns whether a Collector was unregistered. Note that an unchecked
// Collector cannot be unregistered (as its Describe method does not
// yield any descriptor).
//
// Note that even after unregistering, it will not be possible to
// register a new Collector that is inconsistent with the unregistered
@ -123,15 +139,23 @@ type Registerer interface {
type Gatherer interface {
// Gather calls the Collect method of the registered Collectors and then
// gathers the collected metrics into a lexicographically sorted slice
// of MetricFamily protobufs. Even if an error occurs, Gather attempts
// to gather as many metrics as possible. Hence, if a non-nil error is
// returned, the returned MetricFamily slice could be nil (in case of a
// fatal error that prevented any meaningful metric collection) or
// contain a number of MetricFamily protobufs, some of which might be
// incomplete, and some might be missing altogether. The returned error
// (which might be a MultiError) explains the details. In scenarios
// where complete collection is critical, the returned MetricFamily
// protobufs should be disregarded if the returned error is non-nil.
// of uniquely named MetricFamily protobufs. Gather ensures that the
// returned slice is valid and self-consistent so that it can be used
// for valid exposition. As an exception to the strict consistency
// requirements described for metric.Desc, Gather will tolerate
// different sets of label names for metrics of the same metric family.
//
// Even if an error occurs, Gather attempts to gather as many metrics as
// possible. Hence, if a non-nil error is returned, the returned
// MetricFamily slice could be nil (in case of a fatal error that
// prevented any meaningful metric collection) or contain a number of
// MetricFamily protobufs, some of which might be incomplete, and some
// might be missing altogether. The returned error (which might be a
// MultiError) explains the details. Note that this is mostly useful for
// debugging purposes. If the gathered protobufs are to be used for
// exposition in actual monitoring, it is almost always better to not
// expose an incomplete result and instead disregard the returned
// MetricFamily protobufs in case the returned error is non-nil.
Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error)
}
@ -201,6 +225,13 @@ func (errs MultiError) Error() string {
return buf.String()
}
// Append appends the provided error if it is not nil.
func (errs *MultiError) Append(err error) {
if err != nil {
*errs = append(*errs, err)
}
}
// MaybeUnwrap returns nil if len(errs) is 0. It returns the first and only
// contained error as error if len(errs is 1). In all other cases, it returns
// the MultiError directly. This is helpful for returning a MultiError in a way
@ -225,6 +256,7 @@ type Registry struct {
collectorsByID map[uint64]Collector // ID is a hash of the descIDs.
descIDs map[uint64]struct{}
dimHashesByName map[string]uint64
uncheckedCollectors []Collector
pedanticChecksEnabled bool
}
@ -242,7 +274,12 @@ func (r *Registry) Register(c Collector) error {
close(descChan)
}()
r.mtx.Lock()
defer r.mtx.Unlock()
defer func() {
// Drain channel in case of premature return to not leak a goroutine.
for range descChan {
}
r.mtx.Unlock()
}()
// Conduct various tests...
for desc := range descChan {
@ -282,9 +319,10 @@ func (r *Registry) Register(c Collector) error {
}
}
}
// Did anything happen at all?
// A Collector yielding no Desc at all is considered unchecked.
if len(newDescIDs) == 0 {
return errors.New("collector has no descriptors")
r.uncheckedCollectors = append(r.uncheckedCollectors, c)
return nil
}
if existing, exists := r.collectorsByID[collectorID]; exists {
return AlreadyRegisteredError{
@ -358,31 +396,25 @@ func (r *Registry) MustRegister(cs ...Collector) {
// Gather implements Gatherer.
func (r *Registry) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
var (
metricChan = make(chan Metric, capMetricChan)
metricHashes = map[uint64]struct{}{}
dimHashes = map[string]uint64{}
wg sync.WaitGroup
errs MultiError // The collected errors to return in the end.
registeredDescIDs map[uint64]struct{} // Only used for pedantic checks
checkedMetricChan = make(chan Metric, capMetricChan)
uncheckedMetricChan = make(chan Metric, capMetricChan)
metricHashes = map[uint64]struct{}{}
wg sync.WaitGroup
errs MultiError // The collected errors to return in the end.
registeredDescIDs map[uint64]struct{} // Only used for pedantic checks
)
r.mtx.RLock()
goroutineBudget := len(r.collectorsByID) + len(r.uncheckedCollectors)
metricFamiliesByName := make(map[string]*dto.MetricFamily, len(r.dimHashesByName))
// Scatter.
// (Collectors could be complex and slow, so we call them all at once.)
wg.Add(len(r.collectorsByID))
go func() {
wg.Wait()
close(metricChan)
}()
checkedCollectors := make(chan Collector, len(r.collectorsByID))
uncheckedCollectors := make(chan Collector, len(r.uncheckedCollectors))
for _, collector := range r.collectorsByID {
go func(collector Collector) {
defer wg.Done()
collector.Collect(metricChan)
}(collector)
checkedCollectors <- collector
}
for _, collector := range r.uncheckedCollectors {
uncheckedCollectors <- collector
}
// In case pedantic checks are enabled, we have to copy the map before
// giving up the RLock.
if r.pedanticChecksEnabled {
@ -391,127 +423,258 @@ func (r *Registry) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
registeredDescIDs[id] = struct{}{}
}
}
r.mtx.RUnlock()
// Drain metricChan in case of premature return.
wg.Add(goroutineBudget)
collectWorker := func() {
for {
select {
case collector := <-checkedCollectors:
collector.Collect(checkedMetricChan)
case collector := <-uncheckedCollectors:
collector.Collect(uncheckedMetricChan)
default:
return
}
wg.Done()
}
}
// Start the first worker now to make sure at least one is running.
go collectWorker()
goroutineBudget--
// Close checkedMetricChan and uncheckedMetricChan once all collectors
// are collected.
go func() {
wg.Wait()
close(checkedMetricChan)
close(uncheckedMetricChan)
}()
// Drain checkedMetricChan and uncheckedMetricChan in case of premature return.
defer func() {
for range metricChan {
if checkedMetricChan != nil {
for range checkedMetricChan {
}
}
if uncheckedMetricChan != nil {
for range uncheckedMetricChan {
}
}
}()
// Gather.
for metric := range metricChan {
// This could be done concurrently, too, but it required locking
// of metricFamiliesByName (and of metricHashes if checks are
// enabled). Most likely not worth it.
desc := metric.Desc()
dtoMetric := &dto.Metric{}
if err := metric.Write(dtoMetric); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"error collecting metric %v: %s", desc, err,
// Copy the channel references so we can nil them out later to remove
// them from the select statements below.
cmc := checkedMetricChan
umc := uncheckedMetricChan
for {
select {
case metric, ok := <-cmc:
if !ok {
cmc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
registeredDescIDs,
))
continue
case metric, ok := <-umc:
if !ok {
umc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
nil,
))
default:
if goroutineBudget <= 0 || len(checkedCollectors)+len(uncheckedCollectors) == 0 {
// All collectors are already being worked on or
// we have already as many goroutines started as
// there are collectors. Do the same as above,
// just without the default.
select {
case metric, ok := <-cmc:
if !ok {
cmc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
registeredDescIDs,
))
case metric, ok := <-umc:
if !ok {
umc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
nil,
))
}
break
}
// Start more workers.
go collectWorker()
goroutineBudget--
runtime.Gosched()
}
metricFamily, ok := metricFamiliesByName[desc.fqName]
if ok {
if metricFamily.GetHelp() != desc.help {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s has help %q but should have %q",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric, desc.help, metricFamily.GetHelp(),
))
continue
}
// TODO(beorn7): Simplify switch once Desc has type.
switch metricFamily.GetType() {
case dto.MetricType_COUNTER:
if dtoMetric.Counter == nil {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Counter",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
))
continue
}
case dto.MetricType_GAUGE:
if dtoMetric.Gauge == nil {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Gauge",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
))
continue
}
case dto.MetricType_SUMMARY:
if dtoMetric.Summary == nil {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Summary",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
))
continue
}
case dto.MetricType_UNTYPED:
if dtoMetric.Untyped == nil {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be Untyped",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
))
continue
}
case dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM:
if dtoMetric.Histogram == nil {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Histogram",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
))
continue
}
default:
panic("encountered MetricFamily with invalid type")
}
} else {
metricFamily = &dto.MetricFamily{}
metricFamily.Name = proto.String(desc.fqName)
metricFamily.Help = proto.String(desc.help)
// TODO(beorn7): Simplify switch once Desc has type.
switch {
case dtoMetric.Gauge != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_GAUGE.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Counter != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_COUNTER.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Summary != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_SUMMARY.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Untyped != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_UNTYPED.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Histogram != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM.Enum()
default:
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"empty metric collected: %s", dtoMetric,
))
continue
}
metricFamiliesByName[desc.fqName] = metricFamily
// Once both checkedMetricChan and uncheckdMetricChan are closed
// and drained, the contraption above will nil out cmc and umc,
// and then we can leave the collect loop here.
if cmc == nil && umc == nil {
break
}
if err := checkMetricConsistency(metricFamily, dtoMetric, metricHashes, dimHashes); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
continue
}
if r.pedanticChecksEnabled {
// Is the desc registered at all?
if _, exist := registeredDescIDs[desc.id]; !exist {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s with unregistered descriptor %s",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, desc,
))
continue
}
if err := checkDescConsistency(metricFamily, dtoMetric, desc); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
continue
}
}
metricFamily.Metric = append(metricFamily.Metric, dtoMetric)
}
return normalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName), errs.MaybeUnwrap()
return internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName), errs.MaybeUnwrap()
}
// WriteToTextfile calls Gather on the provided Gatherer, encodes the result in the
// Prometheus text format, and writes it to a temporary file. Upon success, the
// temporary file is renamed to the provided filename.
//
// This is intended for use with the textfile collector of the node exporter.
// Note that the node exporter expects the filename to be suffixed with ".prom".
func WriteToTextfile(filename string, g Gatherer) error {
tmp, err := ioutil.TempFile(filepath.Dir(filename), filepath.Base(filename))
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer os.Remove(tmp.Name())
mfs, err := g.Gather()
if err != nil {
return err
}
for _, mf := range mfs {
if _, err := expfmt.MetricFamilyToText(tmp, mf); err != nil {
return err
}
}
if err := tmp.Close(); err != nil {
return err
}
if err := os.Chmod(tmp.Name(), 0644); err != nil {
return err
}
return os.Rename(tmp.Name(), filename)
}
// processMetric is an internal helper method only used by the Gather method.
func processMetric(
metric Metric,
metricFamiliesByName map[string]*dto.MetricFamily,
metricHashes map[uint64]struct{},
registeredDescIDs map[uint64]struct{},
) error {
desc := metric.Desc()
// Wrapped metrics collected by an unchecked Collector can have an
// invalid Desc.
if desc.err != nil {
return desc.err
}
dtoMetric := &dto.Metric{}
if err := metric.Write(dtoMetric); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("error collecting metric %v: %s", desc, err)
}
metricFamily, ok := metricFamiliesByName[desc.fqName]
if ok { // Existing name.
if metricFamily.GetHelp() != desc.help {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s has help %q but should have %q",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric, desc.help, metricFamily.GetHelp(),
)
}
// TODO(beorn7): Simplify switch once Desc has type.
switch metricFamily.GetType() {
case dto.MetricType_COUNTER:
if dtoMetric.Counter == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Counter",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_GAUGE:
if dtoMetric.Gauge == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Gauge",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_SUMMARY:
if dtoMetric.Summary == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Summary",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_UNTYPED:
if dtoMetric.Untyped == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be Untyped",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM:
if dtoMetric.Histogram == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Histogram",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
default:
panic("encountered MetricFamily with invalid type")
}
} else { // New name.
metricFamily = &dto.MetricFamily{}
metricFamily.Name = proto.String(desc.fqName)
metricFamily.Help = proto.String(desc.help)
// TODO(beorn7): Simplify switch once Desc has type.
switch {
case dtoMetric.Gauge != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_GAUGE.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Counter != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_COUNTER.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Summary != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_SUMMARY.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Untyped != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_UNTYPED.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Histogram != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM.Enum()
default:
return fmt.Errorf("empty metric collected: %s", dtoMetric)
}
if err := checkSuffixCollisions(metricFamily, metricFamiliesByName); err != nil {
return err
}
metricFamiliesByName[desc.fqName] = metricFamily
}
if err := checkMetricConsistency(metricFamily, dtoMetric, metricHashes); err != nil {
return err
}
if registeredDescIDs != nil {
// Is the desc registered at all?
if _, exist := registeredDescIDs[desc.id]; !exist {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s with unregistered descriptor %s",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, desc,
)
}
if err := checkDescConsistency(metricFamily, dtoMetric, desc); err != nil {
return err
}
}
metricFamily.Metric = append(metricFamily.Metric, dtoMetric)
return nil
}
// Gatherers is a slice of Gatherer instances that implements the Gatherer
@ -537,7 +700,6 @@ func (gs Gatherers) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
var (
metricFamiliesByName = map[string]*dto.MetricFamily{}
metricHashes = map[uint64]struct{}{}
dimHashes = map[string]uint64{}
errs MultiError // The collected errors to return in the end.
)
@ -574,10 +736,14 @@ func (gs Gatherers) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
existingMF.Name = mf.Name
existingMF.Help = mf.Help
existingMF.Type = mf.Type
if err := checkSuffixCollisions(existingMF, metricFamiliesByName); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
continue
}
metricFamiliesByName[mf.GetName()] = existingMF
}
for _, m := range mf.Metric {
if err := checkMetricConsistency(existingMF, m, metricHashes, dimHashes); err != nil {
if err := checkMetricConsistency(existingMF, m, metricHashes); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
continue
}
@ -585,88 +751,80 @@ func (gs Gatherers) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
}
}
}
return normalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName), errs.MaybeUnwrap()
return internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName), errs.MaybeUnwrap()
}
// metricSorter is a sortable slice of *dto.Metric.
type metricSorter []*dto.Metric
func (s metricSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s metricSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s metricSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
if len(s[i].Label) != len(s[j].Label) {
// This should not happen. The metrics are
// inconsistent. However, we have to deal with the fact, as
// people might use custom collectors or metric family injection
// to create inconsistent metrics. So let's simply compare the
// number of labels in this case. That will still yield
// reproducible sorting.
return len(s[i].Label) < len(s[j].Label)
// checkSuffixCollisions checks for collisions with the “magic” suffixes the
// Prometheus text format and the internal metric representation of the
// Prometheus server add while flattening Summaries and Histograms.
func checkSuffixCollisions(mf *dto.MetricFamily, mfs map[string]*dto.MetricFamily) error {
var (
newName = mf.GetName()
newType = mf.GetType()
newNameWithoutSuffix = ""
)
switch {
case strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_count"):
newNameWithoutSuffix = newName[:len(newName)-6]
case strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_sum"):
newNameWithoutSuffix = newName[:len(newName)-4]
case strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_bucket"):
newNameWithoutSuffix = newName[:len(newName)-7]
}
for n, lp := range s[i].Label {
vi := lp.GetValue()
vj := s[j].Label[n].GetValue()
if vi != vj {
return vi < vj
if newNameWithoutSuffix != "" {
if existingMF, ok := mfs[newNameWithoutSuffix]; ok {
switch existingMF.GetType() {
case dto.MetricType_SUMMARY:
if !strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_bucket") {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric named %q collides with previously collected summary named %q",
newName, newNameWithoutSuffix,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM:
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric named %q collides with previously collected histogram named %q",
newName, newNameWithoutSuffix,
)
}
}
}
// We should never arrive here. Multiple metrics with the same
// label set in the same scrape will lead to undefined ingestion
// behavior. However, as above, we have to provide stable sorting
// here, even for inconsistent metrics. So sort equal metrics
// by their timestamp, with missing timestamps (implying "now")
// coming last.
if s[i].TimestampMs == nil {
return false
}
if s[j].TimestampMs == nil {
return true
}
return s[i].GetTimestampMs() < s[j].GetTimestampMs()
}
// normalizeMetricFamilies returns a MetricFamily slice with empty
// MetricFamilies pruned and the remaining MetricFamilies sorted by name within
// the slice, with the contained Metrics sorted within each MetricFamily.
func normalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName map[string]*dto.MetricFamily) []*dto.MetricFamily {
for _, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
sort.Sort(metricSorter(mf.Metric))
}
names := make([]string, 0, len(metricFamiliesByName))
for name, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
if len(mf.Metric) > 0 {
names = append(names, name)
if newType == dto.MetricType_SUMMARY || newType == dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM {
if _, ok := mfs[newName+"_count"]; ok {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected histogram or summary named %q collides with previously collected metric named %q",
newName, newName+"_count",
)
}
if _, ok := mfs[newName+"_sum"]; ok {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected histogram or summary named %q collides with previously collected metric named %q",
newName, newName+"_sum",
)
}
}
sort.Strings(names)
result := make([]*dto.MetricFamily, 0, len(names))
for _, name := range names {
result = append(result, metricFamiliesByName[name])
if newType == dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM {
if _, ok := mfs[newName+"_bucket"]; ok {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected histogram named %q collides with previously collected metric named %q",
newName, newName+"_bucket",
)
}
}
return result
return nil
}
// checkMetricConsistency checks if the provided Metric is consistent with the
// provided MetricFamily. It also hashed the Metric labels and the MetricFamily
// name. If the resulting hash is alread in the provided metricHashes, an error
// is returned. If not, it is added to metricHashes. The provided dimHashes maps
// MetricFamily names to their dimHash (hashed sorted label names). If dimHashes
// doesn't yet contain a hash for the provided MetricFamily, it is
// added. Otherwise, an error is returned if the existing dimHashes in not equal
// the calculated dimHash.
// provided MetricFamily. It also hashes the Metric labels and the MetricFamily
// name. If the resulting hash is already in the provided metricHashes, an error
// is returned. If not, it is added to metricHashes.
func checkMetricConsistency(
metricFamily *dto.MetricFamily,
dtoMetric *dto.Metric,
metricHashes map[uint64]struct{},
dimHashes map[string]uint64,
) error {
name := metricFamily.GetName()
// Type consistency with metric family.
if metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_GAUGE && dtoMetric.Gauge == nil ||
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_COUNTER && dtoMetric.Counter == nil ||
@ -674,41 +832,59 @@ func checkMetricConsistency(
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM && dtoMetric.Histogram == nil ||
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_UNTYPED && dtoMetric.Untyped == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s is not a %s",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, metricFamily.GetType(),
"collected metric %q { %s} is not a %s",
name, dtoMetric, metricFamily.GetType(),
)
}
// Is the metric unique (i.e. no other metric with the same name and the same label values)?
previousLabelName := ""
for _, labelPair := range dtoMetric.GetLabel() {
labelName := labelPair.GetName()
if labelName == previousLabelName {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} has two or more labels with the same name: %s",
name, dtoMetric, labelName,
)
}
if !checkLabelName(labelName) {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} has a label with an invalid name: %s",
name, dtoMetric, labelName,
)
}
if dtoMetric.Summary != nil && labelName == quantileLabel {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} must not have an explicit %q label",
name, dtoMetric, quantileLabel,
)
}
if !utf8.ValidString(labelPair.GetValue()) {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} has a label named %q whose value is not utf8: %#v",
name, dtoMetric, labelName, labelPair.GetValue())
}
previousLabelName = labelName
}
// Is the metric unique (i.e. no other metric with the same name and the same labels)?
h := hashNew()
h = hashAdd(h, metricFamily.GetName())
h = hashAdd(h, name)
h = hashAddByte(h, separatorByte)
dh := hashNew()
// Make sure label pairs are sorted. We depend on it for the consistency
// check.
sort.Sort(LabelPairSorter(dtoMetric.Label))
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(dtoMetric.Label))
for _, lp := range dtoMetric.Label {
h = hashAdd(h, lp.GetName())
h = hashAddByte(h, separatorByte)
h = hashAdd(h, lp.GetValue())
h = hashAddByte(h, separatorByte)
dh = hashAdd(dh, lp.GetName())
dh = hashAddByte(dh, separatorByte)
}
if _, exists := metricHashes[h]; exists {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s was collected before with the same name and label values",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric,
"collected metric %q { %s} was collected before with the same name and label values",
name, dtoMetric,
)
}
if dimHash, ok := dimHashes[metricFamily.GetName()]; ok {
if dimHash != dh {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s has label dimensions inconsistent with previously collected metrics in the same metric family",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric,
)
}
} else {
dimHashes[metricFamily.GetName()] = dh
}
metricHashes[h] = struct{}{}
return nil
}
@ -740,7 +916,7 @@ func checkDescConsistency(
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, desc,
)
}
sort.Sort(LabelPairSorter(lpsFromDesc))
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(lpsFromDesc))
for i, lpFromDesc := range lpsFromDesc {
lpFromMetric := dtoMetric.Label[i]
if lpFromDesc.GetName() != lpFromMetric.GetName() ||

View File

@ -36,7 +36,10 @@ const quantileLabel = "quantile"
//
// A typical use-case is the observation of request latencies. By default, a
// Summary provides the median, the 90th and the 99th percentile of the latency
// as rank estimations.
// as rank estimations. However, the default behavior will change in the
// upcoming v0.10 of the library. There will be no rank estimations at all by
// default. For a sane transition, it is recommended to set the desired rank
// estimations explicitly.
//
// Note that the rank estimations cannot be aggregated in a meaningful way with
// the Prometheus query language (i.e. you cannot average or add them). If you
@ -78,8 +81,10 @@ const (
)
// SummaryOpts bundles the options for creating a Summary metric. It is
// mandatory to set Name and Help to a non-empty string. All other fields are
// optional and can safely be left at their zero value.
// mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. While all other fields are
// optional and can safely be left at their zero value, it is recommended to set
// a help string and to explicitly set the Objectives field to the desired value
// as the default value will change in the upcoming v0.10 of the library.
type SummaryOpts struct {
// Namespace, Subsystem, and Name are components of the fully-qualified
// name of the Summary (created by joining these components with
@ -90,29 +95,27 @@ type SummaryOpts struct {
Subsystem string
Name string
// Help provides information about this Summary. Mandatory!
// Help provides information about this Summary.
//
// Metrics with the same fully-qualified name must have the same Help
// string.
Help string
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this
// Summary. Summaries with the same fully-qualified name must have the
// same label names in their ConstLabels.
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this metric. Metrics
// with the same fully-qualified name must have the same label names in
// their ConstLabels.
//
// Note that in most cases, labels have a value that varies during the
// lifetime of a process. Those labels are usually managed with a
// SummaryVec. ConstLabels serve only special purposes. One is for the
// special case where the value of a label does not change during the
// lifetime of a process, e.g. if the revision of the running binary is
// put into a label. Another, more advanced purpose is if more than one
// Collector needs to collect Summaries with the same fully-qualified
// name. In that case, those Summaries must differ in the values of
// their ConstLabels. See the Collector examples.
// Due to the way a Summary is represented in the Prometheus text format
// and how it is handled by the Prometheus server internally, “quantile”
// is an illegal label name. Construction of a Summary or SummaryVec
// will panic if this label name is used in ConstLabels.
//
// If the value of a label never changes (not even between binaries),
// that label most likely should not be a label at all (but part of the
// metric name).
// ConstLabels are only used rarely. In particular, do not use them to
// attach the same labels to all your metrics. Those use cases are
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels,-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
// Objectives defines the quantile rank estimates with their respective
@ -178,7 +181,7 @@ func NewSummary(opts SummaryOpts) Summary {
func newSummary(desc *Desc, opts SummaryOpts, labelValues ...string) Summary {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
panic(errInconsistentCardinality)
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, labelValues))
}
for _, n := range desc.variableLabels {
@ -399,13 +402,21 @@ func (s quantSort) Less(i, j int) bool {
// (e.g. HTTP request latencies, partitioned by status code and method). Create
// instances with NewSummaryVec.
type SummaryVec struct {
*MetricVec
*metricVec
}
// NewSummaryVec creates a new SummaryVec based on the provided SummaryOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names. At least one label name must be
// provided.
// partitioned by the given label names.
//
// Due to the way a Summary is represented in the Prometheus text format and how
// it is handled by the Prometheus server internally, “quantile” is an illegal
// label name. NewSummaryVec will panic if this label name is used.
func NewSummaryVec(opts SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *SummaryVec {
for _, ln := range labelNames {
if ln == quantileLabel {
panic(errQuantileLabelNotAllowed)
}
}
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
@ -413,28 +424,58 @@ func NewSummaryVec(opts SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *SummaryVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &SummaryVec{
MetricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newSummary(desc, opts, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues replaces the method of the same name in MetricVec.
// The difference is that this method returns an Observer and not a Metric so
// that no type conversion to an Observer is required.
func (m *SummaryVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Summary for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Summary is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Summary to only
// create the new Summary but leave it at its starting value, a Summary without
// any observations.
//
// Keeping the Summary for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Summary from the SummaryVec. In that case,
// the Summary will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Summary with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith replaces the method of the same name in MetricVec. The
// difference is that this method returns an Observer and not a Metric so that
// no type conversion to an Observer is required.
func (m *SummaryVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
// GetMetricWith returns the Summary for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Summary is created. Implications of
// creating a Summary without using it and keeping the Summary for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
@ -442,18 +483,57 @@ func (m *SummaryVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. By not returning an
// error, WithLabelValues allows shortcuts like
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Observe(42.21)
func (m *SummaryVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Observer {
return m.MetricVec.WithLabelValues(lvs...).(Observer)
func (v *SummaryVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Observer {
s, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return s
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. By not returning an error, With allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Observe(42.21)
func (m *SummaryVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
return m.MetricVec.With(labels).(Observer)
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Observe(42.21)
func (v *SummaryVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
s, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return s
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the SummaryVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *SummaryVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (ObserverVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &SummaryVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *SummaryVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) ObserverVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
type constSummary struct {
@ -506,7 +586,7 @@ func (s *constSummary) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// map[float64]float64{0.5: 0.23, 0.99: 0.56}
//
// NewConstSummary returns an error if the length of labelValues is not
// consistent with the variable labels in Desc.
// consistent with the variable labels in Desc or if Desc is invalid.
func NewConstSummary(
desc *Desc,
count uint64,
@ -514,8 +594,11 @@ func NewConstSummary(
quantiles map[float64]float64,
labelValues ...string,
) (Metric, error) {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
return nil, errInconsistentCardinality
if desc.err != nil {
return nil, desc.err
}
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(desc.variableLabels)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &constSummary{
desc: desc,

View File

@ -0,0 +1,29 @@
load("@io_bazel_rules_go//go:def.bzl", "go_library")
go_library(
name = "go_default_library",
srcs = ["testutil.go"],
importmap = "k8s.io/kubernetes/vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil",
importpath = "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/testutil",
visibility = ["//visibility:public"],
deps = [
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/client_model/go:go_default_library",
"//vendor/github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt:go_default_library",
],
)
filegroup(
name = "package-srcs",
srcs = glob(["**"]),
tags = ["automanaged"],
visibility = ["//visibility:private"],
)
filegroup(
name = "all-srcs",
srcs = [":package-srcs"],
tags = ["automanaged"],
visibility = ["//visibility:public"],
)

View File

@ -0,0 +1,184 @@
// Copyright 2018 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
// Package testutil provides helpers to test code using the prometheus package
// of client_golang.
//
// While writing unit tests to verify correct instrumentation of your code, it's
// a common mistake to mostly test the instrumentation library instead of your
// own code. Rather than verifying that a prometheus.Counter's value has changed
// as expected or that it shows up in the exposition after registration, it is
// in general more robust and more faithful to the concept of unit tests to use
// mock implementations of the prometheus.Counter and prometheus.Registerer
// interfaces that simply assert that the Add or Register methods have been
// called with the expected arguments. However, this might be overkill in simple
// scenarios. The ToFloat64 function is provided for simple inspection of a
// single-value metric, but it has to be used with caution.
//
// End-to-end tests to verify all or larger parts of the metrics exposition can
// be implemented with the CollectAndCompare or GatherAndCompare functions. The
// most appropriate use is not so much testing instrumentation of your code, but
// testing custom prometheus.Collector implementations and in particular whole
// exporters, i.e. programs that retrieve telemetry data from a 3rd party source
// and convert it into Prometheus metrics.
package testutil
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io"
"reflect"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal"
)
// ToFloat64 collects all Metrics from the provided Collector. It expects that
// this results in exactly one Metric being collected, which must be a Gauge,
// Counter, or Untyped. In all other cases, ToFloat64 panics. ToFloat64 returns
// the value of the collected Metric.
//
// The Collector provided is typically a simple instance of Gauge or Counter, or
// less commonly a GaugeVec or CounterVec with exactly one element. But any
// Collector fulfilling the prerequisites described above will do.
//
// Use this function with caution. It is computationally very expensive and thus
// not suited at all to read values from Metrics in regular code. This is really
// only for testing purposes, and even for testing, other approaches are often
// more appropriate (see this package's documentation).
//
// A clear anti-pattern would be to use a metric type from the prometheus
// package to track values that are also needed for something else than the
// exposition of Prometheus metrics. For example, you would like to track the
// number of items in a queue because your code should reject queuing further
// items if a certain limit is reached. It is tempting to track the number of
// items in a prometheus.Gauge, as it is then easily available as a metric for
// exposition, too. However, then you would need to call ToFloat64 in your
// regular code, potentially quite often. The recommended way is to track the
// number of items conventionally (in the way you would have done it without
// considering Prometheus metrics) and then expose the number with a
// prometheus.GaugeFunc.
func ToFloat64(c prometheus.Collector) float64 {
var (
m prometheus.Metric
mCount int
mChan = make(chan prometheus.Metric)
done = make(chan struct{})
)
go func() {
for m = range mChan {
mCount++
}
close(done)
}()
c.Collect(mChan)
close(mChan)
<-done
if mCount != 1 {
panic(fmt.Errorf("collected %d metrics instead of exactly 1", mCount))
}
pb := &dto.Metric{}
m.Write(pb)
if pb.Gauge != nil {
return pb.Gauge.GetValue()
}
if pb.Counter != nil {
return pb.Counter.GetValue()
}
if pb.Untyped != nil {
return pb.Untyped.GetValue()
}
panic(fmt.Errorf("collected a non-gauge/counter/untyped metric: %s", pb))
}
// CollectAndCompare registers the provided Collector with a newly created
// pedantic Registry. It then does the same as GatherAndCompare, gathering the
// metrics from the pedantic Registry.
func CollectAndCompare(c prometheus.Collector, expected io.Reader, metricNames ...string) error {
reg := prometheus.NewPedanticRegistry()
if err := reg.Register(c); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("registering collector failed: %s", err)
}
return GatherAndCompare(reg, expected, metricNames...)
}
// GatherAndCompare gathers all metrics from the provided Gatherer and compares
// it to an expected output read from the provided Reader in the Prometheus text
// exposition format. If any metricNames are provided, only metrics with those
// names are compared.
func GatherAndCompare(g prometheus.Gatherer, expected io.Reader, metricNames ...string) error {
metrics, err := g.Gather()
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("gathering metrics failed: %s", err)
}
if metricNames != nil {
metrics = filterMetrics(metrics, metricNames)
}
var tp expfmt.TextParser
expectedMetrics, err := tp.TextToMetricFamilies(expected)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("parsing expected metrics failed: %s", err)
}
if !reflect.DeepEqual(metrics, internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(expectedMetrics)) {
// Encode the gathered output to the readable text format for comparison.
var buf1 bytes.Buffer
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(&buf1, expfmt.FmtText)
for _, mf := range metrics {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("encoding result failed: %s", err)
}
}
// Encode normalized expected metrics again to generate them in the same ordering
// the registry does to spot differences more easily.
var buf2 bytes.Buffer
enc = expfmt.NewEncoder(&buf2, expfmt.FmtText)
for _, mf := range internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(expectedMetrics) {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("encoding result failed: %s", err)
}
}
return fmt.Errorf(`
metric output does not match expectation; want:
%s
got:
%s
`, buf2.String(), buf1.String())
}
return nil
}
func filterMetrics(metrics []*dto.MetricFamily, names []string) []*dto.MetricFamily {
var filtered []*dto.MetricFamily
for _, m := range metrics {
for _, name := range names {
if m.GetName() == name {
filtered = append(filtered, m)
break
}
}
}
return filtered
}

View File

@ -41,6 +41,9 @@ func NewTimer(o Observer) *Timer {
// NewTimer. It calls the Observe method of the Observer provided during
// construction with the duration in seconds as an argument. ObserveDuration is
// usually called with a defer statement.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
func (t *Timer) ObserveDuration() {
if t.observer != nil {
t.observer.Observe(time.Since(t.begin).Seconds())

View File

@ -13,113 +13,12 @@
package prometheus
// Untyped is a Metric that represents a single numerical value that can
// arbitrarily go up and down.
//
// An Untyped metric works the same as a Gauge. The only difference is that to
// no type information is implied.
//
// To create Untyped instances, use NewUntyped.
//
// Deprecated: The Untyped type is deprecated because it doesn't make sense in
// direct instrumentation. If you need to mirror an external metric of unknown
// type (usually while writing exporters), Use MustNewConstMetric to create an
// untyped metric instance on the fly.
type Untyped interface {
Metric
Collector
// Set sets the Untyped metric to an arbitrary value.
Set(float64)
// Inc increments the Untyped metric by 1.
Inc()
// Dec decrements the Untyped metric by 1.
Dec()
// Add adds the given value to the Untyped metric. (The value can be
// negative, resulting in a decrease.)
Add(float64)
// Sub subtracts the given value from the Untyped metric. (The value can
// be negative, resulting in an increase.)
Sub(float64)
}
// UntypedOpts is an alias for Opts. See there for doc comments.
type UntypedOpts Opts
// NewUntyped creates a new Untyped metric from the provided UntypedOpts.
func NewUntyped(opts UntypedOpts) Untyped {
return newValue(NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
), UntypedValue, 0)
}
// UntypedVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Untyped metrics that all
// share the same Desc, but have different values for their variable
// labels. This is used if you want to count the same thing partitioned by
// various dimensions. Create instances with NewUntypedVec.
type UntypedVec struct {
*MetricVec
}
// NewUntypedVec creates a new UntypedVec based on the provided UntypedOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names. At least one label name must be
// provided.
func NewUntypedVec(opts UntypedOpts, labelNames []string) *UntypedVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
labelNames,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &UntypedVec{
MetricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newValue(desc, UntypedValue, 0, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues replaces the method of the same name in
// MetricVec. The difference is that this method returns an Untyped and not a
// Metric so that no type conversion is required.
func (m *UntypedVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Untyped, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Untyped), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith replaces the method of the same name in MetricVec. The
// difference is that this method returns an Untyped and not a Metric so that no
// type conversion is required.
func (m *UntypedVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Untyped, error) {
metric, err := m.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Untyped), err
}
return nil, err
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. By not returning an
// error, WithLabelValues allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Add(42)
func (m *UntypedVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Untyped {
return m.MetricVec.WithLabelValues(lvs...).(Untyped)
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. By not returning an error, With allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (m *UntypedVec) With(labels Labels) Untyped {
return m.MetricVec.With(labels).(Untyped)
}
// UntypedFunc is an Untyped whose value is determined at collect time by
// calling a provided function.
// UntypedFunc works like GaugeFunc but the collected metric is of type
// "Untyped". UntypedFunc is useful to mirror an external metric of unknown
// type.
//
// To create UntypedFunc instances, use NewUntypedFunc.
type UntypedFunc interface {

View File

@ -14,16 +14,12 @@
package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"math"
"sort"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// ValueType is an enumeration of metric types that represent a simple value.
@ -37,81 +33,6 @@ const (
UntypedValue
)
var errInconsistentCardinality = errors.New("inconsistent label cardinality")
// value is a generic metric for simple values. It implements Metric, Collector,
// Counter, Gauge, and Untyped. Its effective type is determined by
// ValueType. This is a low-level building block used by the library to back the
// implementations of Counter, Gauge, and Untyped.
type value struct {
// valBits contains the bits of the represented float64 value. It has
// to go first in the struct to guarantee alignment for atomic
// operations. http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
valBits uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
valType ValueType
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
// newValue returns a newly allocated value with the given Desc, ValueType,
// sample value and label values. It panics if the number of label
// values is different from the number of variable labels in Desc.
func newValue(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, val float64, labelValues ...string) *value {
if len(labelValues) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(errInconsistentCardinality)
}
result := &value{
desc: desc,
valType: valueType,
valBits: math.Float64bits(val),
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}
result.init(result)
return result
}
func (v *value) Desc() *Desc {
return v.desc
}
func (v *value) Set(val float64) {
atomic.StoreUint64(&v.valBits, math.Float64bits(val))
}
func (v *value) SetToCurrentTime() {
v.Set(float64(time.Now().UnixNano()) / 1e9)
}
func (v *value) Inc() {
v.Add(1)
}
func (v *value) Dec() {
v.Add(-1)
}
func (v *value) Add(val float64) {
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&v.valBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + val)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&v.valBits, oldBits, newBits) {
return
}
}
}
func (v *value) Sub(val float64) {
v.Add(val * -1)
}
func (v *value) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
val := math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&v.valBits))
return populateMetric(v.valType, val, v.labelPairs, out)
}
// valueFunc is a generic metric for simple values retrieved on collect time
// from a function. It implements Metric and Collector. Its effective type is
// determined by ValueType. This is a low-level building block used by the
@ -156,10 +77,14 @@ func (v *valueFunc) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// operations. However, when implementing custom Collectors, it is useful as a
// throw-away metric that is generated on the fly to send it to Prometheus in
// the Collect method. NewConstMetric returns an error if the length of
// labelValues is not consistent with the variable labels in Desc.
// labelValues is not consistent with the variable labels in Desc or if Desc is
// invalid.
func NewConstMetric(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, value float64, labelValues ...string) (Metric, error) {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
return nil, errInconsistentCardinality
if desc.err != nil {
return nil, desc.err
}
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(desc.variableLabels)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &constMetric{
desc: desc,
@ -231,9 +156,7 @@ func makeLabelPairs(desc *Desc, labelValues []string) []*dto.LabelPair {
Value: proto.String(labelValues[i]),
})
}
for _, lp := range desc.constLabelPairs {
labelPairs = append(labelPairs, lp)
}
sort.Sort(LabelPairSorter(labelPairs))
labelPairs = append(labelPairs, desc.constLabelPairs...)
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(labelPairs))
return labelPairs
}

View File

@ -20,33 +20,180 @@ import (
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
)
// MetricVec is a Collector to bundle metrics of the same name that
// differ in their label values. MetricVec is usually not used directly but as a
// building block for implementations of vectors of a given metric
// type. GaugeVec, CounterVec, SummaryVec, and UntypedVec are examples already
// provided in this package.
type MetricVec struct {
mtx sync.RWMutex // Protects the children.
children map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues
desc *Desc
// metricVec is a Collector to bundle metrics of the same name that differ in
// their label values. metricVec is not used directly (and therefore
// unexported). It is used as a building block for implementations of vectors of
// a given metric type, like GaugeVec, CounterVec, SummaryVec, and HistogramVec.
// It also handles label currying. It uses basicMetricVec internally.
type metricVec struct {
*metricMap
newMetric func(labelValues ...string) Metric
hashAdd func(h uint64, s string) uint64 // replace hash function for testing collision handling
curry []curriedLabelValue
// hashAdd and hashAddByte can be replaced for testing collision handling.
hashAdd func(h uint64, s string) uint64
hashAddByte func(h uint64, b byte) uint64
}
// newMetricVec returns an initialized MetricVec. The concrete value is
// returned for embedding into another struct.
func newMetricVec(desc *Desc, newMetric func(lvs ...string) Metric) *MetricVec {
return &MetricVec{
children: map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues{},
desc: desc,
newMetric: newMetric,
// newMetricVec returns an initialized metricVec.
func newMetricVec(desc *Desc, newMetric func(lvs ...string) Metric) *metricVec {
return &metricVec{
metricMap: &metricMap{
metrics: map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues{},
desc: desc,
newMetric: newMetric,
},
hashAdd: hashAdd,
hashAddByte: hashAddByte,
}
}
// DeleteLabelValues removes the metric where the variable labels are the same
// as those passed in as labels (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). It
// returns true if a metric was deleted.
//
// It is not an error if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc. However, such inconsistent label count can
// never match an actual metric, so the method will always return false in that
// case.
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider Delete(Labels) as an
// alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the CounterVec example.
func (m *metricVec) DeleteLabelValues(lvs ...string) bool {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return false
}
return m.metricMap.deleteByHashWithLabelValues(h, lvs, m.curry)
}
// Delete deletes the metric where the variable labels are the same as those
// passed in as labels. It returns true if a metric was deleted.
//
// It is not an error if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc. However, such inconsistent Labels
// can never match an actual metric, so the method will always return false in
// that case.
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as DeleteLabelValues(...string). See
// there for pros and cons of the two methods.
func (m *metricVec) Delete(labels Labels) bool {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return false
}
return m.metricMap.deleteByHashWithLabels(h, labels, m.curry)
}
func (m *metricVec) curryWith(labels Labels) (*metricVec, error) {
var (
newCurry []curriedLabelValue
oldCurry = m.curry
iCurry int
)
for i, label := range m.desc.variableLabels {
val, ok := labels[label]
if iCurry < len(oldCurry) && oldCurry[iCurry].index == i {
if ok {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("label name %q is already curried", label)
}
newCurry = append(newCurry, oldCurry[iCurry])
iCurry++
} else {
if !ok {
continue // Label stays uncurried.
}
newCurry = append(newCurry, curriedLabelValue{i, val})
}
}
if l := len(oldCurry) + len(labels) - len(newCurry); l > 0 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("%d unknown label(s) found during currying", l)
}
return &metricVec{
metricMap: m.metricMap,
curry: newCurry,
hashAdd: m.hashAdd,
hashAddByte: m.hashAddByte,
}, nil
}
func (m *metricVec) getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return m.metricMap.getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(h, lvs, m.curry), nil
}
func (m *metricVec) getMetricWith(labels Labels) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return m.metricMap.getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(h, labels, m.curry), nil
}
func (m *metricVec) hashLabelValues(vals []string) (uint64, error) {
if err := validateLabelValues(vals, len(m.desc.variableLabels)-len(m.curry)); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
var (
h = hashNew()
curry = m.curry
iVals, iCurry int
)
for i := 0; i < len(m.desc.variableLabels); i++ {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
h = m.hashAdd(h, curry[iCurry].value)
iCurry++
} else {
h = m.hashAdd(h, vals[iVals])
iVals++
}
h = m.hashAddByte(h, model.SeparatorByte)
}
return h, nil
}
func (m *metricVec) hashLabels(labels Labels) (uint64, error) {
if err := validateValuesInLabels(labels, len(m.desc.variableLabels)-len(m.curry)); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
var (
h = hashNew()
curry = m.curry
iCurry int
)
for i, label := range m.desc.variableLabels {
val, ok := labels[label]
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
if ok {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("label name %q is already curried", label)
}
h = m.hashAdd(h, curry[iCurry].value)
iCurry++
} else {
if !ok {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("label name %q missing in label map", label)
}
h = m.hashAdd(h, val)
}
h = m.hashAddByte(h, model.SeparatorByte)
}
return h, nil
}
// metricWithLabelValues provides the metric and its label values for
// disambiguation on hash collision.
type metricWithLabelValues struct {
@ -54,166 +201,72 @@ type metricWithLabelValues struct {
metric Metric
}
// Describe implements Collector. The length of the returned slice
// is always one.
func (m *MetricVec) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
// curriedLabelValue sets the curried value for a label at the given index.
type curriedLabelValue struct {
index int
value string
}
// metricMap is a helper for metricVec and shared between differently curried
// metricVecs.
type metricMap struct {
mtx sync.RWMutex // Protects metrics.
metrics map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues
desc *Desc
newMetric func(labelValues ...string) Metric
}
// Describe implements Collector. It will send exactly one Desc to the provided
// channel.
func (m *metricMap) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- m.desc
}
// Collect implements Collector.
func (m *MetricVec) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
func (m *metricMap) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
m.mtx.RLock()
defer m.mtx.RUnlock()
for _, metrics := range m.children {
for _, metrics := range m.metrics {
for _, metric := range metrics {
ch <- metric.metric
}
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Metric for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Metric is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Metric to only
// create the new Metric but leave it at its start value (e.g. a Summary or
// Histogram without any observations). See also the SummaryVec example.
//
// Keeping the Metric for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Metric from the MetricVec. In that case, the
// Metric will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Metric with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc.
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (m *MetricVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return m.getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(h, lvs), nil
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Metric for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Metric is created. Implications of
// creating a Metric without using it and keeping the Metric for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc.
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (m *MetricVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return m.getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(h, labels), nil
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics if an error
// occurs. The method allows neat syntax like:
// httpReqs.WithLabelValues("404", "POST").Inc()
func (m *MetricVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Metric {
metric, err := m.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return metric
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics if an error occurs. The method allows
// neat syntax like:
// httpReqs.With(Labels{"status":"404", "method":"POST"}).Inc()
func (m *MetricVec) With(labels Labels) Metric {
metric, err := m.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return metric
}
// DeleteLabelValues removes the metric where the variable labels are the same
// as those passed in as labels (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). It
// returns true if a metric was deleted.
//
// It is not an error if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc. However, such inconsistent label count can
// never match an actual Metric, so the method will always return false in that
// case.
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider Delete(Labels) as an
// alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the CounterVec example.
func (m *MetricVec) DeleteLabelValues(lvs ...string) bool {
// Reset deletes all metrics in this vector.
func (m *metricMap) Reset() {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return false
for h := range m.metrics {
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
return m.deleteByHashWithLabelValues(h, lvs)
}
// Delete deletes the metric where the variable labels are the same as those
// passed in as labels. It returns true if a metric was deleted.
//
// It is not an error if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in the Desc of the MetricVec. However, such
// inconsistent Labels can never match an actual Metric, so the method will
// always return false in that case.
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as DeleteLabelValues(...string). See
// there for pros and cons of the two methods.
func (m *MetricVec) Delete(labels Labels) bool {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return false
}
return m.deleteByHashWithLabels(h, labels)
}
// deleteByHashWithLabelValues removes the metric from the hash bucket h. If
// there are multiple matches in the bucket, use lvs to select a metric and
// remove only that metric.
func (m *MetricVec) deleteByHashWithLabelValues(h uint64, lvs []string) bool {
metrics, ok := m.children[h]
func (m *metricMap) deleteByHashWithLabelValues(
h uint64, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) bool {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if !ok {
return false
}
i := m.findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics, lvs)
i := findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics, lvs, curry)
if i >= len(metrics) {
return false
}
if len(metrics) > 1 {
m.children[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
m.metrics[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
} else {
delete(m.children, h)
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
return true
}
@ -221,69 +274,38 @@ func (m *MetricVec) deleteByHashWithLabelValues(h uint64, lvs []string) bool {
// deleteByHashWithLabels removes the metric from the hash bucket h. If there
// are multiple matches in the bucket, use lvs to select a metric and remove
// only that metric.
func (m *MetricVec) deleteByHashWithLabels(h uint64, labels Labels) bool {
metrics, ok := m.children[h]
func (m *metricMap) deleteByHashWithLabels(
h uint64, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) bool {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if !ok {
return false
}
i := m.findMetricWithLabels(metrics, labels)
i := findMetricWithLabels(m.desc, metrics, labels, curry)
if i >= len(metrics) {
return false
}
if len(metrics) > 1 {
m.children[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
m.metrics[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
} else {
delete(m.children, h)
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
return true
}
// Reset deletes all metrics in this vector.
func (m *MetricVec) Reset() {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
for h := range m.children {
delete(m.children, h)
}
}
func (m *MetricVec) hashLabelValues(vals []string) (uint64, error) {
if len(vals) != len(m.desc.variableLabels) {
return 0, errInconsistentCardinality
}
h := hashNew()
for _, val := range vals {
h = m.hashAdd(h, val)
h = m.hashAddByte(h, model.SeparatorByte)
}
return h, nil
}
func (m *MetricVec) hashLabels(labels Labels) (uint64, error) {
if len(labels) != len(m.desc.variableLabels) {
return 0, errInconsistentCardinality
}
h := hashNew()
for _, label := range m.desc.variableLabels {
val, ok := labels[label]
if !ok {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("label name %q missing in label map", label)
}
h = m.hashAdd(h, val)
h = m.hashAddByte(h, model.SeparatorByte)
}
return h, nil
}
// getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues retrieves the metric by hash and label value
// or creates it and returns the new one.
//
// This function holds the mutex.
func (m *MetricVec) getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(hash uint64, lvs []string) Metric {
func (m *metricMap) getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(
hash uint64, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) Metric {
m.mtx.RLock()
metric, ok := m.getMetricWithLabelValues(hash, lvs)
metric, ok := m.getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues(hash, lvs, curry)
m.mtx.RUnlock()
if ok {
return metric
@ -291,13 +313,11 @@ func (m *MetricVec) getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(hash uint64, lvs []string)
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metric, ok = m.getMetricWithLabelValues(hash, lvs)
metric, ok = m.getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues(hash, lvs, curry)
if !ok {
// Copy to avoid allocation in case wo don't go down this code path.
copiedLVs := make([]string, len(lvs))
copy(copiedLVs, lvs)
metric = m.newMetric(copiedLVs...)
m.children[hash] = append(m.children[hash], metricWithLabelValues{values: copiedLVs, metric: metric})
inlinedLVs := inlineLabelValues(lvs, curry)
metric = m.newMetric(inlinedLVs...)
m.metrics[hash] = append(m.metrics[hash], metricWithLabelValues{values: inlinedLVs, metric: metric})
}
return metric
}
@ -306,9 +326,11 @@ func (m *MetricVec) getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(hash uint64, lvs []string)
// or creates it and returns the new one.
//
// This function holds the mutex.
func (m *MetricVec) getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(hash uint64, labels Labels) Metric {
func (m *metricMap) getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(
hash uint64, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) Metric {
m.mtx.RLock()
metric, ok := m.getMetricWithLabels(hash, labels)
metric, ok := m.getMetricWithHashAndLabels(hash, labels, curry)
m.mtx.RUnlock()
if ok {
return metric
@ -316,33 +338,37 @@ func (m *MetricVec) getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(hash uint64, labels Labels) Metr
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metric, ok = m.getMetricWithLabels(hash, labels)
metric, ok = m.getMetricWithHashAndLabels(hash, labels, curry)
if !ok {
lvs := m.extractLabelValues(labels)
lvs := extractLabelValues(m.desc, labels, curry)
metric = m.newMetric(lvs...)
m.children[hash] = append(m.children[hash], metricWithLabelValues{values: lvs, metric: metric})
m.metrics[hash] = append(m.metrics[hash], metricWithLabelValues{values: lvs, metric: metric})
}
return metric
}
// getMetricWithLabelValues gets a metric while handling possible collisions in
// the hash space. Must be called while holding read mutex.
func (m *MetricVec) getMetricWithLabelValues(h uint64, lvs []string) (Metric, bool) {
metrics, ok := m.children[h]
// getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues gets a metric while handling possible
// collisions in the hash space. Must be called while holding the read mutex.
func (m *metricMap) getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues(
h uint64, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) (Metric, bool) {
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if ok {
if i := m.findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics, lvs); i < len(metrics) {
if i := findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics, lvs, curry); i < len(metrics) {
return metrics[i].metric, true
}
}
return nil, false
}
// getMetricWithLabels gets a metric while handling possible collisions in
// getMetricWithHashAndLabels gets a metric while handling possible collisions in
// the hash space. Must be called while holding read mutex.
func (m *MetricVec) getMetricWithLabels(h uint64, labels Labels) (Metric, bool) {
metrics, ok := m.children[h]
func (m *metricMap) getMetricWithHashAndLabels(
h uint64, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) (Metric, bool) {
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if ok {
if i := m.findMetricWithLabels(metrics, labels); i < len(metrics) {
if i := findMetricWithLabels(m.desc, metrics, labels, curry); i < len(metrics) {
return metrics[i].metric, true
}
}
@ -351,9 +377,11 @@ func (m *MetricVec) getMetricWithLabels(h uint64, labels Labels) (Metric, bool)
// findMetricWithLabelValues returns the index of the matching metric or
// len(metrics) if not found.
func (m *MetricVec) findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics []metricWithLabelValues, lvs []string) int {
func findMetricWithLabelValues(
metrics []metricWithLabelValues, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) int {
for i, metric := range metrics {
if m.matchLabelValues(metric.values, lvs) {
if matchLabelValues(metric.values, lvs, curry) {
return i
}
}
@ -362,32 +390,51 @@ func (m *MetricVec) findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics []metricWithLabelValues, l
// findMetricWithLabels returns the index of the matching metric or len(metrics)
// if not found.
func (m *MetricVec) findMetricWithLabels(metrics []metricWithLabelValues, labels Labels) int {
func findMetricWithLabels(
desc *Desc, metrics []metricWithLabelValues, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) int {
for i, metric := range metrics {
if m.matchLabels(metric.values, labels) {
if matchLabels(desc, metric.values, labels, curry) {
return i
}
}
return len(metrics)
}
func (m *MetricVec) matchLabelValues(values []string, lvs []string) bool {
if len(values) != len(lvs) {
func matchLabelValues(values []string, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue) bool {
if len(values) != len(lvs)+len(curry) {
return false
}
var iLVs, iCurry int
for i, v := range values {
if v != lvs[i] {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
if v != curry[iCurry].value {
return false
}
iCurry++
continue
}
if v != lvs[iLVs] {
return false
}
iLVs++
}
return true
}
func (m *MetricVec) matchLabels(values []string, labels Labels) bool {
if len(labels) != len(values) {
func matchLabels(desc *Desc, values []string, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue) bool {
if len(values) != len(labels)+len(curry) {
return false
}
for i, k := range m.desc.variableLabels {
iCurry := 0
for i, k := range desc.variableLabels {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
if values[i] != curry[iCurry].value {
return false
}
iCurry++
continue
}
if values[i] != labels[k] {
return false
}
@ -395,10 +442,31 @@ func (m *MetricVec) matchLabels(values []string, labels Labels) bool {
return true
}
func (m *MetricVec) extractLabelValues(labels Labels) []string {
labelValues := make([]string, len(labels))
for i, k := range m.desc.variableLabels {
func extractLabelValues(desc *Desc, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue) []string {
labelValues := make([]string, len(labels)+len(curry))
iCurry := 0
for i, k := range desc.variableLabels {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
labelValues[i] = curry[iCurry].value
iCurry++
continue
}
labelValues[i] = labels[k]
}
return labelValues
}
func inlineLabelValues(lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue) []string {
labelValues := make([]string, len(lvs)+len(curry))
var iCurry, iLVs int
for i := range labelValues {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
labelValues[i] = curry[iCurry].value
iCurry++
continue
}
labelValues[i] = lvs[iLVs]
iLVs++
}
return labelValues
}

View File

@ -0,0 +1,179 @@
// Copyright 2018 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// WrapRegistererWith returns a Registerer wrapping the provided
// Registerer. Collectors registered with the returned Registerer will be
// registered with the wrapped Registerer in a modified way. The modified
// Collector adds the provided Labels to all Metrics it collects (as
// ConstLabels). The Metrics collected by the unmodified Collector must not
// duplicate any of those labels.
//
// WrapRegistererWith provides a way to add fixed labels to a subset of
// Collectors. It should not be used to add fixed labels to all metrics exposed.
//
// The Collector example demonstrates a use of WrapRegistererWith.
func WrapRegistererWith(labels Labels, reg Registerer) Registerer {
return &wrappingRegisterer{
wrappedRegisterer: reg,
labels: labels,
}
}
// WrapRegistererWithPrefix returns a Registerer wrapping the provided
// Registerer. Collectors registered with the returned Registerer will be
// registered with the wrapped Registerer in a modified way. The modified
// Collector adds the provided prefix to the name of all Metrics it collects.
//
// WrapRegistererWithPrefix is useful to have one place to prefix all metrics of
// a sub-system. To make this work, register metrics of the sub-system with the
// wrapping Registerer returned by WrapRegistererWithPrefix. It is rarely useful
// to use the same prefix for all metrics exposed. In particular, do not prefix
// metric names that are standardized across applications, as that would break
// horizontal monitoring, for example the metrics provided by the Go collector
// (see NewGoCollector) and the process collector (see NewProcessCollector). (In
// fact, those metrics are already prefixed with “go_” or “process_”,
// respectively.)
func WrapRegistererWithPrefix(prefix string, reg Registerer) Registerer {
return &wrappingRegisterer{
wrappedRegisterer: reg,
prefix: prefix,
}
}
type wrappingRegisterer struct {
wrappedRegisterer Registerer
prefix string
labels Labels
}
func (r *wrappingRegisterer) Register(c Collector) error {
return r.wrappedRegisterer.Register(&wrappingCollector{
wrappedCollector: c,
prefix: r.prefix,
labels: r.labels,
})
}
func (r *wrappingRegisterer) MustRegister(cs ...Collector) {
for _, c := range cs {
if err := r.Register(c); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
}
func (r *wrappingRegisterer) Unregister(c Collector) bool {
return r.wrappedRegisterer.Unregister(&wrappingCollector{
wrappedCollector: c,
prefix: r.prefix,
labels: r.labels,
})
}
type wrappingCollector struct {
wrappedCollector Collector
prefix string
labels Labels
}
func (c *wrappingCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
wrappedCh := make(chan Metric)
go func() {
c.wrappedCollector.Collect(wrappedCh)
close(wrappedCh)
}()
for m := range wrappedCh {
ch <- &wrappingMetric{
wrappedMetric: m,
prefix: c.prefix,
labels: c.labels,
}
}
}
func (c *wrappingCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
wrappedCh := make(chan *Desc)
go func() {
c.wrappedCollector.Describe(wrappedCh)
close(wrappedCh)
}()
for desc := range wrappedCh {
ch <- wrapDesc(desc, c.prefix, c.labels)
}
}
type wrappingMetric struct {
wrappedMetric Metric
prefix string
labels Labels
}
func (m *wrappingMetric) Desc() *Desc {
return wrapDesc(m.wrappedMetric.Desc(), m.prefix, m.labels)
}
func (m *wrappingMetric) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
if err := m.wrappedMetric.Write(out); err != nil {
return err
}
if len(m.labels) == 0 {
// No wrapping labels.
return nil
}
for ln, lv := range m.labels {
out.Label = append(out.Label, &dto.LabelPair{
Name: proto.String(ln),
Value: proto.String(lv),
})
}
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(out.Label))
return nil
}
func wrapDesc(desc *Desc, prefix string, labels Labels) *Desc {
constLabels := Labels{}
for _, lp := range desc.constLabelPairs {
constLabels[*lp.Name] = *lp.Value
}
for ln, lv := range labels {
if _, alreadyUsed := constLabels[ln]; alreadyUsed {
return &Desc{
fqName: desc.fqName,
help: desc.help,
variableLabels: desc.variableLabels,
constLabelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs,
err: fmt.Errorf("attempted wrapping with already existing label name %q", ln),
}
}
constLabels[ln] = lv
}
// NewDesc will do remaining validations.
newDesc := NewDesc(prefix+desc.fqName, desc.help, desc.variableLabels, constLabels)
// Propagate errors if there was any. This will override any errer
// created by NewDesc above, i.e. earlier errors get precedence.
if desc.err != nil {
newDesc.err = desc.err
}
return newDesc
}