Exporter for machine metrics
You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
 
 
 
 
Björn Rabenstein d955d99e7b Merge pull request #194 from pborzenkov/fix-build-wo-conntrack 9 years ago
collector Fix compilation without conntrack collector 9 years ago
.gitignore Add build artifacts to gitignore 10 years ago
.travis.yml Verify go formatting 9 years ago
AUTHORS.md Update Julius's email address in AUTHORS.md 9 years ago
CHANGELOG.md Cut version 0.11.0 9 years ago
CONTRIBUTING.md License cleanup 10 years ago
Dockerfile New Dockerfile using alpine-golang-make-onbuild base image 10 years ago
LICENSE License cleanup 10 years ago
Makefile Add build_info metric similar to the one of Prometheus itself 9 years ago
Makefile.COMMON Update Makefile.COMMON 9 years ago
NOTICE License cleanup 10 years ago
README.md Introduce entropy collector for Linux 9 years ago
end-to-end-test.sh Re-arrange collectors list in end-to-end test 9 years ago
node_exporter.go Introduce entropy collector for Linux 9 years ago

README.md

Node exporter

Build Status

Prometheus exporter for machine metrics, written in Go with pluggable metric collectors.

Building and running

make
./node_exporter <flags>

Running tests

make test

Available collectors

By default the build will include the native collectors that expose information from /proc.

Which collectors are used is controlled by the --collectors.enabled flag.

Enabled by default

Name Description
conntrack Shows conntrack statistics (does nothing if no /proc/sys/net/netfilter/ present).
diskstats Exposes disk I/O statistics from /proc/diskstats.
entropy Exposes available entropy.
filefd Exposes file descriptor statistics.
filesystem Exposes filesystem statistics, such as disk space used.
loadavg Exposes load average.
mdadm Exposes statistics about devices in /proc/mdstat (does nothing if no /proc/mdstat present).
meminfo Exposes memory statistics from /proc/meminfo.
netdev Exposes network interface statistics from /proc/netstat, such as bytes transferred.
netstat Exposes network statistics from /proc/net/netstat. This is the same information as netstat -s.
stat Exposes various statistics from /proc/stat. This includes CPU usage, boot time, forks and interrupts.
textfile Exposes statistics read from local disk. The --collector.textfile.directory flag must be set.
time Exposes the current system time.
vmstat Exposes statistics from /proc/vmstat.
version Exposes node_exporter version.

Disabled by default

Name Description
bonding Exposes the number of configured and active slaves of Linux bonding interfaces.
gmond Exposes statistics from Ganglia.
interrupts Exposes detailed interrupts statistics from /proc/interrupts.
ipvs Exposes IPVS status from /proc/net/ip_vs and stats from /proc/net/ip_vs_stats.
lastlogin Exposes the last time there was a login.
megacli Exposes RAID statistics from MegaCLI.
ntp Exposes time drift from an NTP server.
runit Exposes service status from runit.
supervisord Exposes service status from supervisord.
systemd Exposes service and system status from systemd.
tcpstat Exposes TCP connection status information from /proc/net/tcp and /proc/net/tcp6. (Warning: the current version has potential performance issues in high load situations.)

Textfile Collector

The textfile collector is similar to the Pushgateway, in that it allows exporting of statistics from batch jobs. It can also be used to export static metrics, such as what role a machine has. The Pushgateway should be used for service-level metrics. The textfile module is for metrics that are tied to a machine.

To use it, set the --collector.textfile.directory flag on the Node exporter. The collector will parse all files in that directory matching the glob *.prom using the text format.

To atomically push completion time for a cron job:

echo my_batch_job_completion_time $(date +%s) > /path/to/directory/my_batch_job.prom.$$
mv /path/to/directory/my_batch_job.prom.$$ /path/to/directory/my_batch_job.prom

To statically set roles for a machine using labels:

echo 'role{role="application_server"} 1' > /path/to/directory/role.prom.$$
mv /path/to/directory/role.prom.$$ /path/to/directory/role.prom

Using Docker

You can deploy this exporter using the prom/node-exporter Docker image.

For example:

docker pull prom/node-exporter

docker run -d -p 9100:9100 --net="host" prom/node-exporter