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prometheus/model/textparse/promparse.go

433 lines
10 KiB

// 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.
//go:generate go get -u modernc.org/golex
//go:generate golex -o=promlex.l.go promlex.l
package textparse
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"io"
"math"
"sort"
"strconv"
"strings"
"unicode/utf8"
"unsafe"
"github.com/prometheus/prometheus/model/exemplar"
Style cleanup of all the changes in sparsehistogram so far A lot of this code was hacked together, literally during a hackathon. This commit intends not to change the code substantially, but just make the code obey the usual style practices. A (possibly incomplete) list of areas: * Generally address linter warnings. * The `pgk` directory is deprecated as per dev-summit. No new packages should be added to it. I moved the new `pkg/histogram` package to `model` anticipating what's proposed in #9478. * Make the naming of the Sparse Histogram more consistent. Including abbreviations, there were just too many names for it: SparseHistogram, Histogram, Histo, hist, his, shs, h. The idea is to call it "Histogram" in general. Only add "Sparse" if it is needed to avoid confusion with conventional Histograms (which is rare because the TSDB really has no notion of conventional Histograms). Use abbreviations only in local scope, and then really abbreviate (not just removing three out of seven letters like in "Histo"). This is in the spirit of https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#variable-names * Several other minor name changes. * A lot of formatting of doc comments. For one, following https://github.com/golang/go/wiki/CodeReviewComments#comment-sentences , but also layout question, anticipating how things will look like when rendered by `godoc` (even where `godoc` doesn't render them right now because they are for unexported types or not a doc comment at all but just a normal code comment - consistency is queen!). * Re-enabled `TestQueryLog` and `TestEndopints` (they pass now, leaving them disabled was presumably an oversight). * Bucket iterator for histogram.Histogram is now created with a method. * HistogramChunk.iterator now allows iterator recycling. (I think @dieterbe only commented it out because he was confused by the question in the comment.) * HistogramAppender.Append panics now because we decided to treat staleness marker differently. Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
3 years ago
"github.com/prometheus/prometheus/model/histogram"
"github.com/prometheus/prometheus/model/labels"
"github.com/prometheus/prometheus/model/value"
)
type promlexer struct {
b []byte
i int
start int
err error
state int
}
type token int
const (
tInvalid token = -1
tEOF token = 0
tLinebreak token = iota
tWhitespace
tHelp
tType
tUnit
tEOFWord
tText
tComment
tBlank
tMName
tBraceOpen
tBraceClose
tLName
tLValue
tComma
tEqual
tTimestamp
tValue
)
func (t token) String() string {
switch t {
case tInvalid:
return "INVALID"
case tEOF:
return "EOF"
case tLinebreak:
return "LINEBREAK"
case tWhitespace:
return "WHITESPACE"
case tHelp:
return "HELP"
case tType:
return "TYPE"
case tUnit:
return "UNIT"
case tEOFWord:
return "EOFWORD"
case tText:
return "TEXT"
case tComment:
return "COMMENT"
case tBlank:
return "BLANK"
case tMName:
return "MNAME"
case tBraceOpen:
return "BOPEN"
case tBraceClose:
return "BCLOSE"
case tLName:
return "LNAME"
case tLValue:
return "LVALUE"
case tEqual:
return "EQUAL"
case tComma:
return "COMMA"
case tTimestamp:
return "TIMESTAMP"
case tValue:
return "VALUE"
}
return fmt.Sprintf("<invalid: %d>", t)
}
// buf returns the buffer of the current token.
func (l *promlexer) buf() []byte {
return l.b[l.start:l.i]
}
func (l *promlexer) cur() byte {
return l.b[l.i]
}
// next advances the promlexer to the next character.
func (l *promlexer) next() byte {
l.i++
if l.i >= len(l.b) {
l.err = io.EOF
return byte(tEOF)
}
// Lex struggles with null bytes. If we are in a label value or help string, where
// they are allowed, consume them here immediately.
for l.b[l.i] == 0 && (l.state == sLValue || l.state == sMeta2 || l.state == sComment) {
l.i++
}
return l.b[l.i]
}
func (l *promlexer) Error(es string) {
l.err = errors.New(es)
}
// PromParser parses samples from a byte slice of samples in the official
// Prometheus text exposition format.
type PromParser struct {
l *promlexer
series []byte
text []byte
mtype MetricType
val float64
ts int64
hasTS bool
start int
offsets []int
}
// NewPromParser returns a new parser of the byte slice.
func NewPromParser(b []byte) Parser {
return &PromParser{l: &promlexer{b: append(b, '\n')}}
}
// Series returns the bytes of the series, the timestamp if set, and the value
// of the current sample.
func (p *PromParser) Series() ([]byte, *int64, float64) {
if p.hasTS {
return p.series, &p.ts, p.val
}
return p.series, nil, p.val
}
// Histogram always returns (nil, nil, nil, nil) because the Prometheus text format
// does not support sparse histograms.
func (p *PromParser) Histogram() ([]byte, *int64, *histogram.Histogram, *histogram.FloatHistogram) {
return nil, nil, nil, nil
Hacky implementation of protobuf parsing This "brings back" protobuf parsing, with the only goal to play with the new sparse histograms. The Prom-2.x style parser is highly adapted to the structure of the Prometheus text format (and later OpenMetrics). Some jumping through hoops is required to feed protobuf into it. This is not meant to be a model for the final implementation. It should just enable sparse histogram ingestion at a reasonable efficiency. Following known shortcomings and flaws: - No tests yet. - Summaries and legacy histograms, i.e. without sparse buckets, are ignored. - Staleness doesn't work (but this could be fixed in the appender, to be discussed). - No tricks have been tried that would be similar to the tricks the text parsers do (like direct pointers into the HTTP response body). That makes things weird here. Tricky optimizations only make sense once the final format is specified, which will almost certainly not be the old protobuf format. (Interestingly, I expect this implementation to be in fact much more efficient than the original protobuf ingestion in Prom-1.x.) - This is using a proto3 version of metrics.proto (mostly to be consistent with the other protobuf uses). However, proto3 sees no difference between an unset field. We depend on that to distinguish between an unset timestamp and the timestamp 0 (1970-01-01, 00:00:00 UTC). In this experimental code, we just assume that timestamp is never specified and therefore a timestamp of 0 always is interpreted as "not set". Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
3 years ago
}
// Help returns the metric name and help text in the current entry.
// Must only be called after Next returned a help entry.
// The returned byte slices become invalid after the next call to Next.
func (p *PromParser) Help() ([]byte, []byte) {
m := p.l.b[p.offsets[0]:p.offsets[1]]
// Replacer causes allocations. Replace only when necessary.
if strings.IndexByte(yoloString(p.text), byte('\\')) >= 0 {
return m, []byte(helpReplacer.Replace(string(p.text)))
}
return m, p.text
}
// Type returns the metric name and type in the current entry.
// Must only be called after Next returned a type entry.
// The returned byte slices become invalid after the next call to Next.
func (p *PromParser) Type() ([]byte, MetricType) {
return p.l.b[p.offsets[0]:p.offsets[1]], p.mtype
}
// Unit returns the metric name and unit in the current entry.
// Must only be called after Next returned a unit entry.
// The returned byte slices become invalid after the next call to Next.
func (p *PromParser) Unit() ([]byte, []byte) {
// The Prometheus format does not have units.
return nil, nil
}
// Comment returns the text of the current comment.
// Must only be called after Next returned a comment entry.
// The returned byte slice becomes invalid after the next call to Next.
func (p *PromParser) Comment() []byte {
return p.text
}
// Metric writes the labels of the current sample into the passed labels.
// It returns the string from which the metric was parsed.
func (p *PromParser) Metric(l *labels.Labels) string {
// Allocate the full immutable string immediately, so we just
// have to create references on it below.
s := string(p.series)
*l = append(*l, labels.Label{
Name: labels.MetricName,
Value: s[:p.offsets[0]-p.start],
})
for i := 1; i < len(p.offsets); i += 4 {
a := p.offsets[i] - p.start
b := p.offsets[i+1] - p.start
c := p.offsets[i+2] - p.start
d := p.offsets[i+3] - p.start
// Replacer causes allocations. Replace only when necessary.
if strings.IndexByte(s[c:d], byte('\\')) >= 0 {
*l = append(*l, labels.Label{Name: s[a:b], Value: lvalReplacer.Replace(s[c:d])})
continue
}
*l = append(*l, labels.Label{Name: s[a:b], Value: s[c:d]})
}
// Sort labels to maintain the sorted labels invariant.
sort.Sort(*l)
return s
}
// Exemplar writes the exemplar of the current sample into the passed
// exemplar. It returns if an exemplar exists.
func (p *PromParser) Exemplar(e *exemplar.Exemplar) bool {
return false
}
// nextToken returns the next token from the promlexer. It skips over tabs
// and spaces.
func (p *PromParser) nextToken() token {
for {
if tok := p.l.Lex(); tok != tWhitespace {
return tok
}
}
}
func parseError(exp string, got token) error {
return fmt.Errorf("%s, got %q", exp, got)
}
// Next advances the parser to the next sample. It returns false if no
// more samples were read or an error occurred.
func (p *PromParser) Next() (Entry, error) {
var err error
p.start = p.l.i
p.offsets = p.offsets[:0]
switch t := p.nextToken(); t {
case tEOF:
return EntryInvalid, io.EOF
case tLinebreak:
// Allow full blank lines.
return p.Next()
case tHelp, tType:
switch t2 := p.nextToken(); t2 {
case tMName:
p.offsets = append(p.offsets, p.l.start, p.l.i)
default:
return EntryInvalid, parseError("expected metric name after "+t.String(), t2)
}
switch t2 := p.nextToken(); t2 {
case tText:
if len(p.l.buf()) > 1 {
p.text = p.l.buf()[1:]
} else {
p.text = []byte{}
}
default:
return EntryInvalid, fmt.Errorf("expected text in %s", t.String())
}
switch t {
case tType:
switch s := yoloString(p.text); s {
case "counter":
p.mtype = MetricTypeCounter
case "gauge":
p.mtype = MetricTypeGauge
case "histogram":
p.mtype = MetricTypeHistogram
case "summary":
p.mtype = MetricTypeSummary
case "untyped":
p.mtype = MetricTypeUnknown
default:
return EntryInvalid, fmt.Errorf("invalid metric type %q", s)
}
case tHelp:
if !utf8.Valid(p.text) {
return EntryInvalid, fmt.Errorf("help text is not a valid utf8 string")
}
}
if t := p.nextToken(); t != tLinebreak {
return EntryInvalid, parseError("linebreak expected after metadata", t)
}
switch t {
case tHelp:
return EntryHelp, nil
case tType:
return EntryType, nil
}
case tComment:
p.text = p.l.buf()
if t := p.nextToken(); t != tLinebreak {
return EntryInvalid, parseError("linebreak expected after comment", t)
}
return EntryComment, nil
case tMName:
p.offsets = append(p.offsets, p.l.i)
p.series = p.l.b[p.start:p.l.i]
t2 := p.nextToken()
if t2 == tBraceOpen {
if err := p.parseLVals(); err != nil {
return EntryInvalid, err
}
p.series = p.l.b[p.start:p.l.i]
t2 = p.nextToken()
}
if t2 != tValue {
return EntryInvalid, parseError("expected value after metric", t)
}
if p.val, err = parseFloat(yoloString(p.l.buf())); err != nil {
return EntryInvalid, err
}
// Ensure canonical NaN value.
if math.IsNaN(p.val) {
p.val = math.Float64frombits(value.NormalNaN)
}
p.hasTS = false
switch p.nextToken() {
case tLinebreak:
break
case tTimestamp:
p.hasTS = true
if p.ts, err = strconv.ParseInt(yoloString(p.l.buf()), 10, 64); err != nil {
return EntryInvalid, err
}
if t2 := p.nextToken(); t2 != tLinebreak {
return EntryInvalid, parseError("expected next entry after timestamp", t)
}
default:
return EntryInvalid, parseError("expected timestamp or new record", t)
}
return EntrySeries, nil
default:
err = fmt.Errorf("%q is not a valid start token", t)
}
return EntryInvalid, err
}
func (p *PromParser) parseLVals() error {
t := p.nextToken()
for {
switch t {
case tBraceClose:
return nil
case tLName:
default:
return parseError("expected label name", t)
}
p.offsets = append(p.offsets, p.l.start, p.l.i)
if t := p.nextToken(); t != tEqual {
return parseError("expected equal", t)
}
if t := p.nextToken(); t != tLValue {
return parseError("expected label value", t)
}
if !utf8.Valid(p.l.buf()) {
return fmt.Errorf("invalid UTF-8 label value")
}
// The promlexer ensures the value string is quoted. Strip first
// and last character.
p.offsets = append(p.offsets, p.l.start+1, p.l.i-1)
// Free trailing commas are allowed.
if t = p.nextToken(); t == tComma {
t = p.nextToken()
}
}
}
var lvalReplacer = strings.NewReplacer(
`\"`, "\"",
`\\`, "\\",
`\n`, "\n",
)
var helpReplacer = strings.NewReplacer(
`\\`, "\\",
`\n`, "\n",
)
func yoloString(b []byte) string {
return *((*string)(unsafe.Pointer(&b)))
}
func parseFloat(s string) (float64, error) {
// Keep to pre-Go 1.13 float formats.
if strings.ContainsAny(s, "pP_") {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("unsupported character in float")
}
return strconv.ParseFloat(s, 64)
}