For instance `require.NoError` will print the unexpected error; we don't
need to include it in the message.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
Converted maps into labels.Labels to avoid a lot of copying of data which leads to very high memory consumption while opening the /service-discovery endpoint in the Prometheus UI
Signed-off-by: Leegin <114397475+Leegin-darknight@users.noreply.github.com>
Converted maps into labels.Labels to avoid a lot of copying of data which leads to very high memory consumption while opening the /service-discovery endpoint in the Prometheus UI
Signed-off-by: Leegin <114397475+Leegin-darknight@users.noreply.github.com>
Conditions are ANDed inside the same matcher but matchers are ORed
Including unit tests for "promtool tsdb dump".
Refactor some matchers scraping utils.
Signed-off-by: machine424 <ayoubmrini424@gmail.com>
They are used in multiple repos, so common is a better place for them.
Several packages now don't depend on `model/textparse`, e.g.
`storage/remote`.
Also remove `metadata` struct from `api.go`, since it was identical to
a struct in the `metadata` package.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
Too confusing to have `MetadataList` and `ListMetadata`, etc.
I standardised on the ones which are in an interface.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
* web/api: optimize labelnames/values with 1 set of matchers
If there is exactly one set of matchers provided, we can skip adding
the results to a map and getting them back out again.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
Add unit tests for Web API's query endpoint (GET/POST).
Also modify the endpoint handler to use context.WithDeadline instead of
context.WithTimeout, so the deadline is deterministic for the tests.
Signed-off-by: Arve Knudsen <arve.knudsen@gmail.com>
Return annotations (warnings and infos) from PromQL queries
This generalizes the warnings we have already used before (but only for problems with remote read) as "annotations".
Annotations can be warnings or infos (the latter could be false positives). We do not treat them different in the API for now and return them all as "warnings". It would be easy to distinguish them and return infos separately, should that appear useful in the future.
The new annotations are then used to create a lot of warnings or infos during PromQL evaluations. Partially these are things we have wanted for a long time (e.g. inform the user that they have applied `rate` to a metric that doesn't look like a counter), but the new native histograms have created even more needs for those annotations (e.g. if a query tries to aggregate float numbers with histograms).
The annotations added here are not yet complete. A prominent example would be a warning about a range too short for a rate calculation. But such a warnings is more tricky to create with good fidelity and we will tackle it later.
Another TODO is to take annotations into account when evaluating recording rules.
---------
Signed-off-by: Jeanette Tan <jeanette.tan@grafana.com>
It's possible (quite common on Kubernetes) to have a service discovery
return thousands of targets then drop most of them in relabel rules.
The main place this data is used is to display in the web UI, where
you don't want thousands of lines of display.
The new limit is `keep_dropped_targets`, which defaults to 0
for backwards-compatibility.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
* Add OTLP Ingestion endpoint
We copy files from the otel-collector-contrib. See the README in
`storage/remote/otlptranslator/README.md`.
This supersedes: https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/pull/11965
Signed-off-by: gouthamve <gouthamve@gmail.com>
* Return a 200 OK
It is what the OTEL Golang SDK expect :(
https://github.com/open-telemetry/opentelemetry-go/issues/4363
Signed-off-by: Goutham <gouthamve@gmail.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: gouthamve <gouthamve@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Goutham <gouthamve@gmail.com>
Convert QueryOpts to an interface so that downstream projects like
https://github.com/thanos-community/promql-engine could extend the query
options with engine specific options that are not in the original
engine.
Will be used to enable query analysis per-query.
Signed-off-by: Giedrius Statkevičius <giedrius.statkevicius@vinted.com>
Wiser coders than myself have come to the conclusion that a `switch`
statement is almost always superior to a statement that includes any
`else if`.
The exceptions that I have found in our codebase are just these two:
* The `if else` is followed by an additional statement before the next
condition (separated by a `;`).
* The whole thing is within a `for` loop and `break` statements are
used. In this case, using `switch` would require tagging the `for`
loop, which probably tips the balance.
Why are `switch` statements more readable?
For one, fewer curly braces. But more importantly, the conditions all
have the same alignment, so the whole thing follows the natural flow
of going down a list of conditions. With `else if`, in contrast, all
conditions but the first are "hidden" behind `} else if `, harder to
spot and (for no good reason) presented differently from the first
condition.
I'm sure the aforemention wise coders can list even more reasons.
In any case, I like it so much that I have found myself recommending
it in code reviews. I would like to make it a habit in our code base,
without making it a hard requirement that we would test on the CI. But
for that, there has to be a role model, so this commit eliminates all
`if else` occurrences, unless it is autogenerated code or fits one of
the exceptions above.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
We haven't updated golint-ci in our CI yet, but this commit prepares
for that.
There are a lot of new warnings, and it is mostly because the "revive"
linter got updated. I agree with most of the new warnings, mostly
around not naming unused function parameters (although it is justified
in some cases for documentation purposes – while things like mocks are
a good example where not naming the parameter is clearer).
I'm pretty upset about the "empty block" warning to include `for`
loops. It's such a common pattern to do something in the head of the
`for` loop and then have an empty block. There is still an open issue
about this: https://github.com/mgechev/revive/issues/810 I have
disabled "revive" altogether in files where empty blocks are used
excessively, and I have made the effort to add individual
`// nolint:revive` where empty blocks are used just once or twice.
It's borderline noisy, though, but let's go with it for now.
I should mention that none of the "empty block" warnings for `for`
loop bodies were legitimate.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
Introduces support for a new query parameter in the `/rules` API endpoint that allows filtering by rule names.
If all the rules of a group are filtered, we skip the group entirely.
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>