diff --git a/dev/.documenter-siteinfo.json b/dev/.documenter-siteinfo.json index e33d7e2..b3bac48 100644 --- a/dev/.documenter-siteinfo.json +++ b/dev/.documenter-siteinfo.json @@ -1 +1 @@ -{"documenter":{"julia_version":"1.9.3","generation_timestamp":"2023-11-05T22:49:18","documenter_version":"1.1.2"}} \ No newline at end of file +{"documenter":{"julia_version":"1.9.3","generation_timestamp":"2023-11-05T22:53:30","documenter_version":"1.1.2"}} \ No newline at end of file diff --git a/dev/index.html b/dev/index.html index 634f6e8..606803a 100644 --- a/dev/index.html +++ b/dev/index.html @@ -17,10 +17,10 @@ gc_alloc_bytes_total 365578814 # HELP request_count Number of handled requests # TYPE request_count counter -request_count 1

The output contains some default metrics related to the running process, as well as the request counter that we added ourselves. Every time you refresh, the counter will increment its value. close(server) will shutdown the server.

Collectors

This section documents the collectors that are currently supported. This include the "basic" collectors (Counter, Gauge, Summary) as well as some custom collectors (GCCollector, ProcessCollector). There is also a section on how to implement your own collector, see Custom collectors.

Upstream documentation:

Counter

Quoting the upstream documentation:

A counter is a cumulative metric that represents a single monotonically increasing counter whose value can only increase or be reset to zero on restart. For example, you can use a counter to represent the number of requests served, tasks completed, or errors.

Do not use a counter to expose a value that can decrease. For example, do not use a counter for the number of currently running processes; instead use a gauge.

Counter API reference

Prometheus.CounterMethod
Prometheus.Counter(name, help; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Construct a Counter collector.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the counter metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the counter metric.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

source
Prometheus.incMethod
Prometheus.inc(counter::Counter, v = 1)

Increment the value of the counter with v. v must be non-negative, and defaults to v = 1.

source

Gauge

Quoting the upstream documentation:

A gauge is a metric that represents a single numerical value that can arbitrarily go up and down.

Gauges are typically used for measured values like temperatures or current memory usage, but also "counts" that can go up and down, like the number of concurrent requests.

Gauge API reference

Prometheus.GaugeMethod
Prometheus.Gauge(name, help; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Construct a Gauge collector.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the gauge metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the gauge metric.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

source
Prometheus.incMethod
Prometheus.inc(gauge::Gauge, v = 1)

Increment the value of the gauge with v. v defaults to v = 1.

source
Prometheus.decMethod
Prometheus.dec(gauge::Gauge, v = 1)

Decrement the value of the gauge with v. v defaults to v = 1.

source
Prometheus.setMethod
Prometheus.set(gauge::Gauge, v)

Set the value of the gauge to v.

source
Prometheus.set_to_current_timeMethod
Prometheus.set_to_current_time(gauge::Gauge)

Set the value of the gauge to the current unixtime in seconds.

source

Summary

Quoting the upstream documentation:

Similar to a histogram, a summary samples observations (usually things like request durations and response sizes). While it also provides a total count of observations and a sum of all observed values, it calculates configurable quantiles over a sliding time window.

Summary API reference

Prometheus.SummaryMethod
Prometheus.Summary(name, help; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Construct a Summary collector.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the summary metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the summary metric.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

source
Prometheus.observeMethod
Prometheus.observe(summary::Summary, v)

Add the observed value v to the summary. This increases the sum and count of the summary with v and 1, respectively.

source

GCCollector

A collector that exports metrics about allocations and garbage collection (for example number of allocations, number of bytes allocated, time spent in garbage collection, etc). These metrics have the julia_gc_ prefix in their name.

A GCCollector is registered automatically with the default registry, see Default registry for more details.

GCCollector API reference

Prometheus.GCCollectorMethod
Prometheus.GCCollector(; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Create a collector that exports metrics about allocations and garbage collection.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. The default registry is used by default. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.
Note

A GCCollector is registered automatically with the default registry. If necessary it can be removed by calling

Prometheus.unregister(Prometheus.DEFAULT_REGISTRY, Prometheus.GC_COLLECTOR)
source

ProcessCollector

A collector that exports metrics about a running process, for example CPU seconds and metrics about I/O operations. Metrics from this collector have the process_ prefix in their name. This collector is only available on Linux since it requires the /proc file system.

A ProcessCollector for the current process is registered automatically with the default registry, see Default registry for more details.

ProcessCollector API reference

Prometheus.ProcessCollectorMethod
Prometheus.ProcessCollector(pid; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Create a process collector for the process id given by the pid function. The collector exposes metrics about the process' CPU time, start time, memory usage, file usage, and I/O operations.

Arguments

  • pid :: Function: a function returning a process id as a string or integer for which to collect metrics. By default the "self" pid is used, i.e. the current process.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. The default registry is used by default. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.
Note

A ProcessCollector for the current process is registered automatically with the default registry. If necessary it can be removed by calling

Prometheus.unregister(Prometheus.DEFAULT_REGISTRY, Prometheus.PROCESS_COLLECTOR)
Note

The process collector is currently only available on Linux since it requires the /proc file system. On Windows and macOS this collector will not expose any metrics.

source

Custom collectors

RandomCollector

Labels

See https://prometheus.io/docs/concepts/data_model/#metric-names-and-labels for details.

Prometheus.FamilyMethod
Prometheus.Family{C}(name, help, labelnames; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Create a labeled collector family with labels given by labelnames. For every new set of label values encountered a new collector of type C <: Collector will be created.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the family metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the family metric.
  • labelnames :: Tuple{String, ...}: the label names.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

Examples

# Construct a family of Counters
+request_count 1

The output contains some default metrics related to the running process, as well as the request counter that we added ourselves. Every time you refresh, the counter will increment its value. close(server) will shutdown the server.

Collectors

This section documents the collectors that are currently supported. This include the "basic" collectors (Counter, Gauge, Summary) as well as some custom collectors (GCCollector, ProcessCollector). There is also a section on how to implement your own collector, see Custom collectors.

Upstream documentation:

Counter

Quoting the upstream documentation:

A counter is a cumulative metric that represents a single monotonically increasing counter whose value can only increase or be reset to zero on restart. For example, you can use a counter to represent the number of requests served, tasks completed, or errors.

Do not use a counter to expose a value that can decrease. For example, do not use a counter for the number of currently running processes; instead use a gauge.

Counter API reference

Prometheus.CounterMethod
Prometheus.Counter(name, help; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Construct a Counter collector.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the counter metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the counter metric.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

source
Prometheus.incMethod
Prometheus.inc(counter::Counter, v = 1)

Increment the value of the counter with v. v must be non-negative, and defaults to v = 1.

source

Gauge

Quoting the upstream documentation:

A gauge is a metric that represents a single numerical value that can arbitrarily go up and down.

Gauges are typically used for measured values like temperatures or current memory usage, but also "counts" that can go up and down, like the number of concurrent requests.

Gauge API reference

Prometheus.GaugeMethod
Prometheus.Gauge(name, help; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Construct a Gauge collector.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the gauge metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the gauge metric.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

source
Prometheus.incMethod
Prometheus.inc(gauge::Gauge, v = 1)

Increment the value of the gauge with v. v defaults to v = 1.

source
Prometheus.decMethod
Prometheus.dec(gauge::Gauge, v = 1)

Decrement the value of the gauge with v. v defaults to v = 1.

source

Summary

Quoting the upstream documentation:

Similar to a histogram, a summary samples observations (usually things like request durations and response sizes). While it also provides a total count of observations and a sum of all observed values, it calculates configurable quantiles over a sliding time window.

Summary API reference

Prometheus.SummaryMethod
Prometheus.Summary(name, help; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Construct a Summary collector.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the summary metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the summary metric.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

source
Prometheus.observeMethod
Prometheus.observe(summary::Summary, v)

Add the observed value v to the summary. This increases the sum and count of the summary with v and 1, respectively.

source

GCCollector

A collector that exports metrics about allocations and garbage collection (for example number of allocations, number of bytes allocated, time spent in garbage collection, etc). These metrics have the julia_gc_ prefix in their name.

A GCCollector is registered automatically with the default registry, see Default registry for more details.

GCCollector API reference

Prometheus.GCCollectorMethod
Prometheus.GCCollector(; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Create a collector that exports metrics about allocations and garbage collection.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. The default registry is used by default. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.
Note

A GCCollector is registered automatically with the default registry. If necessary it can be removed by calling

Prometheus.unregister(Prometheus.DEFAULT_REGISTRY, Prometheus.GC_COLLECTOR)
source

ProcessCollector

A collector that exports metrics about a running process, for example CPU seconds and metrics about I/O operations. Metrics from this collector have the process_ prefix in their name. This collector is only available on Linux since it requires the /proc file system.

A ProcessCollector for the current process is registered automatically with the default registry, see Default registry for more details.

ProcessCollector API reference

Prometheus.ProcessCollectorMethod
Prometheus.ProcessCollector(pid; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Create a process collector for the process id given by the pid function. The collector exposes metrics about the process' CPU time, start time, memory usage, file usage, and I/O operations.

Arguments

  • pid :: Function: a function returning a process id as a string or integer for which to collect metrics. By default the "self" pid is used, i.e. the current process.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. The default registry is used by default. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.
Note

A ProcessCollector for the current process is registered automatically with the default registry. If necessary it can be removed by calling

Prometheus.unregister(Prometheus.DEFAULT_REGISTRY, Prometheus.PROCESS_COLLECTOR)
Note

The process collector is currently only available on Linux since it requires the /proc file system. On Windows and macOS this collector will not expose any metrics.

source

Custom collectors

RandomCollector

Labels

See https://prometheus.io/docs/concepts/data_model/#metric-names-and-labels for details.

Prometheus.FamilyMethod
Prometheus.Family{C}(name, help, labelnames; registry=DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Create a labeled collector family with labels given by labelnames. For every new set of label values encountered a new collector of type C <: Collector will be created.

Arguments

  • name :: String: the name of the family metric.
  • help :: String: the documentation for the family metric.
  • labelnames :: Tuple{String, ...}: the label names.

Keyword arguments

  • registry :: Prometheus.CollectorRegistry: the registry in which to register the collector. If not specified the default registry is used. Pass registry = nothing to skip registration.

Methods

Examples

# Construct a family of Counters
 counter_family = Prometheus.Family{Counter}(
     "http_requests", "Number of HTTP requests", ["status_code", "endpoint"],
 )
 
 # Increment the counter for the labels status_code = "200" and endpoint = "/api"
-Prometheus.inc(Prometheus.labels(counter_family, ["200", "/api"]))
source
Prometheus.labelsMethod
Prometheus.labels(family::Family{C}, labelvalues::Tuple{String, ...}) where C

Return the collector of type C from the family corresponding to the labels given by labelvalues.

Note

This method does an acquire/release of a lock, and a dictionary lookup, to find the collector matching the label names. For typical applications this overhead does not matter (below 100ns for some basic benchmarks) but it is safe to cache the returned collector if required.

source
Prometheus.removeMethod
Prometheus.remove(family::Family, labelvalues::Tuple{String, ...})

Remove the collector corresponding to labelvalues. Effectively this resets the collector since Prometheus.labels will recreate the collector when called with the same label names.

Note

This method invalidates cached collectors for the label names.

source
Prometheus.clearMethod
Prometheus.clear(family::Family)

Remove all collectors in the family. Effectively this resets the collectors since Prometheus.labels will recreate them when needed.

Note

This method invalidates all cached collectors.

source

Registries

Default registry

Exposition

Prometheus support

Prometheus.exposeFunction
Prometheus.expose(file::String, reg::CollectorRegistry = DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Export all metrics in reg by writing them to the file file.

source
expose(io::IO, reg::CollectorRegistry = DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Export all metrics in reg by writing them to the I/O stream io.

source
expose(http::HTTP.Stream, reg::CollectorRegistry = DEFAULT_REGISTRY; kwargs...)

Export all metrics in reg by writing them to the HTTP stream http.

The caller is responsible for checking e.g. the HTTP method and URI target. For HEAD requests this method do not write a body, however.

source
+Prometheus.inc(Prometheus.labels(counter_family, ["200", "/api"]))source
Prometheus.labelsMethod
Prometheus.labels(family::Family{C}, labelvalues::Tuple{String, ...}) where C

Return the collector of type C from the family corresponding to the labels given by labelvalues.

Note

This method does an acquire/release of a lock, and a dictionary lookup, to find the collector matching the label names. For typical applications this overhead does not matter (below 100ns for some basic benchmarks) but it is safe to cache the returned collector if required.

source
Prometheus.removeMethod
Prometheus.remove(family::Family, labelvalues::Tuple{String, ...})

Remove the collector corresponding to labelvalues. Effectively this resets the collector since Prometheus.labels will recreate the collector when called with the same label names.

Note

This method invalidates cached collectors for the label names.

source
Prometheus.clearMethod
Prometheus.clear(family::Family)

Remove all collectors in the family. Effectively this resets the collectors since Prometheus.labels will recreate them when needed.

Note

This method invalidates all cached collectors.

source

Registries

Default registry

Exposition

Prometheus support

Prometheus.exposeFunction
Prometheus.expose(file::String, reg::CollectorRegistry = DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Export all metrics in reg by writing them to the file file.

source
expose(io::IO, reg::CollectorRegistry = DEFAULT_REGISTRY)

Export all metrics in reg by writing them to the I/O stream io.

source
expose(http::HTTP.Stream, reg::CollectorRegistry = DEFAULT_REGISTRY; kwargs...)

Export all metrics in reg by writing them to the HTTP stream http.

The caller is responsible for checking e.g. the HTTP method and URI target. For HEAD requests this method do not write a body, however.

source