This is a Prometheus exporter of core RabbitMQ metrics, developed by the RabbitMQ core team. It is largely a "clean room" design that reuses some prior work from Prometheus exporters done by the community.
This plugin is new as of RabbitMQ 3.8.0
.
See Monitoring RabbitMQ with Prometheus and Grafana.
This plugin is included into RabbitMQ 3.8.x releases. Like all plugins, it has to be enabled before it can be used:
To enable it with rabbitmq-plugins:
rabbitmq-plugins enable rabbitmq_prometheus
See the documentation guide.
Default port used by the plugin is 15692
. In most environments there would be no configuration
necessary.
See the entire list of metrics exposed via the default port.
This exporter supports the following options via a set of prometheus.*
configuration keys:
prometheus.return_per_object_metrics
returns all metrics per object, unaggregated (default isfalse
). See #26 for more details.prometheus.path
defines a scrape endpoint (default is"/metrics"
).prometheus.tcp.*
controls HTTP listener settings that match those used by the RabbitMQ HTTP APIprometheus.ssl.*
controls TLS (HTTPS) listener settings that match those used by the RabbitMQ HTTP API
Sample configuration snippet:
# these values are defaults
prometheus.return_per_object_metrics = false
prometheus.path = /metrics
prometheus.tcp.port = 15692
When metrics are returned per object, nodes with 80k queues have been measured to take 58 seconds to return 1.9 million metrics in a 98MB response payload. In order to not put unnecessary pressure on your metrics system, metrics are aggregated by default.
When debugging, it may be useful to return metrics per object (unaggregated). This can be enabled on-the-fly, without restarting or configuring RabbitMQ, using the following command:
rabbitmqctl eval 'application:set_env(rabbitmq_prometheus, return_per_object_metrics, true).'
To go back to aggregated metrics on-the-fly, run the following command:
rabbitmqctl eval 'application:set_env(rabbitmq_prometheus, return_per_object_metrics, false).'
See CONTRIBUTING.md.
This project uses erlang.mk, running make help
will return erlang.mk help.
To see all custom targets that have been documented, run make h
.
For Bash shell autocompletion, run eval "$(make autocomplete)"
, then type make a<TAB>
to see all Make targets starting with the letter a
, e.g.:
$ make a<TAB
ac all.coverdata app-build apps apps-eunit asciidoc-guide autocomplete
all app app-c_src apps-ct asciidoc asciidoc-manual
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