Python programmable Prometheus exporter

p3exporter will help any DevOps to quickstart its Prometheus exporter development. It is completly written in python and provides a facility for pluggable metric collectors. The exporter comes with real life exporters to illustrate how it works but is also intended to use as a framework for completely custom collectors.

The included collectors were only tested on linux systems. Other *nix derivates are not supported by us but you are welcome to contribute to bring this exporter to a broader audience.

Installation and Running

There are different ways to run the exporter on your system. Our exporter listen on tcp/5876 by default. You can change this by adding --port or -p option with the port of your choice.

Running exporter as docker container

The simplest way will is to start it as docker container. The container image is hosted on dockerhub and the latest tag represent the develop branch of the github repository. If you want to use a given version you can us the verson string (e.g. v1.0.0) as tag instead.

docker run -d --net="host" --pid="host" -v "/:/host:ro,rslave" codeaffen/p3exporter:latest

Installing from pypi.org

We also release all versions on pypi so you can use pip to install the exporter and run it locally.

pip install p3exporter

This will install the exporter and all of its dependencies. Now you can start it as every other program. You need to add --config or -c option with path to your p3.yml file.

$ curl --silent https://raw.githubusercontent.com/codeaffen/p3exporter/develop/p3.yml --output ~/tmp/p3.yml
$ p3exporter --config ~/tmp/p3.yml
INFO:root:Collector 'example' was loaded and registred successfully
INFO:root:Collector 'loadavg' was loaded and registred successfully
INFO:root:Collector 'netdev' was loaded and registred successfully
INFO:root:Start exporter, listen on 5876

Install from repository

The last option to install and run p3exporter is to install it from a local clone of our github repository.

$ git clone https://github.com/codeaffen/p3exporter.git
Cloning into 'p3exporter'...
remote: Enumerating objects: 158, done.
remote: Counting objects: 100% (158/158), done.
remote: Compressing objects: 100% (112/112), done.
remote: Total 158 (delta 63), reused 101 (delta 28), pack-reused 0
Receiving objects: 100% (158/158), 188.37 KiB | 1.08 MiB/s, done.
Resolving deltas: 100% (63/63), done.
$ cd p3exporter
$ pip install -e .

From now you can run it with:

$ p3exporter
INFO:root:Collector 'example' was loaded and registred successfully
INFO:root:Collector 'loadavg' was loaded and registred successfully
INFO:root:Collector 'netdev' was loaded and registred successfully
INFO:root:Start exporter, listen on 5876

Building your own container image

To build your own container image you can use the dockerfile which is delivered in our github repository. This file is also used to create our images on dockerhub.

$ docker build -t p3exporter .
Sending build context to Docker daemon  181.8kB
...
Successfully built a6bdf60489f5
Successfully tagged p3exporter:latest

Now you can start the container. Here you can use the command from above. You have just to use your image

docker run -d --net="host" --pid="host" -v "/:/host:ro,rslave" p3exporter:latest

Collectors

Name Description
example example collector that actually does nothing but show how long a function has been executed
loadavg collects average load in 1, 5 and 15 minutes interval
netdev collects netword device information and statistics

Activation and Deactivation of collectors

To activate or deactive collectors you have to configure it in p3.yml within the collectors list. All collectors listed in this list will be activated a start time of p3exporter. If there are any issues e.g. collector can’t be found or has failures in code a warning will be shown and it will not be activated.

exporter_name: "Python prammable Prometheus exporter"
collectors:
  - example
  - loadavg
  - netdev
credentials:
collector_opts:
  netdev:
    whitelist:
    blacklist:
      - docker0
      - lo

further resources

To get more information you can use the following sources: