Fix dependencies

This commit is contained in:
TwinProduction
2020-12-25 03:00:08 -05:00
parent 10ab9265d9
commit 416178fb28
1449 changed files with 7770 additions and 474390 deletions

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command-line-arguments.test

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See [![go-doc](https://godoc.org/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus?status.svg)](https://godoc.org/github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus).

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// Copyright 2019 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.
// +build go1.12
package prometheus
import "runtime/debug"
// readBuildInfo is a wrapper around debug.ReadBuildInfo for Go 1.12+.
func readBuildInfo() (path, version, sum string) {
path, version, sum = "unknown", "unknown", "unknown"
if bi, ok := debug.ReadBuildInfo(); ok {
path = bi.Main.Path
version = bi.Main.Version
sum = bi.Main.Sum
}
return
}

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// Copyright 2019 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.
// +build !go1.12
package prometheus
// readBuildInfo is a wrapper around debug.ReadBuildInfo for Go versions before
// 1.12. Remove this whole file once the minimum supported Go version is 1.12.
func readBuildInfo() (path, version, sum string) {
return "unknown", "unknown", "unknown"
}

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// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
// Collector is the interface implemented by anything that can be used by
// Prometheus to collect metrics. A Collector has to be registered for
// collection. See Registerer.Register.
//
// The stock metrics provided by this package (Gauge, Counter, Summary,
// Histogram, Untyped) are also Collectors (which only ever collect one metric,
// namely itself). An implementer of Collector may, however, collect multiple
// metrics in a coordinated fashion and/or create metrics on the fly. Examples
// for collectors already implemented in this library are the metric vectors
// (i.e. collection of multiple instances of the same Metric but with different
// label values) like GaugeVec or SummaryVec, and the ExpvarCollector.
type Collector interface {
// Describe sends the super-set of all possible descriptors of metrics
// collected by this Collector to the provided channel and returns once
// the last descriptor has been sent. The sent descriptors fulfill the
// consistency and uniqueness requirements described in the Desc
// documentation.
//
// It is valid if one and the same Collector sends duplicate
// descriptors. Those duplicates are simply ignored. However, two
// different Collectors must not send duplicate descriptors.
//
// Sending no descriptor at all marks the Collector as “unchecked”,
// i.e. no checks will be performed at registration time, and the
// Collector may yield any Metric it sees fit in its Collect method.
//
// This method idempotently sends the same descriptors throughout the
// lifetime of the Collector. It may be called concurrently and
// therefore must be implemented in a concurrency safe way.
//
// If a Collector encounters an error while executing this method, it
// must send an invalid descriptor (created with NewInvalidDesc) to
// signal the error to the registry.
Describe(chan<- *Desc)
// Collect is called by the Prometheus registry when collecting
// metrics. The implementation sends each collected metric via the
// provided channel and returns once the last metric has been sent. The
// descriptor of each sent metric is one of those returned by Describe
// (unless the Collector is unchecked, see above). Returned metrics that
// share the same descriptor must differ in their variable label
// values.
//
// This method may be called concurrently and must therefore be
// implemented in a concurrency safe way. Blocking occurs at the expense
// of total performance of rendering all registered metrics. Ideally,
// Collector implementations support concurrent readers.
Collect(chan<- Metric)
}
// DescribeByCollect is a helper to implement the Describe method of a custom
// Collector. It collects the metrics from the provided Collector and sends
// their descriptors to the provided channel.
//
// If a Collector collects the same metrics throughout its lifetime, its
// Describe method can simply be implemented as:
//
// func (c customCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
// DescribeByCollect(c, ch)
// }
//
// However, this will not work if the metrics collected change dynamically over
// the lifetime of the Collector in a way that their combined set of descriptors
// changes as well. The shortcut implementation will then violate the contract
// of the Describe method. If a Collector sometimes collects no metrics at all
// (for example vectors like CounterVec, GaugeVec, etc., which only collect
// metrics after a metric with a fully specified label set has been accessed),
// it might even get registered as an unchecked Collector (cf. the Register
// method of the Registerer interface). Hence, only use this shortcut
// implementation of Describe if you are certain to fulfill the contract.
//
// The Collector example demonstrates a use of DescribeByCollect.
func DescribeByCollect(c Collector, descs chan<- *Desc) {
metrics := make(chan Metric)
go func() {
c.Collect(metrics)
close(metrics)
}()
for m := range metrics {
descs <- m.Desc()
}
}
// selfCollector implements Collector for a single Metric so that the Metric
// collects itself. Add it as an anonymous field to a struct that implements
// Metric, and call init with the Metric itself as an argument.
type selfCollector struct {
self Metric
}
// init provides the selfCollector with a reference to the metric it is supposed
// to collect. It is usually called within the factory function to create a
// metric. See example.
func (c *selfCollector) init(self Metric) {
c.self = self
}
// Describe implements Collector.
func (c *selfCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- c.self.Desc()
}
// Collect implements Collector.
func (c *selfCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
ch <- c.self
}

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// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"math"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// Counter is a Metric that represents a single numerical value that only ever
// goes up. That implies that it cannot be used to count items whose number can
// also go down, e.g. the number of currently running goroutines. Those
// "counters" are represented by Gauges.
//
// A Counter is typically used to count requests served, tasks completed, errors
// occurred, etc.
//
// To create Counter instances, use NewCounter.
type Counter interface {
Metric
Collector
// Inc increments the counter by 1. Use Add to increment it by arbitrary
// non-negative values.
Inc()
// Add adds the given value to the counter. It panics if the value is <
// 0.
Add(float64)
}
// ExemplarAdder is implemented by Counters that offer the option of adding a
// value to the Counter together with an exemplar. Its AddWithExemplar method
// works like the Add method of the Counter interface but also replaces the
// currently saved exemplar (if any) with a new one, created from the provided
// value, the current time as timestamp, and the provided labels. Empty Labels
// will lead to a valid (label-less) exemplar. But if Labels is nil, the current
// exemplar is left in place. AddWithExemplar panics if the value is < 0, if any
// of the provided labels are invalid, or if the provided labels contain more
// than 64 runes in total.
type ExemplarAdder interface {
AddWithExemplar(value float64, exemplar Labels)
}
// CounterOpts is an alias for Opts. See there for doc comments.
type CounterOpts Opts
// NewCounter creates a new Counter based on the provided CounterOpts.
//
// The returned implementation also implements ExemplarAdder. It is safe to
// perform the corresponding type assertion.
//
// The returned implementation tracks the counter value in two separate
// variables, a float64 and a uint64. The latter is used to track calls of the
// Inc method and calls of the Add method with a value that can be represented
// as a uint64. This allows atomic increments of the counter with optimal
// performance. (It is common to have an Inc call in very hot execution paths.)
// Both internal tracking values are added up in the Write method. This has to
// be taken into account when it comes to precision and overflow behavior.
func NewCounter(opts CounterOpts) Counter {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
result := &counter{desc: desc, labelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs, now: time.Now}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}
type counter struct {
// valBits contains the bits of the represented float64 value, while
// valInt stores values that are exact integers. Both have to go first
// in the struct to guarantee alignment for atomic operations.
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
valBits uint64
valInt uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
exemplar atomic.Value // Containing nil or a *dto.Exemplar.
now func() time.Time // To mock out time.Now() for testing.
}
func (c *counter) Desc() *Desc {
return c.desc
}
func (c *counter) Add(v float64) {
if v < 0 {
panic(errors.New("counter cannot decrease in value"))
}
ival := uint64(v)
if float64(ival) == v {
atomic.AddUint64(&c.valInt, ival)
return
}
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&c.valBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + v)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&c.valBits, oldBits, newBits) {
return
}
}
}
func (c *counter) AddWithExemplar(v float64, e Labels) {
c.Add(v)
c.updateExemplar(v, e)
}
func (c *counter) Inc() {
atomic.AddUint64(&c.valInt, 1)
}
func (c *counter) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
fval := math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&c.valBits))
ival := atomic.LoadUint64(&c.valInt)
val := fval + float64(ival)
var exemplar *dto.Exemplar
if e := c.exemplar.Load(); e != nil {
exemplar = e.(*dto.Exemplar)
}
return populateMetric(CounterValue, val, c.labelPairs, exemplar, out)
}
func (c *counter) updateExemplar(v float64, l Labels) {
if l == nil {
return
}
e, err := newExemplar(v, c.now(), l)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
c.exemplar.Store(e)
}
// CounterVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Counters that all share the
// same Desc, but have different values for their variable labels. This is used
// if you want to count the same thing partitioned by various dimensions
// (e.g. number of HTTP requests, partitioned by response code and
// method). Create instances with NewCounterVec.
type CounterVec struct {
*MetricVec
}
// NewCounterVec creates a new CounterVec based on the provided CounterOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names.
func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
labelNames,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &CounterVec{
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
if len(lvs) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, lvs))
}
result := &counter{desc: desc, labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, lvs), now: time.Now}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Counter for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Counter is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Counter to only
// create the new Counter but leave it at its starting value 0. See also the
// SummaryVec example.
//
// Keeping the Counter for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Counter from the CounterVec. In that case,
// the Counter will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Counter with the same label values is created later.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Counter), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Counter for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Counter is created. Implications of
// creating a Counter without using it and keeping the Counter for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Counter), err
}
return nil, err
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Add(42)
func (v *CounterVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Counter {
c, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return c
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (v *CounterVec) With(labels Labels) Counter {
c, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return c
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the CounterVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *CounterVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*CounterVec, error) {
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &CounterVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *CounterVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) *CounterVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
// CounterFunc is a Counter whose value is determined at collect time by calling a
// provided function.
//
// To create CounterFunc instances, use NewCounterFunc.
type CounterFunc interface {
Metric
Collector
}
// NewCounterFunc creates a new CounterFunc based on the provided
// CounterOpts. The value reported is determined by calling the given function
// from within the Write method. Take into account that metric collection may
// happen concurrently. If that results in concurrent calls to Write, like in
// the case where a CounterFunc is directly registered with Prometheus, the
// provided function must be concurrency-safe. The function should also honor
// the contract for a Counter (values only go up, not down), but compliance will
// not be checked.
//
// Check out the ExampleGaugeFunc examples for the similar GaugeFunc.
func NewCounterFunc(opts CounterOpts, function func() float64) CounterFunc {
return newValueFunc(NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
), CounterValue, function)
}

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// Copyright 2016 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.
package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"sort"
"strings"
"github.com/cespare/xxhash/v2"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// Desc is the descriptor used by every Prometheus Metric. It is essentially
// the immutable meta-data of a Metric. The normal Metric implementations
// included in this package manage their Desc under the hood. Users only have to
// deal with Desc if they use advanced features like the ExpvarCollector or
// custom Collectors and Metrics.
//
// Descriptors registered with the same registry have to fulfill certain
// consistency and uniqueness criteria if they share the same fully-qualified
// name: They must have the same help string and the same label names (aka label
// dimensions) in each, constLabels and variableLabels, but they must differ in
// the values of the constLabels.
//
// Descriptors that share the same fully-qualified names and the same label
// values of their constLabels are considered equal.
//
// Use NewDesc to create new Desc instances.
type Desc struct {
// fqName has been built from Namespace, Subsystem, and Name.
fqName string
// help provides some helpful information about this metric.
help string
// constLabelPairs contains precalculated DTO label pairs based on
// the constant labels.
constLabelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
// variableLabels contains names of labels for which the metric
// maintains variable values.
variableLabels []string
// id is a hash of the values of the ConstLabels and fqName. This
// must be unique among all registered descriptors and can therefore be
// used as an identifier of the descriptor.
id uint64
// dimHash is a hash of the label names (preset and variable) and the
// Help string. Each Desc with the same fqName must have the same
// dimHash.
dimHash uint64
// err is an error that occurred during construction. It is reported on
// registration time.
err error
}
// NewDesc allocates and initializes a new Desc. Errors are recorded in the Desc
// and will be reported on registration time. variableLabels and constLabels can
// be nil if no such labels should be set. fqName must not be empty.
//
// variableLabels only contain the label names. Their label values are variable
// and therefore not part of the Desc. (They are managed within the Metric.)
//
// For constLabels, the label values are constant. Therefore, they are fully
// specified in the Desc. See the Collector example for a usage pattern.
func NewDesc(fqName, help string, variableLabels []string, constLabels Labels) *Desc {
d := &Desc{
fqName: fqName,
help: help,
variableLabels: variableLabels,
}
if !model.IsValidMetricName(model.LabelValue(fqName)) {
d.err = fmt.Errorf("%q is not a valid metric name", fqName)
return d
}
// labelValues contains the label values of const labels (in order of
// their sorted label names) plus the fqName (at position 0).
labelValues := make([]string, 1, len(constLabels)+1)
labelValues[0] = fqName
labelNames := make([]string, 0, len(constLabels)+len(variableLabels))
labelNameSet := map[string]struct{}{}
// First add only the const label names and sort them...
for labelName := range constLabels {
if !checkLabelName(labelName) {
d.err = fmt.Errorf("%q is not a valid label name for metric %q", labelName, fqName)
return d
}
labelNames = append(labelNames, labelName)
labelNameSet[labelName] = struct{}{}
}
sort.Strings(labelNames)
// ... so that we can now add const label values in the order of their names.
for _, labelName := range labelNames {
labelValues = append(labelValues, constLabels[labelName])
}
// Validate the const label values. They can't have a wrong cardinality, so
// use in len(labelValues) as expectedNumberOfValues.
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(labelValues)); err != nil {
d.err = err
return d
}
// Now add the variable label names, but prefix them with something that
// cannot be in a regular label name. That prevents matching the label
// dimension with a different mix between preset and variable labels.
for _, labelName := range variableLabels {
if !checkLabelName(labelName) {
d.err = fmt.Errorf("%q is not a valid label name for metric %q", labelName, fqName)
return d
}
labelNames = append(labelNames, "$"+labelName)
labelNameSet[labelName] = struct{}{}
}
if len(labelNames) != len(labelNameSet) {
d.err = errors.New("duplicate label names")
return d
}
xxh := xxhash.New()
for _, val := range labelValues {
xxh.WriteString(val)
xxh.Write(separatorByteSlice)
}
d.id = xxh.Sum64()
// Sort labelNames so that order doesn't matter for the hash.
sort.Strings(labelNames)
// Now hash together (in this order) the help string and the sorted
// label names.
xxh.Reset()
xxh.WriteString(help)
xxh.Write(separatorByteSlice)
for _, labelName := range labelNames {
xxh.WriteString(labelName)
xxh.Write(separatorByteSlice)
}
d.dimHash = xxh.Sum64()
d.constLabelPairs = make([]*dto.LabelPair, 0, len(constLabels))
for n, v := range constLabels {
d.constLabelPairs = append(d.constLabelPairs, &dto.LabelPair{
Name: proto.String(n),
Value: proto.String(v),
})
}
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(d.constLabelPairs))
return d
}
// NewInvalidDesc returns an invalid descriptor, i.e. a descriptor with the
// provided error set. If a collector returning such a descriptor is registered,
// registration will fail with the provided error. NewInvalidDesc can be used by
// a Collector to signal inability to describe itself.
func NewInvalidDesc(err error) *Desc {
return &Desc{
err: err,
}
}
func (d *Desc) String() string {
lpStrings := make([]string, 0, len(d.constLabelPairs))
for _, lp := range d.constLabelPairs {
lpStrings = append(
lpStrings,
fmt.Sprintf("%s=%q", lp.GetName(), lp.GetValue()),
)
}
return fmt.Sprintf(
"Desc{fqName: %q, help: %q, constLabels: {%s}, variableLabels: %v}",
d.fqName,
d.help,
strings.Join(lpStrings, ","),
d.variableLabels,
)
}

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// Copyright 2014 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.
// Package prometheus is the core instrumentation package. It provides metrics
// primitives to instrument code for monitoring. It also offers a registry for
// metrics. Sub-packages allow to expose the registered metrics via HTTP
// (package promhttp) or push them to a Pushgateway (package push). There is
// also a sub-package promauto, which provides metrics constructors with
// automatic registration.
//
// All exported functions and methods are safe to be used concurrently unless
// specified otherwise.
//
// A Basic Example
//
// As a starting point, a very basic usage example:
//
// package main
//
// import (
// "log"
// "net/http"
//
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promhttp"
// )
//
// var (
// cpuTemp = prometheus.NewGauge(prometheus.GaugeOpts{
// Name: "cpu_temperature_celsius",
// Help: "Current temperature of the CPU.",
// })
// hdFailures = prometheus.NewCounterVec(
// prometheus.CounterOpts{
// Name: "hd_errors_total",
// Help: "Number of hard-disk errors.",
// },
// []string{"device"},
// )
// )
//
// func init() {
// // Metrics have to be registered to be exposed:
// prometheus.MustRegister(cpuTemp)
// prometheus.MustRegister(hdFailures)
// }
//
// func main() {
// cpuTemp.Set(65.3)
// hdFailures.With(prometheus.Labels{"device":"/dev/sda"}).Inc()
//
// // The Handler function provides a default handler to expose metrics
// // via an HTTP server. "/metrics" is the usual endpoint for that.
// http.Handle("/metrics", promhttp.Handler())
// log.Fatal(http.ListenAndServe(":8080", nil))
// }
//
//
// This is a complete program that exports two metrics, a Gauge and a Counter,
// the latter with a label attached to turn it into a (one-dimensional) vector.
//
// Metrics
//
// The number of exported identifiers in this package might appear a bit
// overwhelming. However, in addition to the basic plumbing shown in the example
// above, you only need to understand the different metric types and their
// vector versions for basic usage. Furthermore, if you are not concerned with
// fine-grained control of when and how to register metrics with the registry,
// have a look at the promauto package, which will effectively allow you to
// ignore registration altogether in simple cases.
//
// Above, you have already touched the Counter and the Gauge. There are two more
// advanced metric types: the Summary and Histogram. A more thorough description
// of those four metric types can be found in the Prometheus docs:
// https://prometheus.io/docs/concepts/metric_types/
//
// In addition to the fundamental metric types Gauge, Counter, Summary, and
// Histogram, a very important part of the Prometheus data model is the
// partitioning of samples along dimensions called labels, which results in
// metric vectors. The fundamental types are GaugeVec, CounterVec, SummaryVec,
// and HistogramVec.
//
// While only the fundamental metric types implement the Metric interface, both
// the metrics and their vector versions implement the Collector interface. A
// Collector manages the collection of a number of Metrics, but for convenience,
// a Metric can also “collect itself”. Note that Gauge, Counter, Summary, and
// Histogram are interfaces themselves while GaugeVec, CounterVec, SummaryVec,
// and HistogramVec are not.
//
// To create instances of Metrics and their vector versions, you need a suitable
// …Opts struct, i.e. GaugeOpts, CounterOpts, SummaryOpts, or HistogramOpts.
//
// Custom Collectors and constant Metrics
//
// While you could create your own implementations of Metric, most likely you
// will only ever implement the Collector interface on your own. At a first
// glance, a custom Collector seems handy to bundle Metrics for common
// registration (with the prime example of the different metric vectors above,
// which bundle all the metrics of the same name but with different labels).
//
// There is a more involved use case, too: If you already have metrics
// available, created outside of the Prometheus context, you don't need the
// interface of the various Metric types. You essentially want to mirror the
// existing numbers into Prometheus Metrics during collection. An own
// implementation of the Collector interface is perfect for that. You can create
// Metric instances “on the fly” using NewConstMetric, NewConstHistogram, and
// NewConstSummary (and their respective Must… versions). NewConstMetric is used
// for all metric types with just a float64 as their value: Counter, Gauge, and
// a special “type” called Untyped. Use the latter if you are not sure if the
// mirrored metric is a Counter or a Gauge. Creation of the Metric instance
// happens in the Collect method. The Describe method has to return separate
// Desc instances, representative of the “throw-away” metrics to be created
// later. NewDesc comes in handy to create those Desc instances. Alternatively,
// you could return no Desc at all, which will mark the Collector “unchecked”.
// No checks are performed at registration time, but metric consistency will
// still be ensured at scrape time, i.e. any inconsistencies will lead to scrape
// errors. Thus, with unchecked Collectors, the responsibility to not collect
// metrics that lead to inconsistencies in the total scrape result lies with the
// implementer of the Collector. While this is not a desirable state, it is
// sometimes necessary. The typical use case is a situation where the exact
// metrics to be returned by a Collector cannot be predicted at registration
// time, but the implementer has sufficient knowledge of the whole system to
// guarantee metric consistency.
//
// The Collector example illustrates the use case. You can also look at the
// source code of the processCollector (mirroring process metrics), the
// goCollector (mirroring Go metrics), or the expvarCollector (mirroring expvar
// metrics) as examples that are used in this package itself.
//
// If you just need to call a function to get a single float value to collect as
// a metric, GaugeFunc, CounterFunc, or UntypedFunc might be interesting
// shortcuts.
//
// Advanced Uses of the Registry
//
// While MustRegister is the by far most common way of registering a Collector,
// sometimes you might want to handle the errors the registration might cause.
// As suggested by the name, MustRegister panics if an error occurs. With the
// Register function, the error is returned and can be handled.
//
// An error is returned if the registered Collector is incompatible or
// inconsistent with already registered metrics. The registry aims for
// consistency of the collected metrics according to the Prometheus data model.
// Inconsistencies are ideally detected at registration time, not at collect
// time. The former will usually be detected at start-up time of a program,
// while the latter will only happen at scrape time, possibly not even on the
// first scrape if the inconsistency only becomes relevant later. That is the
// main reason why a Collector and a Metric have to describe themselves to the
// registry.
//
// So far, everything we did operated on the so-called default registry, as it
// can be found in the global DefaultRegisterer variable. With NewRegistry, you
// can create a custom registry, or you can even implement the Registerer or
// Gatherer interfaces yourself. The methods Register and Unregister work in the
// same way on a custom registry as the global functions Register and Unregister
// on the default registry.
//
// There are a number of uses for custom registries: You can use registries with
// special properties, see NewPedanticRegistry. You can avoid global state, as
// it is imposed by the DefaultRegisterer. You can use multiple registries at
// the same time to expose different metrics in different ways. You can use
// separate registries for testing purposes.
//
// Also note that the DefaultRegisterer comes registered with a Collector for Go
// runtime metrics (via NewGoCollector) and a Collector for process metrics (via
// NewProcessCollector). With a custom registry, you are in control and decide
// yourself about the Collectors to register.
//
// HTTP Exposition
//
// The Registry implements the Gatherer interface. The caller of the Gather
// method can then expose the gathered metrics in some way. Usually, the metrics
// are served via HTTP on the /metrics endpoint. That's happening in the example
// above. The tools to expose metrics via HTTP are in the promhttp sub-package.
//
// Pushing to the Pushgateway
//
// Function for pushing to the Pushgateway can be found in the push sub-package.
//
// Graphite Bridge
//
// Functions and examples to push metrics from a Gatherer to Graphite can be
// found in the graphite sub-package.
//
// Other Means of Exposition
//
// More ways of exposing metrics can easily be added by following the approaches
// of the existing implementations.
package prometheus

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@ -1,119 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"encoding/json"
"expvar"
)
type expvarCollector struct {
exports map[string]*Desc
}
// NewExpvarCollector returns a newly allocated expvar Collector that still has
// to be registered with a Prometheus registry.
//
// An expvar Collector collects metrics from the expvar interface. It provides a
// quick way to expose numeric values that are already exported via expvar as
// Prometheus metrics. Note that the data models of expvar and Prometheus are
// fundamentally different, and that the expvar Collector is inherently slower
// than native Prometheus metrics. Thus, the expvar Collector is probably great
// for experiments and prototying, but you should seriously consider a more
// direct implementation of Prometheus metrics for monitoring production
// systems.
//
// The exports map has the following meaning:
//
// The keys in the map correspond to expvar keys, i.e. for every expvar key you
// want to export as Prometheus metric, you need an entry in the exports
// map. The descriptor mapped to each key describes how to export the expvar
// value. It defines the name and the help string of the Prometheus metric
// proxying the expvar value. The type will always be Untyped.
//
// For descriptors without variable labels, the expvar value must be a number or
// a bool. The number is then directly exported as the Prometheus sample
// value. (For a bool, 'false' translates to 0 and 'true' to 1). Expvar values
// that are not numbers or bools are silently ignored.
//
// If the descriptor has one variable label, the expvar value must be an expvar
// map. The keys in the expvar map become the various values of the one
// Prometheus label. The values in the expvar map must be numbers or bools again
// as above.
//
// For descriptors with more than one variable label, the expvar must be a
// nested expvar map, i.e. where the values of the topmost map are maps again
// etc. until a depth is reached that corresponds to the number of labels. The
// leaves of that structure must be numbers or bools as above to serve as the
// sample values.
//
// Anything that does not fit into the scheme above is silently ignored.
func NewExpvarCollector(exports map[string]*Desc) Collector {
return &expvarCollector{
exports: exports,
}
}
// Describe implements Collector.
func (e *expvarCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
for _, desc := range e.exports {
ch <- desc
}
}
// Collect implements Collector.
func (e *expvarCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
for name, desc := range e.exports {
var m Metric
expVar := expvar.Get(name)
if expVar == nil {
continue
}
var v interface{}
labels := make([]string, len(desc.variableLabels))
if err := json.Unmarshal([]byte(expVar.String()), &v); err != nil {
ch <- NewInvalidMetric(desc, err)
continue
}
var processValue func(v interface{}, i int)
processValue = func(v interface{}, i int) {
if i >= len(labels) {
copiedLabels := append(make([]string, 0, len(labels)), labels...)
switch v := v.(type) {
case float64:
m = MustNewConstMetric(desc, UntypedValue, v, copiedLabels...)
case bool:
if v {
m = MustNewConstMetric(desc, UntypedValue, 1, copiedLabels...)
} else {
m = MustNewConstMetric(desc, UntypedValue, 0, copiedLabels...)
}
default:
return
}
ch <- m
return
}
vm, ok := v.(map[string]interface{})
if !ok {
return
}
for lv, val := range vm {
labels[i] = lv
processValue(val, i+1)
}
}
processValue(v, 0)
}
}

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@ -1,42 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2018 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.
package prometheus
// Inline and byte-free variant of hash/fnv's fnv64a.
const (
offset64 = 14695981039346656037
prime64 = 1099511628211
)
// hashNew initializies a new fnv64a hash value.
func hashNew() uint64 {
return offset64
}
// hashAdd adds a string to a fnv64a hash value, returning the updated hash.
func hashAdd(h uint64, s string) uint64 {
for i := 0; i < len(s); i++ {
h ^= uint64(s[i])
h *= prime64
}
return h
}
// hashAddByte adds a byte to a fnv64a hash value, returning the updated hash.
func hashAddByte(h uint64, b byte) uint64 {
h ^= uint64(b)
h *= prime64
return h
}

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@ -1,289 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"math"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// Gauge is a Metric that represents a single numerical value that can
// arbitrarily go up and down.
//
// A Gauge is typically used for measured values like temperatures or current
// memory usage, but also "counts" that can go up and down, like the number of
// running goroutines.
//
// To create Gauge instances, use NewGauge.
type Gauge interface {
Metric
Collector
// Set sets the Gauge to an arbitrary value.
Set(float64)
// Inc increments the Gauge by 1. Use Add to increment it by arbitrary
// values.
Inc()
// Dec decrements the Gauge by 1. Use Sub to decrement it by arbitrary
// values.
Dec()
// Add adds the given value to the Gauge. (The value can be negative,
// resulting in a decrease of the Gauge.)
Add(float64)
// Sub subtracts the given value from the Gauge. (The value can be
// negative, resulting in an increase of the Gauge.)
Sub(float64)
// SetToCurrentTime sets the Gauge to the current Unix time in seconds.
SetToCurrentTime()
}
// GaugeOpts is an alias for Opts. See there for doc comments.
type GaugeOpts Opts
// NewGauge creates a new Gauge based on the provided GaugeOpts.
//
// The returned implementation is optimized for a fast Set method. If you have a
// choice for managing the value of a Gauge via Set vs. Inc/Dec/Add/Sub, pick
// the former. For example, the Inc method of the returned Gauge is slower than
// the Inc method of a Counter returned by NewCounter. This matches the typical
// scenarios for Gauges and Counters, where the former tends to be Set-heavy and
// the latter Inc-heavy.
func NewGauge(opts GaugeOpts) Gauge {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
result := &gauge{desc: desc, labelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}
type gauge struct {
// valBits contains the bits of the represented float64 value. It has
// to go first in the struct to guarantee alignment for atomic
// operations. http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
valBits uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (g *gauge) Desc() *Desc {
return g.desc
}
func (g *gauge) Set(val float64) {
atomic.StoreUint64(&g.valBits, math.Float64bits(val))
}
func (g *gauge) SetToCurrentTime() {
g.Set(float64(time.Now().UnixNano()) / 1e9)
}
func (g *gauge) Inc() {
g.Add(1)
}
func (g *gauge) Dec() {
g.Add(-1)
}
func (g *gauge) Add(val float64) {
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&g.valBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + val)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&g.valBits, oldBits, newBits) {
return
}
}
}
func (g *gauge) Sub(val float64) {
g.Add(val * -1)
}
func (g *gauge) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
val := math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&g.valBits))
return populateMetric(GaugeValue, val, g.labelPairs, nil, out)
}
// GaugeVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Gauges that all share the same
// Desc, but have different values for their variable labels. This is used if
// you want to count the same thing partitioned by various dimensions
// (e.g. number of operations queued, partitioned by user and operation
// type). Create instances with NewGaugeVec.
type GaugeVec struct {
*MetricVec
}
// NewGaugeVec creates a new GaugeVec based on the provided GaugeOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names.
func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
labelNames,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &GaugeVec{
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
if len(lvs) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, lvs))
}
result := &gauge{desc: desc, labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, lvs)}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Gauge for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Gauge is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Gauge to only
// create the new Gauge but leave it at its starting value 0. See also the
// SummaryVec example.
//
// Keeping the Gauge for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Gauge from the GaugeVec. In that case, the
// Gauge will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Gauge with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Gauge), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Gauge for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Gauge is created. Implications of
// creating a Gauge without using it and keeping the Gauge for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Gauge), err
}
return nil, err
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Add(42)
func (v *GaugeVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Gauge {
g, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return g
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
func (v *GaugeVec) With(labels Labels) Gauge {
g, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return g
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the GaugeVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *GaugeVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*GaugeVec, error) {
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &GaugeVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *GaugeVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) *GaugeVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
// GaugeFunc is a Gauge whose value is determined at collect time by calling a
// provided function.
//
// To create GaugeFunc instances, use NewGaugeFunc.
type GaugeFunc interface {
Metric
Collector
}
// NewGaugeFunc creates a new GaugeFunc based on the provided GaugeOpts. The
// value reported is determined by calling the given function from within the
// Write method. Take into account that metric collection may happen
// concurrently. Therefore, it must be safe to call the provided function
// concurrently.
//
// NewGaugeFunc is a good way to create an “info” style metric with a constant
// value of 1. Example:
// https://github.com/prometheus/common/blob/8558a5b7db3c84fa38b4766966059a7bd5bfa2ee/version/info.go#L36-L56
func NewGaugeFunc(opts GaugeOpts, function func() float64) GaugeFunc {
return newValueFunc(NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
), GaugeValue, function)
}

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@ -1,397 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2018 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.
package prometheus
import (
"runtime"
"runtime/debug"
"sync"
"time"
)
type goCollector struct {
goroutinesDesc *Desc
threadsDesc *Desc
gcDesc *Desc
goInfoDesc *Desc
// ms... are memstats related.
msLast *runtime.MemStats // Previously collected memstats.
msLastTimestamp time.Time
msMtx sync.Mutex // Protects msLast and msLastTimestamp.
msMetrics memStatsMetrics
msRead func(*runtime.MemStats) // For mocking in tests.
msMaxWait time.Duration // Wait time for fresh memstats.
msMaxAge time.Duration // Maximum allowed age of old memstats.
}
// NewGoCollector returns a collector that exports metrics about the current Go
// process. This includes memory stats. To collect those, runtime.ReadMemStats
// is called. This requires to “stop the world”, which usually only happens for
// garbage collection (GC). Take the following implications into account when
// deciding whether to use the Go collector:
//
// 1. The performance impact of stopping the world is the more relevant the more
// frequently metrics are collected. However, with Go1.9 or later the
// stop-the-world time per metrics collection is very short (~25µs) so that the
// performance impact will only matter in rare cases. However, with older Go
// versions, the stop-the-world duration depends on the heap size and can be
// quite significant (~1.7 ms/GiB as per
// https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/34937).
//
// 2. During an ongoing GC, nothing else can stop the world. Therefore, if the
// metrics collection happens to coincide with GC, it will only complete after
// GC has finished. Usually, GC is fast enough to not cause problems. However,
// with a very large heap, GC might take multiple seconds, which is enough to
// cause scrape timeouts in common setups. To avoid this problem, the Go
// collector will use the memstats from a previous collection if
// runtime.ReadMemStats takes more than 1s. However, if there are no previously
// collected memstats, or their collection is more than 5m ago, the collection
// will block until runtime.ReadMemStats succeeds.
//
// NOTE: The problem is solved in Go 1.15, see
// https://github.com/golang/go/issues/19812 for the related Go issue.
func NewGoCollector() Collector {
return &goCollector{
goroutinesDesc: NewDesc(
"go_goroutines",
"Number of goroutines that currently exist.",
nil, nil),
threadsDesc: NewDesc(
"go_threads",
"Number of OS threads created.",
nil, nil),
gcDesc: NewDesc(
"go_gc_duration_seconds",
"A summary of the pause duration of garbage collection cycles.",
nil, nil),
goInfoDesc: NewDesc(
"go_info",
"Information about the Go environment.",
nil, Labels{"version": runtime.Version()}),
msLast: &runtime.MemStats{},
msRead: runtime.ReadMemStats,
msMaxWait: time.Second,
msMaxAge: 5 * time.Minute,
msMetrics: memStatsMetrics{
{
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("alloc_bytes"),
"Number of bytes allocated and still in use.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.Alloc) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("alloc_bytes_total"),
"Total number of bytes allocated, even if freed.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.TotalAlloc) },
valType: CounterValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes obtained from system.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.Sys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("lookups_total"),
"Total number of pointer lookups.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.Lookups) },
valType: CounterValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("mallocs_total"),
"Total number of mallocs.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.Mallocs) },
valType: CounterValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("frees_total"),
"Total number of frees.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.Frees) },
valType: CounterValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("heap_alloc_bytes"),
"Number of heap bytes allocated and still in use.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.HeapAlloc) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("heap_sys_bytes"),
"Number of heap bytes obtained from system.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.HeapSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("heap_idle_bytes"),
"Number of heap bytes waiting to be used.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.HeapIdle) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("heap_inuse_bytes"),
"Number of heap bytes that are in use.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.HeapInuse) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("heap_released_bytes"),
"Number of heap bytes released to OS.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.HeapReleased) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("heap_objects"),
"Number of allocated objects.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.HeapObjects) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("stack_inuse_bytes"),
"Number of bytes in use by the stack allocator.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.StackInuse) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("stack_sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes obtained from system for stack allocator.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.StackSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("mspan_inuse_bytes"),
"Number of bytes in use by mspan structures.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.MSpanInuse) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("mspan_sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes used for mspan structures obtained from system.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.MSpanSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("mcache_inuse_bytes"),
"Number of bytes in use by mcache structures.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.MCacheInuse) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("mcache_sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes used for mcache structures obtained from system.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.MCacheSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("buck_hash_sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes used by the profiling bucket hash table.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.BuckHashSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("gc_sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes used for garbage collection system metadata.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.GCSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("other_sys_bytes"),
"Number of bytes used for other system allocations.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.OtherSys) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("next_gc_bytes"),
"Number of heap bytes when next garbage collection will take place.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.NextGC) },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("last_gc_time_seconds"),
"Number of seconds since 1970 of last garbage collection.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return float64(ms.LastGC) / 1e9 },
valType: GaugeValue,
}, {
desc: NewDesc(
memstatNamespace("gc_cpu_fraction"),
"The fraction of this program's available CPU time used by the GC since the program started.",
nil, nil,
),
eval: func(ms *runtime.MemStats) float64 { return ms.GCCPUFraction },
valType: GaugeValue,
},
},
}
}
func memstatNamespace(s string) string {
return "go_memstats_" + s
}
// Describe returns all descriptions of the collector.
func (c *goCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- c.goroutinesDesc
ch <- c.threadsDesc
ch <- c.gcDesc
ch <- c.goInfoDesc
for _, i := range c.msMetrics {
ch <- i.desc
}
}
// Collect returns the current state of all metrics of the collector.
func (c *goCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
var (
ms = &runtime.MemStats{}
done = make(chan struct{})
)
// Start reading memstats first as it might take a while.
go func() {
c.msRead(ms)
c.msMtx.Lock()
c.msLast = ms
c.msLastTimestamp = time.Now()
c.msMtx.Unlock()
close(done)
}()
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.goroutinesDesc, GaugeValue, float64(runtime.NumGoroutine()))
n, _ := runtime.ThreadCreateProfile(nil)
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.threadsDesc, GaugeValue, float64(n))
var stats debug.GCStats
stats.PauseQuantiles = make([]time.Duration, 5)
debug.ReadGCStats(&stats)
quantiles := make(map[float64]float64)
for idx, pq := range stats.PauseQuantiles[1:] {
quantiles[float64(idx+1)/float64(len(stats.PauseQuantiles)-1)] = pq.Seconds()
}
quantiles[0.0] = stats.PauseQuantiles[0].Seconds()
ch <- MustNewConstSummary(c.gcDesc, uint64(stats.NumGC), stats.PauseTotal.Seconds(), quantiles)
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.goInfoDesc, GaugeValue, 1)
timer := time.NewTimer(c.msMaxWait)
select {
case <-done: // Our own ReadMemStats succeeded in time. Use it.
timer.Stop() // Important for high collection frequencies to not pile up timers.
c.msCollect(ch, ms)
return
case <-timer.C: // Time out, use last memstats if possible. Continue below.
}
c.msMtx.Lock()
if time.Since(c.msLastTimestamp) < c.msMaxAge {
// Last memstats are recent enough. Collect from them under the lock.
c.msCollect(ch, c.msLast)
c.msMtx.Unlock()
return
}
// If we are here, the last memstats are too old or don't exist. We have
// to wait until our own ReadMemStats finally completes. For that to
// happen, we have to release the lock.
c.msMtx.Unlock()
<-done
c.msCollect(ch, ms)
}
func (c *goCollector) msCollect(ch chan<- Metric, ms *runtime.MemStats) {
for _, i := range c.msMetrics {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(i.desc, i.valType, i.eval(ms))
}
}
// memStatsMetrics provide description, value, and value type for memstat metrics.
type memStatsMetrics []struct {
desc *Desc
eval func(*runtime.MemStats) float64
valType ValueType
}
// NewBuildInfoCollector returns a collector collecting a single metric
// "go_build_info" with the constant value 1 and three labels "path", "version",
// and "checksum". Their label values contain the main module path, version, and
// checksum, respectively. The labels will only have meaningful values if the
// binary is built with Go module support and from source code retrieved from
// the source repository (rather than the local file system). This is usually
// accomplished by building from outside of GOPATH, specifying the full address
// of the main package, e.g. "GO111MODULE=on go run
// github.com/prometheus/client_golang/examples/random". If built without Go
// module support, all label values will be "unknown". If built with Go module
// support but using the source code from the local file system, the "path" will
// be set appropriately, but "checksum" will be empty and "version" will be
// "(devel)".
//
// This collector uses only the build information for the main module. See
// https://github.com/povilasv/prommod for an example of a collector for the
// module dependencies.
func NewBuildInfoCollector() Collector {
path, version, sum := readBuildInfo()
c := &selfCollector{MustNewConstMetric(
NewDesc(
"go_build_info",
"Build information about the main Go module.",
nil, Labels{"path": path, "version": version, "checksum": sum},
),
GaugeValue, 1)}
c.init(c.self)
return c
}

View File

@ -1,637 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2015 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.
package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"math"
"runtime"
"sort"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// A Histogram counts individual observations from an event or sample stream in
// configurable buckets. Similar to a summary, it also provides a sum of
// observations and an observation count.
//
// On the Prometheus server, quantiles can be calculated from a Histogram using
// the histogram_quantile function in the query language.
//
// Note that Histograms, in contrast to Summaries, can be aggregated with the
// Prometheus query language (see the documentation for detailed
// procedures). However, Histograms require the user to pre-define suitable
// buckets, and they are in general less accurate. The Observe method of a
// Histogram has a very low performance overhead in comparison with the Observe
// method of a Summary.
//
// To create Histogram instances, use NewHistogram.
type Histogram interface {
Metric
Collector
// Observe adds a single observation to the histogram.
Observe(float64)
}
// bucketLabel is used for the label that defines the upper bound of a
// bucket of a histogram ("le" -> "less or equal").
const bucketLabel = "le"
// DefBuckets are the default Histogram buckets. The default buckets are
// tailored to broadly measure the response time (in seconds) of a network
// service. Most likely, however, you will be required to define buckets
// customized to your use case.
var (
DefBuckets = []float64{.005, .01, .025, .05, .1, .25, .5, 1, 2.5, 5, 10}
errBucketLabelNotAllowed = fmt.Errorf(
"%q is not allowed as label name in histograms", bucketLabel,
)
)
// LinearBuckets creates 'count' buckets, each 'width' wide, where the lowest
// bucket has an upper bound of 'start'. The final +Inf bucket is not counted
// and not included in the returned slice. The returned slice is meant to be
// used for the Buckets field of HistogramOpts.
//
// The function panics if 'count' is zero or negative.
func LinearBuckets(start, width float64, count int) []float64 {
if count < 1 {
panic("LinearBuckets needs a positive count")
}
buckets := make([]float64, count)
for i := range buckets {
buckets[i] = start
start += width
}
return buckets
}
// ExponentialBuckets creates 'count' buckets, where the lowest bucket has an
// upper bound of 'start' and each following bucket's upper bound is 'factor'
// times the previous bucket's upper bound. The final +Inf bucket is not counted
// and not included in the returned slice. The returned slice is meant to be
// used for the Buckets field of HistogramOpts.
//
// The function panics if 'count' is 0 or negative, if 'start' is 0 or negative,
// or if 'factor' is less than or equal 1.
func ExponentialBuckets(start, factor float64, count int) []float64 {
if count < 1 {
panic("ExponentialBuckets needs a positive count")
}
if start <= 0 {
panic("ExponentialBuckets needs a positive start value")
}
if factor <= 1 {
panic("ExponentialBuckets needs a factor greater than 1")
}
buckets := make([]float64, count)
for i := range buckets {
buckets[i] = start
start *= factor
}
return buckets
}
// HistogramOpts bundles the options for creating a Histogram metric. It is
// mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. All other fields are optional
// and can safely be left at their zero value, although it is strongly
// encouraged to set a Help string.
type HistogramOpts struct {
// Namespace, Subsystem, and Name are components of the fully-qualified
// name of the Histogram (created by joining these components with
// "_"). Only Name is mandatory, the others merely help structuring the
// name. Note that the fully-qualified name of the Histogram must be a
// valid Prometheus metric name.
Namespace string
Subsystem string
Name string
// Help provides information about this Histogram.
//
// Metrics with the same fully-qualified name must have the same Help
// string.
Help string
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this metric. Metrics
// with the same fully-qualified name must have the same label names in
// their ConstLabels.
//
// ConstLabels are only used rarely. In particular, do not use them to
// attach the same labels to all your metrics. Those use cases are
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
// Buckets defines the buckets into which observations are counted. Each
// element in the slice is the upper inclusive bound of a bucket. The
// values must be sorted in strictly increasing order. There is no need
// to add a highest bucket with +Inf bound, it will be added
// implicitly. The default value is DefBuckets.
Buckets []float64
}
// NewHistogram creates a new Histogram based on the provided HistogramOpts. It
// panics if the buckets in HistogramOpts are not in strictly increasing order.
//
// The returned implementation also implements ExemplarObserver. It is safe to
// perform the corresponding type assertion. Exemplars are tracked separately
// for each bucket.
func NewHistogram(opts HistogramOpts) Histogram {
return newHistogram(
NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
),
opts,
)
}
func newHistogram(desc *Desc, opts HistogramOpts, labelValues ...string) Histogram {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, labelValues))
}
for _, n := range desc.variableLabels {
if n == bucketLabel {
panic(errBucketLabelNotAllowed)
}
}
for _, lp := range desc.constLabelPairs {
if lp.GetName() == bucketLabel {
panic(errBucketLabelNotAllowed)
}
}
if len(opts.Buckets) == 0 {
opts.Buckets = DefBuckets
}
h := &histogram{
desc: desc,
upperBounds: opts.Buckets,
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
counts: [2]*histogramCounts{{}, {}},
now: time.Now,
}
for i, upperBound := range h.upperBounds {
if i < len(h.upperBounds)-1 {
if upperBound >= h.upperBounds[i+1] {
panic(fmt.Errorf(
"histogram buckets must be in increasing order: %f >= %f",
upperBound, h.upperBounds[i+1],
))
}
} else {
if math.IsInf(upperBound, +1) {
// The +Inf bucket is implicit. Remove it here.
h.upperBounds = h.upperBounds[:i]
}
}
}
// Finally we know the final length of h.upperBounds and can make buckets
// for both counts as well as exemplars:
h.counts[0].buckets = make([]uint64, len(h.upperBounds))
h.counts[1].buckets = make([]uint64, len(h.upperBounds))
h.exemplars = make([]atomic.Value, len(h.upperBounds)+1)
h.init(h) // Init self-collection.
return h
}
type histogramCounts struct {
// sumBits contains the bits of the float64 representing the sum of all
// observations. sumBits and count have to go first in the struct to
// guarantee alignment for atomic operations.
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
sumBits uint64
count uint64
buckets []uint64
}
type histogram struct {
// countAndHotIdx enables lock-free writes with use of atomic updates.
// The most significant bit is the hot index [0 or 1] of the count field
// below. Observe calls update the hot one. All remaining bits count the
// number of Observe calls. Observe starts by incrementing this counter,
// and finish by incrementing the count field in the respective
// histogramCounts, as a marker for completion.
//
// Calls of the Write method (which are non-mutating reads from the
// perspective of the histogram) swap the hotcold under the writeMtx
// lock. A cooldown is awaited (while locked) by comparing the number of
// observations with the initiation count. Once they match, then the
// last observation on the now cool one has completed. All cool fields must
// be merged into the new hot before releasing writeMtx.
//
// Fields with atomic access first! See alignment constraint:
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
countAndHotIdx uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
writeMtx sync.Mutex // Only used in the Write method.
// Two counts, one is "hot" for lock-free observations, the other is
// "cold" for writing out a dto.Metric. It has to be an array of
// pointers to guarantee 64bit alignment of the histogramCounts, see
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG.
counts [2]*histogramCounts
upperBounds []float64
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
exemplars []atomic.Value // One more than buckets (to include +Inf), each a *dto.Exemplar.
now func() time.Time // To mock out time.Now() for testing.
}
func (h *histogram) Desc() *Desc {
return h.desc
}
func (h *histogram) Observe(v float64) {
h.observe(v, h.findBucket(v))
}
func (h *histogram) ObserveWithExemplar(v float64, e Labels) {
i := h.findBucket(v)
h.observe(v, i)
h.updateExemplar(v, i, e)
}
func (h *histogram) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// For simplicity, we protect this whole method by a mutex. It is not in
// the hot path, i.e. Observe is called much more often than Write. The
// complication of making Write lock-free isn't worth it, if possible at
// all.
h.writeMtx.Lock()
defer h.writeMtx.Unlock()
// Adding 1<<63 switches the hot index (from 0 to 1 or from 1 to 0)
// without touching the count bits. See the struct comments for a full
// description of the algorithm.
n := atomic.AddUint64(&h.countAndHotIdx, 1<<63)
// count is contained unchanged in the lower 63 bits.
count := n & ((1 << 63) - 1)
// The most significant bit tells us which counts is hot. The complement
// is thus the cold one.
hotCounts := h.counts[n>>63]
coldCounts := h.counts[(^n)>>63]
// Await cooldown.
for count != atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.count) {
runtime.Gosched() // Let observations get work done.
}
his := &dto.Histogram{
Bucket: make([]*dto.Bucket, len(h.upperBounds)),
SampleCount: proto.Uint64(count),
SampleSum: proto.Float64(math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.sumBits))),
}
var cumCount uint64
for i, upperBound := range h.upperBounds {
cumCount += atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.buckets[i])
his.Bucket[i] = &dto.Bucket{
CumulativeCount: proto.Uint64(cumCount),
UpperBound: proto.Float64(upperBound),
}
if e := h.exemplars[i].Load(); e != nil {
his.Bucket[i].Exemplar = e.(*dto.Exemplar)
}
}
// If there is an exemplar for the +Inf bucket, we have to add that bucket explicitly.
if e := h.exemplars[len(h.upperBounds)].Load(); e != nil {
b := &dto.Bucket{
CumulativeCount: proto.Uint64(count),
UpperBound: proto.Float64(math.Inf(1)),
Exemplar: e.(*dto.Exemplar),
}
his.Bucket = append(his.Bucket, b)
}
out.Histogram = his
out.Label = h.labelPairs
// Finally add all the cold counts to the new hot counts and reset the cold counts.
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.count, count)
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.count, 0)
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + his.GetSampleSum())
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.sumBits, 0)
break
}
}
for i := range h.upperBounds {
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.buckets[i], atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.buckets[i]))
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.buckets[i], 0)
}
return nil
}
// findBucket returns the index of the bucket for the provided value, or
// len(h.upperBounds) for the +Inf bucket.
func (h *histogram) findBucket(v float64) int {
// TODO(beorn7): For small numbers of buckets (<30), a linear search is
// slightly faster than the binary search. If we really care, we could
// switch from one search strategy to the other depending on the number
// of buckets.
//
// Microbenchmarks (BenchmarkHistogramNoLabels):
// 11 buckets: 38.3 ns/op linear - binary 48.7 ns/op
// 100 buckets: 78.1 ns/op linear - binary 54.9 ns/op
// 300 buckets: 154 ns/op linear - binary 61.6 ns/op
return sort.SearchFloat64s(h.upperBounds, v)
}
// observe is the implementation for Observe without the findBucket part.
func (h *histogram) observe(v float64, bucket int) {
// We increment h.countAndHotIdx so that the counter in the lower
// 63 bits gets incremented. At the same time, we get the new value
// back, which we can use to find the currently-hot counts.
n := atomic.AddUint64(&h.countAndHotIdx, 1)
hotCounts := h.counts[n>>63]
if bucket < len(h.upperBounds) {
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.buckets[bucket], 1)
}
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + v)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
break
}
}
// Increment count last as we take it as a signal that the observation
// is complete.
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.count, 1)
}
// updateExemplar replaces the exemplar for the provided bucket. With empty
// labels, it's a no-op. It panics if any of the labels is invalid.
func (h *histogram) updateExemplar(v float64, bucket int, l Labels) {
if l == nil {
return
}
e, err := newExemplar(v, h.now(), l)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
h.exemplars[bucket].Store(e)
}
// HistogramVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Histograms that all share the
// same Desc, but have different values for their variable labels. This is used
// if you want to count the same thing partitioned by various dimensions
// (e.g. HTTP request latencies, partitioned by status code and method). Create
// instances with NewHistogramVec.
type HistogramVec struct {
*MetricVec
}
// NewHistogramVec creates a new HistogramVec based on the provided HistogramOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names.
func NewHistogramVec(opts HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *HistogramVec {
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
labelNames,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &HistogramVec{
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newHistogram(desc, opts, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Histogram for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Histogram is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Histogram to only
// create the new Histogram but leave it at its starting value, a Histogram without
// any observations.
//
// Keeping the Histogram for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Histogram from the HistogramVec. In that case, the
// Histogram will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Histogram with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Histogram for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Histogram is created. Implications of
// creating a Histogram without using it and keeping the Histogram for later use
// are the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
return nil, err
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Observe(42.21)
func (v *HistogramVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Observer {
h, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return h
}
// With works as GetMetricWith but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Observe(42.21)
func (v *HistogramVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
h, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return h
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the HistogramVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *HistogramVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (ObserverVec, error) {
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &HistogramVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *HistogramVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) ObserverVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
type constHistogram struct {
desc *Desc
count uint64
sum float64
buckets map[float64]uint64
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (h *constHistogram) Desc() *Desc {
return h.desc
}
func (h *constHistogram) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
his := &dto.Histogram{}
buckets := make([]*dto.Bucket, 0, len(h.buckets))
his.SampleCount = proto.Uint64(h.count)
his.SampleSum = proto.Float64(h.sum)
for upperBound, count := range h.buckets {
buckets = append(buckets, &dto.Bucket{
CumulativeCount: proto.Uint64(count),
UpperBound: proto.Float64(upperBound),
})
}
if len(buckets) > 0 {
sort.Sort(buckSort(buckets))
}
his.Bucket = buckets
out.Histogram = his
out.Label = h.labelPairs
return nil
}
// NewConstHistogram returns a metric representing a Prometheus histogram with
// fixed values for the count, sum, and bucket counts. As those parameters
// cannot be changed, the returned value does not implement the Histogram
// interface (but only the Metric interface). Users of this package will not
// have much use for it in regular operations. However, when implementing custom
// Collectors, it is useful as a throw-away metric that is generated on the fly
// to send it to Prometheus in the Collect method.
//
// buckets is a map of upper bounds to cumulative counts, excluding the +Inf
// bucket.
//
// NewConstHistogram returns an error if the length of labelValues is not
// consistent with the variable labels in Desc or if Desc is invalid.
func NewConstHistogram(
desc *Desc,
count uint64,
sum float64,
buckets map[float64]uint64,
labelValues ...string,
) (Metric, error) {
if desc.err != nil {
return nil, desc.err
}
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(desc.variableLabels)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &constHistogram{
desc: desc,
count: count,
sum: sum,
buckets: buckets,
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}, nil
}
// MustNewConstHistogram is a version of NewConstHistogram that panics where
// NewConstHistogram would have returned an error.
func MustNewConstHistogram(
desc *Desc,
count uint64,
sum float64,
buckets map[float64]uint64,
labelValues ...string,
) Metric {
m, err := NewConstHistogram(desc, count, sum, buckets, labelValues...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return m
}
type buckSort []*dto.Bucket
func (s buckSort) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s buckSort) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s buckSort) Less(i, j int) bool {
return s[i].GetUpperBound() < s[j].GetUpperBound()
}

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@ -1,85 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2018 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.
package internal
import (
"sort"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// metricSorter is a sortable slice of *dto.Metric.
type metricSorter []*dto.Metric
func (s metricSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s metricSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s metricSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
if len(s[i].Label) != len(s[j].Label) {
// This should not happen. The metrics are
// inconsistent. However, we have to deal with the fact, as
// people might use custom collectors or metric family injection
// to create inconsistent metrics. So let's simply compare the
// number of labels in this case. That will still yield
// reproducible sorting.
return len(s[i].Label) < len(s[j].Label)
}
for n, lp := range s[i].Label {
vi := lp.GetValue()
vj := s[j].Label[n].GetValue()
if vi != vj {
return vi < vj
}
}
// We should never arrive here. Multiple metrics with the same
// label set in the same scrape will lead to undefined ingestion
// behavior. However, as above, we have to provide stable sorting
// here, even for inconsistent metrics. So sort equal metrics
// by their timestamp, with missing timestamps (implying "now")
// coming last.
if s[i].TimestampMs == nil {
return false
}
if s[j].TimestampMs == nil {
return true
}
return s[i].GetTimestampMs() < s[j].GetTimestampMs()
}
// NormalizeMetricFamilies returns a MetricFamily slice with empty
// MetricFamilies pruned and the remaining MetricFamilies sorted by name within
// the slice, with the contained Metrics sorted within each MetricFamily.
func NormalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName map[string]*dto.MetricFamily) []*dto.MetricFamily {
for _, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
sort.Sort(metricSorter(mf.Metric))
}
names := make([]string, 0, len(metricFamiliesByName))
for name, mf := range metricFamiliesByName {
if len(mf.Metric) > 0 {
names = append(names, name)
}
}
sort.Strings(names)
result := make([]*dto.MetricFamily, 0, len(names))
for _, name := range names {
result = append(result, metricFamiliesByName[name])
}
return result
}

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// Copyright 2018 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.
package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"strings"
"unicode/utf8"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
)
// Labels represents a collection of label name -> value mappings. This type is
// commonly used with the With(Labels) and GetMetricWith(Labels) methods of
// metric vector Collectors, e.g.:
// myVec.With(Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Add(42)
//
// The other use-case is the specification of constant label pairs in Opts or to
// create a Desc.
type Labels map[string]string
// reservedLabelPrefix is a prefix which is not legal in user-supplied
// label names.
const reservedLabelPrefix = "__"
var errInconsistentCardinality = errors.New("inconsistent label cardinality")
func makeInconsistentCardinalityError(fqName string, labels, labelValues []string) error {
return fmt.Errorf(
"%s: %q has %d variable labels named %q but %d values %q were provided",
errInconsistentCardinality, fqName,
len(labels), labels,
len(labelValues), labelValues,
)
}
func validateValuesInLabels(labels Labels, expectedNumberOfValues int) error {
if len(labels) != expectedNumberOfValues {
return fmt.Errorf(
"%s: expected %d label values but got %d in %#v",
errInconsistentCardinality, expectedNumberOfValues,
len(labels), labels,
)
}
for name, val := range labels {
if !utf8.ValidString(val) {
return fmt.Errorf("label %s: value %q is not valid UTF-8", name, val)
}
}
return nil
}
func validateLabelValues(vals []string, expectedNumberOfValues int) error {
if len(vals) != expectedNumberOfValues {
return fmt.Errorf(
"%s: expected %d label values but got %d in %#v",
errInconsistentCardinality, expectedNumberOfValues,
len(vals), vals,
)
}
for _, val := range vals {
if !utf8.ValidString(val) {
return fmt.Errorf("label value %q is not valid UTF-8", val)
}
}
return nil
}
func checkLabelName(l string) bool {
return model.LabelName(l).IsValid() && !strings.HasPrefix(l, reservedLabelPrefix)
}

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// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"strings"
"time"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
var separatorByteSlice = []byte{model.SeparatorByte} // For convenient use with xxhash.
// A Metric models a single sample value with its meta data being exported to
// Prometheus. Implementations of Metric in this package are Gauge, Counter,
// Histogram, Summary, and Untyped.
type Metric interface {
// Desc returns the descriptor for the Metric. This method idempotently
// returns the same descriptor throughout the lifetime of the
// Metric. The returned descriptor is immutable by contract. A Metric
// unable to describe itself must return an invalid descriptor (created
// with NewInvalidDesc).
Desc() *Desc
// Write encodes the Metric into a "Metric" Protocol Buffer data
// transmission object.
//
// Metric implementations must observe concurrency safety as reads of
// this metric may occur at any time, and any blocking occurs at the
// expense of total performance of rendering all registered
// metrics. Ideally, Metric implementations should support concurrent
// readers.
//
// While populating dto.Metric, it is the responsibility of the
// implementation to ensure validity of the Metric protobuf (like valid
// UTF-8 strings or syntactically valid metric and label names). It is
// recommended to sort labels lexicographically. Callers of Write should
// still make sure of sorting if they depend on it.
Write(*dto.Metric) error
// TODO(beorn7): The original rationale of passing in a pre-allocated
// dto.Metric protobuf to save allocations has disappeared. The
// signature of this method should be changed to "Write() (*dto.Metric,
// error)".
}
// Opts bundles the options for creating most Metric types. Each metric
// implementation XXX has its own XXXOpts type, but in most cases, it is just be
// an alias of this type (which might change when the requirement arises.)
//
// It is mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. All other fields are
// optional and can safely be left at their zero value, although it is strongly
// encouraged to set a Help string.
type Opts struct {
// Namespace, Subsystem, and Name are components of the fully-qualified
// name of the Metric (created by joining these components with
// "_"). Only Name is mandatory, the others merely help structuring the
// name. Note that the fully-qualified name of the metric must be a
// valid Prometheus metric name.
Namespace string
Subsystem string
Name string
// Help provides information about this metric.
//
// Metrics with the same fully-qualified name must have the same Help
// string.
Help string
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this metric. Metrics
// with the same fully-qualified name must have the same label names in
// their ConstLabels.
//
// ConstLabels are only used rarely. In particular, do not use them to
// attach the same labels to all your metrics. Those use cases are
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
}
// BuildFQName joins the given three name components by "_". Empty name
// components are ignored. If the name parameter itself is empty, an empty
// string is returned, no matter what. Metric implementations included in this
// library use this function internally to generate the fully-qualified metric
// name from the name component in their Opts. Users of the library will only
// need this function if they implement their own Metric or instantiate a Desc
// (with NewDesc) directly.
func BuildFQName(namespace, subsystem, name string) string {
if name == "" {
return ""
}
switch {
case namespace != "" && subsystem != "":
return strings.Join([]string{namespace, subsystem, name}, "_")
case namespace != "":
return strings.Join([]string{namespace, name}, "_")
case subsystem != "":
return strings.Join([]string{subsystem, name}, "_")
}
return name
}
// labelPairSorter implements sort.Interface. It is used to sort a slice of
// dto.LabelPair pointers.
type labelPairSorter []*dto.LabelPair
func (s labelPairSorter) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s labelPairSorter) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s labelPairSorter) Less(i, j int) bool {
return s[i].GetName() < s[j].GetName()
}
type invalidMetric struct {
desc *Desc
err error
}
// NewInvalidMetric returns a metric whose Write method always returns the
// provided error. It is useful if a Collector finds itself unable to collect
// a metric and wishes to report an error to the registry.
func NewInvalidMetric(desc *Desc, err error) Metric {
return &invalidMetric{desc, err}
}
func (m *invalidMetric) Desc() *Desc { return m.desc }
func (m *invalidMetric) Write(*dto.Metric) error { return m.err }
type timestampedMetric struct {
Metric
t time.Time
}
func (m timestampedMetric) Write(pb *dto.Metric) error {
e := m.Metric.Write(pb)
pb.TimestampMs = proto.Int64(m.t.Unix()*1000 + int64(m.t.Nanosecond()/1000000))
return e
}
// NewMetricWithTimestamp returns a new Metric wrapping the provided Metric in a
// way that it has an explicit timestamp set to the provided Time. This is only
// useful in rare cases as the timestamp of a Prometheus metric should usually
// be set by the Prometheus server during scraping. Exceptions include mirroring
// metrics with given timestamps from other metric
// sources.
//
// NewMetricWithTimestamp works best with MustNewConstMetric,
// MustNewConstHistogram, and MustNewConstSummary, see example.
//
// Currently, the exposition formats used by Prometheus are limited to
// millisecond resolution. Thus, the provided time will be rounded down to the
// next full millisecond value.
func NewMetricWithTimestamp(t time.Time, m Metric) Metric {
return timestampedMetric{Metric: m, t: t}
}

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@ -1,64 +0,0 @@
// 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.
package prometheus
// Observer is the interface that wraps the Observe method, which is used by
// Histogram and Summary to add observations.
type Observer interface {
Observe(float64)
}
// The ObserverFunc type is an adapter to allow the use of ordinary
// functions as Observers. If f is a function with the appropriate
// signature, ObserverFunc(f) is an Observer that calls f.
//
// This adapter is usually used in connection with the Timer type, and there are
// two general use cases:
//
// The most common one is to use a Gauge as the Observer for a Timer.
// See the "Gauge" Timer example.
//
// The more advanced use case is to create a function that dynamically decides
// which Observer to use for observing the duration. See the "Complex" Timer
// example.
type ObserverFunc func(float64)
// Observe calls f(value). It implements Observer.
func (f ObserverFunc) Observe(value float64) {
f(value)
}
// ObserverVec is an interface implemented by `HistogramVec` and `SummaryVec`.
type ObserverVec interface {
GetMetricWith(Labels) (Observer, error)
GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error)
With(Labels) Observer
WithLabelValues(...string) Observer
CurryWith(Labels) (ObserverVec, error)
MustCurryWith(Labels) ObserverVec
Collector
}
// ExemplarObserver is implemented by Observers that offer the option of
// observing a value together with an exemplar. Its ObserveWithExemplar method
// works like the Observe method of an Observer but also replaces the currently
// saved exemplar (if any) with a new one, created from the provided value, the
// current time as timestamp, and the provided Labels. Empty Labels will lead to
// a valid (label-less) exemplar. But if Labels is nil, the current exemplar is
// left in place. ObserveWithExemplar panics if any of the provided labels are
// invalid or if the provided labels contain more than 64 runes in total.
type ExemplarObserver interface {
ObserveWithExemplar(value float64, exemplar Labels)
}

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// Copyright 2015 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.
package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"strconv"
"strings"
)
type processCollector struct {
collectFn func(chan<- Metric)
pidFn func() (int, error)
reportErrors bool
cpuTotal *Desc
openFDs, maxFDs *Desc
vsize, maxVsize *Desc
rss *Desc
startTime *Desc
}
// ProcessCollectorOpts defines the behavior of a process metrics collector
// created with NewProcessCollector.
type ProcessCollectorOpts struct {
// PidFn returns the PID of the process the collector collects metrics
// for. It is called upon each collection. By default, the PID of the
// current process is used, as determined on construction time by
// calling os.Getpid().
PidFn func() (int, error)
// If non-empty, each of the collected metrics is prefixed by the
// provided string and an underscore ("_").
Namespace string
// If true, any error encountered during collection is reported as an
// invalid metric (see NewInvalidMetric). Otherwise, errors are ignored
// and the collected metrics will be incomplete. (Possibly, no metrics
// will be collected at all.) While that's usually not desired, it is
// appropriate for the common "mix-in" of process metrics, where process
// metrics are nice to have, but failing to collect them should not
// disrupt the collection of the remaining metrics.
ReportErrors bool
}
// NewProcessCollector returns a collector which exports the current state of
// process metrics including CPU, memory and file descriptor usage as well as
// the process start time. The detailed behavior is defined by the provided
// ProcessCollectorOpts. The zero value of ProcessCollectorOpts creates a
// collector for the current process with an empty namespace string and no error
// reporting.
//
// The collector only works on operating systems with a Linux-style proc
// filesystem and on Microsoft Windows. On other operating systems, it will not
// collect any metrics.
func NewProcessCollector(opts ProcessCollectorOpts) Collector {
ns := ""
if len(opts.Namespace) > 0 {
ns = opts.Namespace + "_"
}
c := &processCollector{
reportErrors: opts.ReportErrors,
cpuTotal: NewDesc(
ns+"process_cpu_seconds_total",
"Total user and system CPU time spent in seconds.",
nil, nil,
),
openFDs: NewDesc(
ns+"process_open_fds",
"Number of open file descriptors.",
nil, nil,
),
maxFDs: NewDesc(
ns+"process_max_fds",
"Maximum number of open file descriptors.",
nil, nil,
),
vsize: NewDesc(
ns+"process_virtual_memory_bytes",
"Virtual memory size in bytes.",
nil, nil,
),
maxVsize: NewDesc(
ns+"process_virtual_memory_max_bytes",
"Maximum amount of virtual memory available in bytes.",
nil, nil,
),
rss: NewDesc(
ns+"process_resident_memory_bytes",
"Resident memory size in bytes.",
nil, nil,
),
startTime: NewDesc(
ns+"process_start_time_seconds",
"Start time of the process since unix epoch in seconds.",
nil, nil,
),
}
if opts.PidFn == nil {
pid := os.Getpid()
c.pidFn = func() (int, error) { return pid, nil }
} else {
c.pidFn = opts.PidFn
}
// Set up process metric collection if supported by the runtime.
if canCollectProcess() {
c.collectFn = c.processCollect
} else {
c.collectFn = func(ch chan<- Metric) {
c.reportError(ch, nil, errors.New("process metrics not supported on this platform"))
}
}
return c
}
// Describe returns all descriptions of the collector.
func (c *processCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- c.cpuTotal
ch <- c.openFDs
ch <- c.maxFDs
ch <- c.vsize
ch <- c.maxVsize
ch <- c.rss
ch <- c.startTime
}
// Collect returns the current state of all metrics of the collector.
func (c *processCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
c.collectFn(ch)
}
func (c *processCollector) reportError(ch chan<- Metric, desc *Desc, err error) {
if !c.reportErrors {
return
}
if desc == nil {
desc = NewInvalidDesc(err)
}
ch <- NewInvalidMetric(desc, err)
}
// NewPidFileFn returns a function that retrieves a pid from the specified file.
// It is meant to be used for the PidFn field in ProcessCollectorOpts.
func NewPidFileFn(pidFilePath string) func() (int, error) {
return func() (int, error) {
content, err := ioutil.ReadFile(pidFilePath)
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("can't read pid file %q: %+v", pidFilePath, err)
}
pid, err := strconv.Atoi(strings.TrimSpace(string(content)))
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("can't parse pid file %q: %+v", pidFilePath, err)
}
return pid, nil
}
}

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// Copyright 2019 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.
// +build !windows
package prometheus
import (
"github.com/prometheus/procfs"
)
func canCollectProcess() bool {
_, err := procfs.NewDefaultFS()
return err == nil
}
func (c *processCollector) processCollect(ch chan<- Metric) {
pid, err := c.pidFn()
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
p, err := procfs.NewProc(pid)
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
if stat, err := p.Stat(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.cpuTotal, CounterValue, stat.CPUTime())
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.vsize, GaugeValue, float64(stat.VirtualMemory()))
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.rss, GaugeValue, float64(stat.ResidentMemory()))
if startTime, err := stat.StartTime(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.startTime, GaugeValue, startTime)
} else {
c.reportError(ch, c.startTime, err)
}
} else {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
}
if fds, err := p.FileDescriptorsLen(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.openFDs, GaugeValue, float64(fds))
} else {
c.reportError(ch, c.openFDs, err)
}
if limits, err := p.Limits(); err == nil {
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.maxFDs, GaugeValue, float64(limits.OpenFiles))
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.maxVsize, GaugeValue, float64(limits.AddressSpace))
} else {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
}
}

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// Copyright 2019 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.
package prometheus
import (
"syscall"
"unsafe"
"golang.org/x/sys/windows"
)
func canCollectProcess() bool {
return true
}
var (
modpsapi = syscall.NewLazyDLL("psapi.dll")
modkernel32 = syscall.NewLazyDLL("kernel32.dll")
procGetProcessMemoryInfo = modpsapi.NewProc("GetProcessMemoryInfo")
procGetProcessHandleCount = modkernel32.NewProc("GetProcessHandleCount")
)
type processMemoryCounters struct {
// System interface description
// https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/api/psapi/ns-psapi-process_memory_counters_ex
// Refer to the Golang internal implementation
// https://golang.org/src/internal/syscall/windows/psapi_windows.go
_ uint32
PageFaultCount uint32
PeakWorkingSetSize uintptr
WorkingSetSize uintptr
QuotaPeakPagedPoolUsage uintptr
QuotaPagedPoolUsage uintptr
QuotaPeakNonPagedPoolUsage uintptr
QuotaNonPagedPoolUsage uintptr
PagefileUsage uintptr
PeakPagefileUsage uintptr
PrivateUsage uintptr
}
func getProcessMemoryInfo(handle windows.Handle) (processMemoryCounters, error) {
mem := processMemoryCounters{}
r1, _, err := procGetProcessMemoryInfo.Call(
uintptr(handle),
uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&mem)),
uintptr(unsafe.Sizeof(mem)),
)
if r1 != 1 {
return mem, err
} else {
return mem, nil
}
}
func getProcessHandleCount(handle windows.Handle) (uint32, error) {
var count uint32
r1, _, err := procGetProcessHandleCount.Call(
uintptr(handle),
uintptr(unsafe.Pointer(&count)),
)
if r1 != 1 {
return 0, err
} else {
return count, nil
}
}
func (c *processCollector) processCollect(ch chan<- Metric) {
h, err := windows.GetCurrentProcess()
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
var startTime, exitTime, kernelTime, userTime windows.Filetime
err = windows.GetProcessTimes(h, &startTime, &exitTime, &kernelTime, &userTime)
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.startTime, GaugeValue, float64(startTime.Nanoseconds()/1e9))
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.cpuTotal, CounterValue, fileTimeToSeconds(kernelTime)+fileTimeToSeconds(userTime))
mem, err := getProcessMemoryInfo(h)
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.vsize, GaugeValue, float64(mem.PrivateUsage))
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.rss, GaugeValue, float64(mem.WorkingSetSize))
handles, err := getProcessHandleCount(h)
if err != nil {
c.reportError(ch, nil, err)
return
}
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.openFDs, GaugeValue, float64(handles))
ch <- MustNewConstMetric(c.maxFDs, GaugeValue, float64(16*1024*1024)) // Windows has a hard-coded max limit, not per-process.
}
func fileTimeToSeconds(ft windows.Filetime) float64 {
return float64(uint64(ft.HighDateTime)<<32+uint64(ft.LowDateTime)) / 1e7
}

View File

@ -1,376 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2018 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.
// Package promauto provides alternative constructors for the fundamental
// Prometheus metric types and their …Vec and …Func variants. The difference to
// their counterparts in the prometheus package is that the promauto
// constructors return Collectors that are already registered with a
// registry. There are two sets of constructors. The constructors in the first
// set are top-level functions, while the constructors in the other set are
// methods of the Factory type. The top-level function return Collectors
// registered with the global registry (prometheus.DefaultRegisterer), while the
// methods return Collectors registered with the registry the Factory was
// constructed with. All constructors panic if the registration fails.
//
// The following example is a complete program to create a histogram of normally
// distributed random numbers from the math/rand package:
//
// package main
//
// import (
// "math/rand"
// "net/http"
//
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promauto"
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promhttp"
// )
//
// var histogram = promauto.NewHistogram(prometheus.HistogramOpts{
// Name: "random_numbers",
// Help: "A histogram of normally distributed random numbers.",
// Buckets: prometheus.LinearBuckets(-3, .1, 61),
// })
//
// func Random() {
// for {
// histogram.Observe(rand.NormFloat64())
// }
// }
//
// func main() {
// go Random()
// http.Handle("/metrics", promhttp.Handler())
// http.ListenAndServe(":1971", nil)
// }
//
// Prometheus's version of a minimal hello-world program:
//
// package main
//
// import (
// "fmt"
// "net/http"
//
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promauto"
// "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/promhttp"
// )
//
// func main() {
// http.Handle("/", promhttp.InstrumentHandlerCounter(
// promauto.NewCounterVec(
// prometheus.CounterOpts{
// Name: "hello_requests_total",
// Help: "Total number of hello-world requests by HTTP code.",
// },
// []string{"code"},
// ),
// http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
// fmt.Fprint(w, "Hello, world!")
// }),
// ))
// http.Handle("/metrics", promhttp.Handler())
// http.ListenAndServe(":1971", nil)
// }
//
// A Factory is created with the With(prometheus.Registerer) function, which
// enables two usage pattern. With(prometheus.Registerer) can be called once per
// line:
//
// var (
// reg = prometheus.NewRegistry()
// randomNumbers = promauto.With(reg).NewHistogram(prometheus.HistogramOpts{
// Name: "random_numbers",
// Help: "A histogram of normally distributed random numbers.",
// Buckets: prometheus.LinearBuckets(-3, .1, 61),
// })
// requestCount = promauto.With(reg).NewCounterVec(
// prometheus.CounterOpts{
// Name: "http_requests_total",
// Help: "Total number of HTTP requests by status code and method.",
// },
// []string{"code", "method"},
// )
// )
//
// Or it can be used to create a Factory once to be used multiple times:
//
// var (
// reg = prometheus.NewRegistry()
// factory = promauto.With(reg)
// randomNumbers = factory.NewHistogram(prometheus.HistogramOpts{
// Name: "random_numbers",
// Help: "A histogram of normally distributed random numbers.",
// Buckets: prometheus.LinearBuckets(-3, .1, 61),
// })
// requestCount = factory.NewCounterVec(
// prometheus.CounterOpts{
// Name: "http_requests_total",
// Help: "Total number of HTTP requests by status code and method.",
// },
// []string{"code", "method"},
// )
// )
//
// This appears very handy. So why are these constructors locked away in a
// separate package?
//
// The main problem is that registration may fail, e.g. if a metric inconsistent
// with or equal to the newly to be registered one is already registered.
// Therefore, the Register method in the prometheus.Registerer interface returns
// an error, and the same is the case for the top-level prometheus.Register
// function that registers with the global registry. The prometheus package also
// provides MustRegister versions for both. They panic if the registration
// fails, and they clearly call this out by using the Must… idiom. Panicking is
// problematic in this case because it doesn't just happen on input provided by
// the caller that is invalid on its own. Things are a bit more subtle here:
// Metric creation and registration tend to be spread widely over the
// codebase. It can easily happen that an incompatible metric is added to an
// unrelated part of the code, and suddenly code that used to work perfectly
// fine starts to panic (provided that the registration of the newly added
// metric happens before the registration of the previously existing
// metric). This may come as an even bigger surprise with the global registry,
// where simply importing another package can trigger a panic (if the newly
// imported package registers metrics in its init function). At least, in the
// prometheus package, creation of metrics and other collectors is separate from
// registration. You first create the metric, and then you decide explicitly if
// you want to register it with a local or the global registry, and if you want
// to handle the error or risk a panic. With the constructors in the promauto
// package, registration is automatic, and if it fails, it will always
// panic. Furthermore, the constructors will often be called in the var section
// of a file, which means that panicking will happen as a side effect of merely
// importing a package.
//
// A separate package allows conservative users to entirely ignore it. And
// whoever wants to use it, will do so explicitly, with an opportunity to read
// this warning.
//
// Enjoy promauto responsibly!
package promauto
import "github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
// NewCounter works like the function of the same name in the prometheus package
// but it automatically registers the Counter with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewCounter panics.
func NewCounter(opts prometheus.CounterOpts) prometheus.Counter {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewCounter(opts)
}
// NewCounterVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the CounterVec with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewCounterVec
// panics.
func NewCounterVec(opts prometheus.CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.CounterVec {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewCounterVec(opts, labelNames)
}
// NewCounterFunc works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the CounterFunc with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewCounterFunc
// panics.
func NewCounterFunc(opts prometheus.CounterOpts, function func() float64) prometheus.CounterFunc {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewCounterFunc(opts, function)
}
// NewGauge works like the function of the same name in the prometheus package
// but it automatically registers the Gauge with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewGauge panics.
func NewGauge(opts prometheus.GaugeOpts) prometheus.Gauge {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewGauge(opts)
}
// NewGaugeVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the GaugeVec with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewGaugeVec panics.
func NewGaugeVec(opts prometheus.GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.GaugeVec {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewGaugeVec(opts, labelNames)
}
// NewGaugeFunc works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the GaugeFunc with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewGaugeFunc panics.
func NewGaugeFunc(opts prometheus.GaugeOpts, function func() float64) prometheus.GaugeFunc {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewGaugeFunc(opts, function)
}
// NewSummary works like the function of the same name in the prometheus package
// but it automatically registers the Summary with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewSummary panics.
func NewSummary(opts prometheus.SummaryOpts) prometheus.Summary {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewSummary(opts)
}
// NewSummaryVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the SummaryVec with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewSummaryVec
// panics.
func NewSummaryVec(opts prometheus.SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.SummaryVec {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewSummaryVec(opts, labelNames)
}
// NewHistogram works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the Histogram with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewHistogram panics.
func NewHistogram(opts prometheus.HistogramOpts) prometheus.Histogram {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewHistogram(opts)
}
// NewHistogramVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the HistogramVec with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewHistogramVec
// panics.
func NewHistogramVec(opts prometheus.HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.HistogramVec {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewHistogramVec(opts, labelNames)
}
// NewUntypedFunc works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the UntypedFunc with the
// prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If the registration fails, NewUntypedFunc
// panics.
func NewUntypedFunc(opts prometheus.UntypedOpts, function func() float64) prometheus.UntypedFunc {
return With(prometheus.DefaultRegisterer).NewUntypedFunc(opts, function)
}
// Factory provides factory methods to create Collectors that are automatically
// registered with a Registerer. Create a Factory with the With function,
// providing a Registerer to auto-register created Collectors with. The zero
// value of a Factory creates Collectors that are not registered with any
// Registerer. All methods of the Factory panic if the registration fails.
type Factory struct {
r prometheus.Registerer
}
// With creates a Factory using the provided Registerer for registration of the
// created Collectors. If the provided Registerer is nil, the returned Factory
// creates Collectors that are not registered with any Registerer.
func With(r prometheus.Registerer) Factory { return Factory{r} }
// NewCounter works like the function of the same name in the prometheus package
// but it automatically registers the Counter with the Factory's Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewCounter(opts prometheus.CounterOpts) prometheus.Counter {
c := prometheus.NewCounter(opts)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(c)
}
return c
}
// NewCounterVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the CounterVec with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewCounterVec(opts prometheus.CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.CounterVec {
c := prometheus.NewCounterVec(opts, labelNames)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(c)
}
return c
}
// NewCounterFunc works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the CounterFunc with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewCounterFunc(opts prometheus.CounterOpts, function func() float64) prometheus.CounterFunc {
c := prometheus.NewCounterFunc(opts, function)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(c)
}
return c
}
// NewGauge works like the function of the same name in the prometheus package
// but it automatically registers the Gauge with the Factory's Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewGauge(opts prometheus.GaugeOpts) prometheus.Gauge {
g := prometheus.NewGauge(opts)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(g)
}
return g
}
// NewGaugeVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the GaugeVec with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewGaugeVec(opts prometheus.GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.GaugeVec {
g := prometheus.NewGaugeVec(opts, labelNames)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(g)
}
return g
}
// NewGaugeFunc works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the GaugeFunc with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewGaugeFunc(opts prometheus.GaugeOpts, function func() float64) prometheus.GaugeFunc {
g := prometheus.NewGaugeFunc(opts, function)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(g)
}
return g
}
// NewSummary works like the function of the same name in the prometheus package
// but it automatically registers the Summary with the Factory's Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewSummary(opts prometheus.SummaryOpts) prometheus.Summary {
s := prometheus.NewSummary(opts)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(s)
}
return s
}
// NewSummaryVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the SummaryVec with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewSummaryVec(opts prometheus.SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.SummaryVec {
s := prometheus.NewSummaryVec(opts, labelNames)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(s)
}
return s
}
// NewHistogram works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the Histogram with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewHistogram(opts prometheus.HistogramOpts) prometheus.Histogram {
h := prometheus.NewHistogram(opts)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(h)
}
return h
}
// NewHistogramVec works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the HistogramVec with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewHistogramVec(opts prometheus.HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *prometheus.HistogramVec {
h := prometheus.NewHistogramVec(opts, labelNames)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(h)
}
return h
}
// NewUntypedFunc works like the function of the same name in the prometheus
// package but it automatically registers the UntypedFunc with the Factory's
// Registerer.
func (f Factory) NewUntypedFunc(opts prometheus.UntypedOpts, function func() float64) prometheus.UntypedFunc {
u := prometheus.NewUntypedFunc(opts, function)
if f.r != nil {
f.r.MustRegister(u)
}
return u
}

View File

@ -1,370 +0,0 @@
// 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.
package promhttp
import (
"bufio"
"io"
"net"
"net/http"
)
const (
closeNotifier = 1 << iota
flusher
hijacker
readerFrom
pusher
)
type delegator interface {
http.ResponseWriter
Status() int
Written() int64
}
type responseWriterDelegator struct {
http.ResponseWriter
status int
written int64
wroteHeader bool
observeWriteHeader func(int)
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Status() int {
return r.status
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Written() int64 {
return r.written
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) WriteHeader(code int) {
if r.observeWriteHeader != nil && !r.wroteHeader {
// Only call observeWriteHeader for the 1st time. It's a bug if
// WriteHeader is called more than once, but we want to protect
// against it here. Note that we still delegate the WriteHeader
// to the original ResponseWriter to not mask the bug from it.
r.observeWriteHeader(code)
}
r.status = code
r.wroteHeader = true
r.ResponseWriter.WriteHeader(code)
}
func (r *responseWriterDelegator) Write(b []byte) (int, error) {
// If applicable, call WriteHeader here so that observeWriteHeader is
// handled appropriately.
if !r.wroteHeader {
r.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
n, err := r.ResponseWriter.Write(b)
r.written += int64(n)
return n, err
}
type closeNotifierDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type flusherDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type hijackerDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type readerFromDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type pusherDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
func (d closeNotifierDelegator) CloseNotify() <-chan bool {
//lint:ignore SA1019 http.CloseNotifier is deprecated but we don't want to
//remove support from client_golang yet.
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.CloseNotifier).CloseNotify()
}
func (d flusherDelegator) Flush() {
// If applicable, call WriteHeader here so that observeWriteHeader is
// handled appropriately.
if !d.wroteHeader {
d.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
d.ResponseWriter.(http.Flusher).Flush()
}
func (d hijackerDelegator) Hijack() (net.Conn, *bufio.ReadWriter, error) {
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.Hijacker).Hijack()
}
func (d readerFromDelegator) ReadFrom(re io.Reader) (int64, error) {
// If applicable, call WriteHeader here so that observeWriteHeader is
// handled appropriately.
if !d.wroteHeader {
d.WriteHeader(http.StatusOK)
}
n, err := d.ResponseWriter.(io.ReaderFrom).ReadFrom(re)
d.written += n
return n, err
}
func (d pusherDelegator) Push(target string, opts *http.PushOptions) error {
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.Pusher).Push(target, opts)
}
var pickDelegator = make([]func(*responseWriterDelegator) delegator, 32)
func init() {
// TODO(beorn7): Code generation would help here.
pickDelegator[0] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 0
return d
}
pickDelegator[closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 1
return closeNotifierDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 2
return flusherDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 3
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 4
return hijackerDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 5
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 6
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 7
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 8
return readerFromDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 9
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 10
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 11
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 12
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 13
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 14
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[readerFrom+hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 15
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 16
return pusherDelegator{d}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 17
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 18
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 19
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 20
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 21
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 22
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { //23
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 24
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 25
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 26
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 27
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 28
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 29
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker+flusher] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 30
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}}
}
pickDelegator[pusher+readerFrom+hijacker+flusher+closeNotifier] = func(d *responseWriterDelegator) delegator { // 31
return struct {
*responseWriterDelegator
http.Pusher
io.ReaderFrom
http.Hijacker
http.Flusher
http.CloseNotifier
}{d, pusherDelegator{d}, readerFromDelegator{d}, hijackerDelegator{d}, flusherDelegator{d}, closeNotifierDelegator{d}}
}
}
func newDelegator(w http.ResponseWriter, observeWriteHeaderFunc func(int)) delegator {
d := &responseWriterDelegator{
ResponseWriter: w,
observeWriteHeader: observeWriteHeaderFunc,
}
id := 0
//lint:ignore SA1019 http.CloseNotifier is deprecated but we don't want to
//remove support from client_golang yet.
if _, ok := w.(http.CloseNotifier); ok {
id += closeNotifier
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Flusher); ok {
id += flusher
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Hijacker); ok {
id += hijacker
}
if _, ok := w.(io.ReaderFrom); ok {
id += readerFrom
}
if _, ok := w.(http.Pusher); ok {
id += pusher
}
return pickDelegator[id](d)
}

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@ -1,383 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2016 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.
// Package promhttp provides tooling around HTTP servers and clients.
//
// First, the package allows the creation of http.Handler instances to expose
// Prometheus metrics via HTTP. promhttp.Handler acts on the
// prometheus.DefaultGatherer. With HandlerFor, you can create a handler for a
// custom registry or anything that implements the Gatherer interface. It also
// allows the creation of handlers that act differently on errors or allow to
// log errors.
//
// Second, the package provides tooling to instrument instances of http.Handler
// via middleware. Middleware wrappers follow the naming scheme
// InstrumentHandlerX, where X describes the intended use of the middleware.
// See each function's doc comment for specific details.
//
// Finally, the package allows for an http.RoundTripper to be instrumented via
// middleware. Middleware wrappers follow the naming scheme
// InstrumentRoundTripperX, where X describes the intended use of the
// middleware. See each function's doc comment for specific details.
package promhttp
import (
"compress/gzip"
"fmt"
"io"
"net/http"
"strings"
"sync"
"time"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
)
const (
contentTypeHeader = "Content-Type"
contentEncodingHeader = "Content-Encoding"
acceptEncodingHeader = "Accept-Encoding"
)
var gzipPool = sync.Pool{
New: func() interface{} {
return gzip.NewWriter(nil)
},
}
// Handler returns an http.Handler for the prometheus.DefaultGatherer, using
// default HandlerOpts, i.e. it reports the first error as an HTTP error, it has
// no error logging, and it applies compression if requested by the client.
//
// The returned http.Handler is already instrumented using the
// InstrumentMetricHandler function and the prometheus.DefaultRegisterer. If you
// create multiple http.Handlers by separate calls of the Handler function, the
// metrics used for instrumentation will be shared between them, providing
// global scrape counts.
//
// This function is meant to cover the bulk of basic use cases. If you are doing
// anything that requires more customization (including using a non-default
// Gatherer, different instrumentation, and non-default HandlerOpts), use the
// HandlerFor function. See there for details.
func Handler() http.Handler {
return InstrumentMetricHandler(
prometheus.DefaultRegisterer, HandlerFor(prometheus.DefaultGatherer, HandlerOpts{}),
)
}
// HandlerFor returns an uninstrumented http.Handler for the provided
// Gatherer. The behavior of the Handler is defined by the provided
// HandlerOpts. Thus, HandlerFor is useful to create http.Handlers for custom
// Gatherers, with non-default HandlerOpts, and/or with custom (or no)
// instrumentation. Use the InstrumentMetricHandler function to apply the same
// kind of instrumentation as it is used by the Handler function.
func HandlerFor(reg prometheus.Gatherer, opts HandlerOpts) http.Handler {
var (
inFlightSem chan struct{}
errCnt = prometheus.NewCounterVec(
prometheus.CounterOpts{
Name: "promhttp_metric_handler_errors_total",
Help: "Total number of internal errors encountered by the promhttp metric handler.",
},
[]string{"cause"},
)
)
if opts.MaxRequestsInFlight > 0 {
inFlightSem = make(chan struct{}, opts.MaxRequestsInFlight)
}
if opts.Registry != nil {
// Initialize all possibilities that can occur below.
errCnt.WithLabelValues("gathering")
errCnt.WithLabelValues("encoding")
if err := opts.Registry.Register(errCnt); err != nil {
if are, ok := err.(prometheus.AlreadyRegisteredError); ok {
errCnt = are.ExistingCollector.(*prometheus.CounterVec)
} else {
panic(err)
}
}
}
h := http.HandlerFunc(func(rsp http.ResponseWriter, req *http.Request) {
if inFlightSem != nil {
select {
case inFlightSem <- struct{}{}: // All good, carry on.
defer func() { <-inFlightSem }()
default:
http.Error(rsp, fmt.Sprintf(
"Limit of concurrent requests reached (%d), try again later.", opts.MaxRequestsInFlight,
), http.StatusServiceUnavailable)
return
}
}
mfs, err := reg.Gather()
if err != nil {
if opts.ErrorLog != nil {
opts.ErrorLog.Println("error gathering metrics:", err)
}
errCnt.WithLabelValues("gathering").Inc()
switch opts.ErrorHandling {
case PanicOnError:
panic(err)
case ContinueOnError:
if len(mfs) == 0 {
// Still report the error if no metrics have been gathered.
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
case HTTPErrorOnError:
httpError(rsp, err)
return
}
}
var contentType expfmt.Format
if opts.EnableOpenMetrics {
contentType = expfmt.NegotiateIncludingOpenMetrics(req.Header)
} else {
contentType = expfmt.Negotiate(req.Header)
}
header := rsp.Header()
header.Set(contentTypeHeader, string(contentType))
w := io.Writer(rsp)
if !opts.DisableCompression && gzipAccepted(req.Header) {
header.Set(contentEncodingHeader, "gzip")
gz := gzipPool.Get().(*gzip.Writer)
defer gzipPool.Put(gz)
gz.Reset(w)
defer gz.Close()
w = gz
}
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(w, contentType)
// handleError handles the error according to opts.ErrorHandling
// and returns true if we have to abort after the handling.
handleError := func(err error) bool {
if err == nil {
return false
}
if opts.ErrorLog != nil {
opts.ErrorLog.Println("error encoding and sending metric family:", err)
}
errCnt.WithLabelValues("encoding").Inc()
switch opts.ErrorHandling {
case PanicOnError:
panic(err)
case HTTPErrorOnError:
// We cannot really send an HTTP error at this
// point because we most likely have written
// something to rsp already. But at least we can
// stop sending.
return true
}
// Do nothing in all other cases, including ContinueOnError.
return false
}
for _, mf := range mfs {
if handleError(enc.Encode(mf)) {
return
}
}
if closer, ok := enc.(expfmt.Closer); ok {
// This in particular takes care of the final "# EOF\n" line for OpenMetrics.
if handleError(closer.Close()) {
return
}
}
})
if opts.Timeout <= 0 {
return h
}
return http.TimeoutHandler(h, opts.Timeout, fmt.Sprintf(
"Exceeded configured timeout of %v.\n",
opts.Timeout,
))
}
// InstrumentMetricHandler is usually used with an http.Handler returned by the
// HandlerFor function. It instruments the provided http.Handler with two
// metrics: A counter vector "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_total" to count
// scrapes partitioned by HTTP status code, and a gauge
// "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_in_flight" to track the number of
// simultaneous scrapes. This function idempotently registers collectors for
// both metrics with the provided Registerer. It panics if the registration
// fails. The provided metrics are useful to see how many scrapes hit the
// monitored target (which could be from different Prometheus servers or other
// scrapers), and how often they overlap (which would result in more than one
// scrape in flight at the same time). Note that the scrapes-in-flight gauge
// will contain the scrape by which it is exposed, while the scrape counter will
// only get incremented after the scrape is complete (as only then the status
// code is known). For tracking scrape durations, use the
// "scrape_duration_seconds" gauge created by the Prometheus server upon each
// scrape.
func InstrumentMetricHandler(reg prometheus.Registerer, handler http.Handler) http.Handler {
cnt := prometheus.NewCounterVec(
prometheus.CounterOpts{
Name: "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_total",
Help: "Total number of scrapes by HTTP status code.",
},
[]string{"code"},
)
// Initialize the most likely HTTP status codes.
cnt.WithLabelValues("200")
cnt.WithLabelValues("500")
cnt.WithLabelValues("503")
if err := reg.Register(cnt); err != nil {
if are, ok := err.(prometheus.AlreadyRegisteredError); ok {
cnt = are.ExistingCollector.(*prometheus.CounterVec)
} else {
panic(err)
}
}
gge := prometheus.NewGauge(prometheus.GaugeOpts{
Name: "promhttp_metric_handler_requests_in_flight",
Help: "Current number of scrapes being served.",
})
if err := reg.Register(gge); err != nil {
if are, ok := err.(prometheus.AlreadyRegisteredError); ok {
gge = are.ExistingCollector.(prometheus.Gauge)
} else {
panic(err)
}
}
return InstrumentHandlerCounter(cnt, InstrumentHandlerInFlight(gge, handler))
}
// HandlerErrorHandling defines how a Handler serving metrics will handle
// errors.
type HandlerErrorHandling int
// These constants cause handlers serving metrics to behave as described if
// errors are encountered.
const (
// Serve an HTTP status code 500 upon the first error
// encountered. Report the error message in the body. Note that HTTP
// errors cannot be served anymore once the beginning of a regular
// payload has been sent. Thus, in the (unlikely) case that encoding the
// payload into the negotiated wire format fails, serving the response
// will simply be aborted. Set an ErrorLog in HandlerOpts to detect
// those errors.
HTTPErrorOnError HandlerErrorHandling = iota
// Ignore errors and try to serve as many metrics as possible. However,
// if no metrics can be served, serve an HTTP status code 500 and the
// last error message in the body. Only use this in deliberate "best
// effort" metrics collection scenarios. In this case, it is highly
// recommended to provide other means of detecting errors: By setting an
// ErrorLog in HandlerOpts, the errors are logged. By providing a
// Registry in HandlerOpts, the exposed metrics include an error counter
// "promhttp_metric_handler_errors_total", which can be used for
// alerts.
ContinueOnError
// Panic upon the first error encountered (useful for "crash only" apps).
PanicOnError
)
// Logger is the minimal interface HandlerOpts needs for logging. Note that
// log.Logger from the standard library implements this interface, and it is
// easy to implement by custom loggers, if they don't do so already anyway.
type Logger interface {
Println(v ...interface{})
}
// HandlerOpts specifies options how to serve metrics via an http.Handler. The
// zero value of HandlerOpts is a reasonable default.
type HandlerOpts struct {
// ErrorLog specifies an optional Logger for errors collecting and
// serving metrics. If nil, errors are not logged at all. Note that the
// type of a reported error is often prometheus.MultiError, which
// formats into a multi-line error string. If you want to avoid the
// latter, create a Logger implementation that detects a
// prometheus.MultiError and formats the contained errors into one line.
ErrorLog Logger
// ErrorHandling defines how errors are handled. Note that errors are
// logged regardless of the configured ErrorHandling provided ErrorLog
// is not nil.
ErrorHandling HandlerErrorHandling
// If Registry is not nil, it is used to register a metric
// "promhttp_metric_handler_errors_total", partitioned by "cause". A
// failed registration causes a panic. Note that this error counter is
// different from the instrumentation you get from the various
// InstrumentHandler... helpers. It counts errors that don't necessarily
// result in a non-2xx HTTP status code. There are two typical cases:
// (1) Encoding errors that only happen after streaming of the HTTP body
// has already started (and the status code 200 has been sent). This
// should only happen with custom collectors. (2) Collection errors with
// no effect on the HTTP status code because ErrorHandling is set to
// ContinueOnError.
Registry prometheus.Registerer
// If DisableCompression is true, the handler will never compress the
// response, even if requested by the client.
DisableCompression bool
// The number of concurrent HTTP requests is limited to
// MaxRequestsInFlight. Additional requests are responded to with 503
// Service Unavailable and a suitable message in the body. If
// MaxRequestsInFlight is 0 or negative, no limit is applied.
MaxRequestsInFlight int
// If handling a request takes longer than Timeout, it is responded to
// with 503 ServiceUnavailable and a suitable Message. No timeout is
// applied if Timeout is 0 or negative. Note that with the current
// implementation, reaching the timeout simply ends the HTTP requests as
// described above (and even that only if sending of the body hasn't
// started yet), while the bulk work of gathering all the metrics keeps
// running in the background (with the eventual result to be thrown
// away). Until the implementation is improved, it is recommended to
// implement a separate timeout in potentially slow Collectors.
Timeout time.Duration
// If true, the experimental OpenMetrics encoding is added to the
// possible options during content negotiation. Note that Prometheus
// 2.5.0+ will negotiate OpenMetrics as first priority. OpenMetrics is
// the only way to transmit exemplars. However, the move to OpenMetrics
// is not completely transparent. Most notably, the values of "quantile"
// labels of Summaries and "le" labels of Histograms are formatted with
// a trailing ".0" if they would otherwise look like integer numbers
// (which changes the identity of the resulting series on the Prometheus
// server).
EnableOpenMetrics bool
}
// gzipAccepted returns whether the client will accept gzip-encoded content.
func gzipAccepted(header http.Header) bool {
a := header.Get(acceptEncodingHeader)
parts := strings.Split(a, ",")
for _, part := range parts {
part = strings.TrimSpace(part)
if part == "gzip" || strings.HasPrefix(part, "gzip;") {
return true
}
}
return false
}
// httpError removes any content-encoding header and then calls http.Error with
// the provided error and http.StatusInternalServerError. Error contents is
// supposed to be uncompressed plain text. Same as with a plain http.Error, this
// must not be called if the header or any payload has already been sent.
func httpError(rsp http.ResponseWriter, err error) {
rsp.Header().Del(contentEncodingHeader)
http.Error(
rsp,
"An error has occurred while serving metrics:\n\n"+err.Error(),
http.StatusInternalServerError,
)
}

View File

@ -1,219 +0,0 @@
// 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.
package promhttp
import (
"crypto/tls"
"net/http"
"net/http/httptrace"
"time"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
)
// The RoundTripperFunc type is an adapter to allow the use of ordinary
// functions as RoundTrippers. If f is a function with the appropriate
// signature, RountTripperFunc(f) is a RoundTripper that calls f.
type RoundTripperFunc func(req *http.Request) (*http.Response, error)
// RoundTrip implements the RoundTripper interface.
func (rt RoundTripperFunc) RoundTrip(r *http.Request) (*http.Response, error) {
return rt(r)
}
// InstrumentRoundTripperInFlight is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.RoundTripper. It sets the provided prometheus.Gauge to the number of
// requests currently handled by the wrapped http.RoundTripper.
//
// See the example for ExampleInstrumentRoundTripperDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentRoundTripperInFlight(gauge prometheus.Gauge, next http.RoundTripper) RoundTripperFunc {
return RoundTripperFunc(func(r *http.Request) (*http.Response, error) {
gauge.Inc()
defer gauge.Dec()
return next.RoundTrip(r)
})
}
// InstrumentRoundTripperCounter is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.RoundTripper to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec.
// The CounterVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. Partitioning of the CounterVec happens by HTTP status code
// and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in the
// CounterVec. For unpartitioned counting, use a CounterVec with zero labels.
//
// If the wrapped RoundTripper panics or returns a non-nil error, the Counter
// is not incremented.
//
// See the example for ExampleInstrumentRoundTripperDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentRoundTripperCounter(counter *prometheus.CounterVec, next http.RoundTripper) RoundTripperFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(counter)
return RoundTripperFunc(func(r *http.Request) (*http.Response, error) {
resp, err := next.RoundTrip(r)
if err == nil {
counter.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, resp.StatusCode)).Inc()
}
return resp, err
})
}
// InstrumentRoundTripperDuration is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.RoundTripper to observe the request duration with the provided
// ObserverVec. The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const
// non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names are "code" and
// "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer
// in the ObserverVec is called with the request duration in
// seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped RoundTripper panics or returns a non-nil error, no values are
// reported.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
func InstrumentRoundTripperDuration(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.RoundTripper) RoundTripperFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
return RoundTripperFunc(func(r *http.Request) (*http.Response, error) {
start := time.Now()
resp, err := next.RoundTrip(r)
if err == nil {
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, resp.StatusCode)).Observe(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
return resp, err
})
}
// InstrumentTrace is used to offer flexibility in instrumenting the available
// httptrace.ClientTrace hook functions. Each function is passed a float64
// representing the time in seconds since the start of the http request. A user
// may choose to use separately buckets Histograms, or implement custom
// instance labels on a per function basis.
type InstrumentTrace struct {
GotConn func(float64)
PutIdleConn func(float64)
GotFirstResponseByte func(float64)
Got100Continue func(float64)
DNSStart func(float64)
DNSDone func(float64)
ConnectStart func(float64)
ConnectDone func(float64)
TLSHandshakeStart func(float64)
TLSHandshakeDone func(float64)
WroteHeaders func(float64)
Wait100Continue func(float64)
WroteRequest func(float64)
}
// InstrumentRoundTripperTrace is a middleware that wraps the provided
// RoundTripper and reports times to hook functions provided in the
// InstrumentTrace struct. Hook functions that are not present in the provided
// InstrumentTrace struct are ignored. Times reported to the hook functions are
// time since the start of the request. Only with Go1.9+, those times are
// guaranteed to never be negative. (Earlier Go versions are not using a
// monotonic clock.) Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and
// should be used judiciously.
//
// For hook functions that receive an error as an argument, no observations are
// made in the event of a non-nil error value.
//
// See the example for ExampleInstrumentRoundTripperDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentRoundTripperTrace(it *InstrumentTrace, next http.RoundTripper) RoundTripperFunc {
return RoundTripperFunc(func(r *http.Request) (*http.Response, error) {
start := time.Now()
trace := &httptrace.ClientTrace{
GotConn: func(_ httptrace.GotConnInfo) {
if it.GotConn != nil {
it.GotConn(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
PutIdleConn: func(err error) {
if err != nil {
return
}
if it.PutIdleConn != nil {
it.PutIdleConn(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
DNSStart: func(_ httptrace.DNSStartInfo) {
if it.DNSStart != nil {
it.DNSStart(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
DNSDone: func(_ httptrace.DNSDoneInfo) {
if it.DNSDone != nil {
it.DNSDone(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
ConnectStart: func(_, _ string) {
if it.ConnectStart != nil {
it.ConnectStart(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
ConnectDone: func(_, _ string, err error) {
if err != nil {
return
}
if it.ConnectDone != nil {
it.ConnectDone(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
GotFirstResponseByte: func() {
if it.GotFirstResponseByte != nil {
it.GotFirstResponseByte(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
Got100Continue: func() {
if it.Got100Continue != nil {
it.Got100Continue(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
TLSHandshakeStart: func() {
if it.TLSHandshakeStart != nil {
it.TLSHandshakeStart(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
TLSHandshakeDone: func(_ tls.ConnectionState, err error) {
if err != nil {
return
}
if it.TLSHandshakeDone != nil {
it.TLSHandshakeDone(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
WroteHeaders: func() {
if it.WroteHeaders != nil {
it.WroteHeaders(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
Wait100Continue: func() {
if it.Wait100Continue != nil {
it.Wait100Continue(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
WroteRequest: func(_ httptrace.WroteRequestInfo) {
if it.WroteRequest != nil {
it.WroteRequest(time.Since(start).Seconds())
}
},
}
r = r.WithContext(httptrace.WithClientTrace(r.Context(), trace))
return next.RoundTrip(r)
})
}

View File

@ -1,458 +0,0 @@
// 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.
package promhttp
import (
"errors"
"net/http"
"strconv"
"strings"
"time"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
)
// magicString is used for the hacky label test in checkLabels. Remove once fixed.
const magicString = "zZgWfBxLqvG8kc8IMv3POi2Bb0tZI3vAnBx+gBaFi9FyPzB/CzKUer1yufDa"
// InstrumentHandlerInFlight is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler. It sets the provided prometheus.Gauge to the number of
// requests currently handled by the wrapped http.Handler.
//
// See the example for InstrumentHandlerDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentHandlerInFlight(g prometheus.Gauge, next http.Handler) http.Handler {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
g.Inc()
defer g.Dec()
next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
})
}
// InstrumentHandlerDuration is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request duration with the provided ObserverVec.
// The ObserverVec must have valid metric and label names and must have zero,
// one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe
// method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request duration
// in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if
// the respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics, no values are reported.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
func InstrumentHandlerDuration(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
if code {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
now := time.Now()
d := newDelegator(w, nil)
next.ServeHTTP(d, r)
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, d.Status())).Observe(time.Since(now).Seconds())
})
}
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
now := time.Now()
next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, 0)).Observe(time.Since(now).Seconds())
})
}
// InstrumentHandlerCounter is a middleware that wraps the provided http.Handler
// to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec. The CounterVec
// must have valid metric and label names and must have zero, one, or two
// non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names are
// "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. Partitioning of the
// CounterVec happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the respective
// instance label names are present in the CounterVec. For unpartitioned
// counting, use a CounterVec with zero labels.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics, the Counter is not incremented.
//
// See the example for InstrumentHandlerDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentHandlerCounter(counter *prometheus.CounterVec, next http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(counter)
if code {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
d := newDelegator(w, nil)
next.ServeHTTP(d, r)
counter.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, d.Status())).Inc()
})
}
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
counter.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, 0)).Inc()
})
}
// InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe with the provided ObserverVec the request duration
// until the response headers are written. The ObserverVec must have valid
// metric and label names and must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried
// labels. For those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The
// function panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the
// ObserverVec is called with the request duration in seconds. Partitioning
// happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance
// label names are present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations,
// use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
// expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics before calling WriteHeader, no value is
// reported.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
//
// See the example for InstrumentHandlerDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
now := time.Now()
d := newDelegator(w, func(status int) {
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, status)).Observe(time.Since(now).Seconds())
})
next.ServeHTTP(d, r)
})
}
// InstrumentHandlerRequestSize is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have valid metric and label names and must have zero, one,
// or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names
// are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of
// the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request size in
// bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics, no values are reported.
//
// See the example for InstrumentHandlerDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentHandlerRequestSize(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) http.HandlerFunc {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
if code {
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
d := newDelegator(w, nil)
next.ServeHTTP(d, r)
size := computeApproximateRequestSize(r)
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, d.Status())).Observe(float64(size))
})
}
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
next.ServeHTTP(w, r)
size := computeApproximateRequestSize(r)
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, 0)).Observe(float64(size))
})
}
// InstrumentHandlerResponseSize is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the response size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have valid metric and label names and must have zero, one,
// or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names
// are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of
// the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the response size in
// bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics, no values are reported.
//
// See the example for InstrumentHandlerDuration for example usage.
func InstrumentHandlerResponseSize(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) http.Handler {
code, method := checkLabels(obs)
return http.HandlerFunc(func(w http.ResponseWriter, r *http.Request) {
d := newDelegator(w, nil)
next.ServeHTTP(d, r)
obs.With(labels(code, method, r.Method, d.Status())).Observe(float64(d.Written()))
})
}
// checkLabels returns whether the provided Collector has a non-const,
// non-curried label named "code" and/or "method". It panics if the provided
// Collector does not have a Desc or has more than one Desc or its Desc is
// invalid. It also panics if the Collector has any non-const, non-curried
// labels that are not named "code" or "method".
func checkLabels(c prometheus.Collector) (code bool, method bool) {
// TODO(beorn7): Remove this hacky way to check for instance labels
// once Descriptors can have their dimensionality queried.
var (
desc *prometheus.Desc
m prometheus.Metric
pm dto.Metric
lvs []string
)
// Get the Desc from the Collector.
descc := make(chan *prometheus.Desc, 1)
c.Describe(descc)
select {
case desc = <-descc:
default:
panic("no description provided by collector")
}
select {
case <-descc:
panic("more than one description provided by collector")
default:
}
close(descc)
// Make sure the Collector has a valid Desc by registering it with a
// temporary registry.
prometheus.NewRegistry().MustRegister(c)
// Create a ConstMetric with the Desc. Since we don't know how many
// variable labels there are, try for as long as it needs.
for err := errors.New("dummy"); err != nil; lvs = append(lvs, magicString) {
m, err = prometheus.NewConstMetric(desc, prometheus.UntypedValue, 0, lvs...)
}
// Write out the metric into a proto message and look at the labels.
// If the value is not the magicString, it is a constLabel, which doesn't interest us.
// If the label is curried, it doesn't interest us.
// In all other cases, only "code" or "method" is allowed.
if err := m.Write(&pm); err != nil {
panic("error checking metric for labels")
}
for _, label := range pm.Label {
name, value := label.GetName(), label.GetValue()
if value != magicString || isLabelCurried(c, name) {
continue
}
switch name {
case "code":
code = true
case "method":
method = true
default:
panic("metric partitioned with non-supported labels")
}
}
return
}
func isLabelCurried(c prometheus.Collector, label string) bool {
// This is even hackier than the label test above.
// We essentially try to curry again and see if it works.
// But for that, we need to type-convert to the two
// types we use here, ObserverVec or *CounterVec.
switch v := c.(type) {
case *prometheus.CounterVec:
if _, err := v.CurryWith(prometheus.Labels{label: "dummy"}); err == nil {
return false
}
case prometheus.ObserverVec:
if _, err := v.CurryWith(prometheus.Labels{label: "dummy"}); err == nil {
return false
}
default:
panic("unsupported metric vec type")
}
return true
}
// emptyLabels is a one-time allocation for non-partitioned metrics to avoid
// unnecessary allocations on each request.
var emptyLabels = prometheus.Labels{}
func labels(code, method bool, reqMethod string, status int) prometheus.Labels {
if !(code || method) {
return emptyLabels
}
labels := prometheus.Labels{}
if code {
labels["code"] = sanitizeCode(status)
}
if method {
labels["method"] = sanitizeMethod(reqMethod)
}
return labels
}
func computeApproximateRequestSize(r *http.Request) int {
s := 0
if r.URL != nil {
s += len(r.URL.String())
}
s += len(r.Method)
s += len(r.Proto)
for name, values := range r.Header {
s += len(name)
for _, value := range values {
s += len(value)
}
}
s += len(r.Host)
// N.B. r.Form and r.MultipartForm are assumed to be included in r.URL.
if r.ContentLength != -1 {
s += int(r.ContentLength)
}
return s
}
func sanitizeMethod(m string) string {
switch m {
case "GET", "get":
return "get"
case "PUT", "put":
return "put"
case "HEAD", "head":
return "head"
case "POST", "post":
return "post"
case "DELETE", "delete":
return "delete"
case "CONNECT", "connect":
return "connect"
case "OPTIONS", "options":
return "options"
case "NOTIFY", "notify":
return "notify"
default:
return strings.ToLower(m)
}
}
// If the wrapped http.Handler has not set a status code, i.e. the value is
// currently 0, santizeCode will return 200, for consistency with behavior in
// the stdlib.
func sanitizeCode(s int) string {
switch s {
case 100:
return "100"
case 101:
return "101"
case 200, 0:
return "200"
case 201:
return "201"
case 202:
return "202"
case 203:
return "203"
case 204:
return "204"
case 205:
return "205"
case 206:
return "206"
case 300:
return "300"
case 301:
return "301"
case 302:
return "302"
case 304:
return "304"
case 305:
return "305"
case 307:
return "307"
case 400:
return "400"
case 401:
return "401"
case 402:
return "402"
case 403:
return "403"
case 404:
return "404"
case 405:
return "405"
case 406:
return "406"
case 407:
return "407"
case 408:
return "408"
case 409:
return "409"
case 410:
return "410"
case 411:
return "411"
case 412:
return "412"
case 413:
return "413"
case 414:
return "414"
case 415:
return "415"
case 416:
return "416"
case 417:
return "417"
case 418:
return "418"
case 500:
return "500"
case 501:
return "501"
case 502:
return "502"
case 503:
return "503"
case 504:
return "504"
case 505:
return "505"
case 428:
return "428"
case 429:
return "429"
case 431:
return "431"
case 511:
return "511"
default:
return strconv.Itoa(s)
}
}

View File

@ -1,950 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"path/filepath"
"runtime"
"sort"
"strings"
"sync"
"unicode/utf8"
"github.com/cespare/xxhash/v2"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal"
)
const (
// Capacity for the channel to collect metrics and descriptors.
capMetricChan = 1000
capDescChan = 10
)
// DefaultRegisterer and DefaultGatherer are the implementations of the
// Registerer and Gatherer interface a number of convenience functions in this
// package act on. Initially, both variables point to the same Registry, which
// has a process collector (currently on Linux only, see NewProcessCollector)
// and a Go collector (see NewGoCollector, in particular the note about
// stop-the-world implication with Go versions older than 1.9) already
// registered. This approach to keep default instances as global state mirrors
// the approach of other packages in the Go standard library. Note that there
// are caveats. Change the variables with caution and only if you understand the
// consequences. Users who want to avoid global state altogether should not use
// the convenience functions and act on custom instances instead.
var (
defaultRegistry = NewRegistry()
DefaultRegisterer Registerer = defaultRegistry
DefaultGatherer Gatherer = defaultRegistry
)
func init() {
MustRegister(NewProcessCollector(ProcessCollectorOpts{}))
MustRegister(NewGoCollector())
}
// NewRegistry creates a new vanilla Registry without any Collectors
// pre-registered.
func NewRegistry() *Registry {
return &Registry{
collectorsByID: map[uint64]Collector{},
descIDs: map[uint64]struct{}{},
dimHashesByName: map[string]uint64{},
}
}
// NewPedanticRegistry returns a registry that checks during collection if each
// collected Metric is consistent with its reported Desc, and if the Desc has
// actually been registered with the registry. Unchecked Collectors (those whose
// Describe method does not yield any descriptors) are excluded from the check.
//
// Usually, a Registry will be happy as long as the union of all collected
// Metrics is consistent and valid even if some metrics are not consistent with
// their own Desc or a Desc provided by their registered Collector. Well-behaved
// Collectors and Metrics will only provide consistent Descs. This Registry is
// useful to test the implementation of Collectors and Metrics.
func NewPedanticRegistry() *Registry {
r := NewRegistry()
r.pedanticChecksEnabled = true
return r
}
// Registerer is the interface for the part of a registry in charge of
// registering and unregistering. Users of custom registries should use
// Registerer as type for registration purposes (rather than the Registry type
// directly). In that way, they are free to use custom Registerer implementation
// (e.g. for testing purposes).
type Registerer interface {
// Register registers a new Collector to be included in metrics
// collection. It returns an error if the descriptors provided by the
// Collector are invalid or if they — in combination with descriptors of
// already registered Collectors — do not fulfill the consistency and
// uniqueness criteria described in the documentation of metric.Desc.
//
// If the provided Collector is equal to a Collector already registered
// (which includes the case of re-registering the same Collector), the
// returned error is an instance of AlreadyRegisteredError, which
// contains the previously registered Collector.
//
// A Collector whose Describe method does not yield any Desc is treated
// as unchecked. Registration will always succeed. No check for
// re-registering (see previous paragraph) is performed. Thus, the
// caller is responsible for not double-registering the same unchecked
// Collector, and for providing a Collector that will not cause
// inconsistent metrics on collection. (This would lead to scrape
// errors.)
Register(Collector) error
// MustRegister works like Register but registers any number of
// Collectors and panics upon the first registration that causes an
// error.
MustRegister(...Collector)
// Unregister unregisters the Collector that equals the Collector passed
// in as an argument. (Two Collectors are considered equal if their
// Describe method yields the same set of descriptors.) The function
// returns whether a Collector was unregistered. Note that an unchecked
// Collector cannot be unregistered (as its Describe method does not
// yield any descriptor).
//
// Note that even after unregistering, it will not be possible to
// register a new Collector that is inconsistent with the unregistered
// Collector, e.g. a Collector collecting metrics with the same name but
// a different help string. The rationale here is that the same registry
// instance must only collect consistent metrics throughout its
// lifetime.
Unregister(Collector) bool
}
// Gatherer is the interface for the part of a registry in charge of gathering
// the collected metrics into a number of MetricFamilies. The Gatherer interface
// comes with the same general implication as described for the Registerer
// interface.
type Gatherer interface {
// Gather calls the Collect method of the registered Collectors and then
// gathers the collected metrics into a lexicographically sorted slice
// of uniquely named MetricFamily protobufs. Gather ensures that the
// returned slice is valid and self-consistent so that it can be used
// for valid exposition. As an exception to the strict consistency
// requirements described for metric.Desc, Gather will tolerate
// different sets of label names for metrics of the same metric family.
//
// Even if an error occurs, Gather attempts to gather as many metrics as
// possible. Hence, if a non-nil error is returned, the returned
// MetricFamily slice could be nil (in case of a fatal error that
// prevented any meaningful metric collection) or contain a number of
// MetricFamily protobufs, some of which might be incomplete, and some
// might be missing altogether. The returned error (which might be a
// MultiError) explains the details. Note that this is mostly useful for
// debugging purposes. If the gathered protobufs are to be used for
// exposition in actual monitoring, it is almost always better to not
// expose an incomplete result and instead disregard the returned
// MetricFamily protobufs in case the returned error is non-nil.
Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error)
}
// Register registers the provided Collector with the DefaultRegisterer.
//
// Register is a shortcut for DefaultRegisterer.Register(c). See there for more
// details.
func Register(c Collector) error {
return DefaultRegisterer.Register(c)
}
// MustRegister registers the provided Collectors with the DefaultRegisterer and
// panics if any error occurs.
//
// MustRegister is a shortcut for DefaultRegisterer.MustRegister(cs...). See
// there for more details.
func MustRegister(cs ...Collector) {
DefaultRegisterer.MustRegister(cs...)
}
// Unregister removes the registration of the provided Collector from the
// DefaultRegisterer.
//
// Unregister is a shortcut for DefaultRegisterer.Unregister(c). See there for
// more details.
func Unregister(c Collector) bool {
return DefaultRegisterer.Unregister(c)
}
// GathererFunc turns a function into a Gatherer.
type GathererFunc func() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error)
// Gather implements Gatherer.
func (gf GathererFunc) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
return gf()
}
// AlreadyRegisteredError is returned by the Register method if the Collector to
// be registered has already been registered before, or a different Collector
// that collects the same metrics has been registered before. Registration fails
// in that case, but you can detect from the kind of error what has
// happened. The error contains fields for the existing Collector and the
// (rejected) new Collector that equals the existing one. This can be used to
// find out if an equal Collector has been registered before and switch over to
// using the old one, as demonstrated in the example.
type AlreadyRegisteredError struct {
ExistingCollector, NewCollector Collector
}
func (err AlreadyRegisteredError) Error() string {
return "duplicate metrics collector registration attempted"
}
// MultiError is a slice of errors implementing the error interface. It is used
// by a Gatherer to report multiple errors during MetricFamily gathering.
type MultiError []error
// Error formats the contained errors as a bullet point list, preceded by the
// total number of errors. Note that this results in a multi-line string.
func (errs MultiError) Error() string {
if len(errs) == 0 {
return ""
}
buf := &bytes.Buffer{}
fmt.Fprintf(buf, "%d error(s) occurred:", len(errs))
for _, err := range errs {
fmt.Fprintf(buf, "\n* %s", err)
}
return buf.String()
}
// Append appends the provided error if it is not nil.
func (errs *MultiError) Append(err error) {
if err != nil {
*errs = append(*errs, err)
}
}
// MaybeUnwrap returns nil if len(errs) is 0. It returns the first and only
// contained error as error if len(errs is 1). In all other cases, it returns
// the MultiError directly. This is helpful for returning a MultiError in a way
// that only uses the MultiError if needed.
func (errs MultiError) MaybeUnwrap() error {
switch len(errs) {
case 0:
return nil
case 1:
return errs[0]
default:
return errs
}
}
// Registry registers Prometheus collectors, collects their metrics, and gathers
// them into MetricFamilies for exposition. It implements both Registerer and
// Gatherer. The zero value is not usable. Create instances with NewRegistry or
// NewPedanticRegistry.
type Registry struct {
mtx sync.RWMutex
collectorsByID map[uint64]Collector // ID is a hash of the descIDs.
descIDs map[uint64]struct{}
dimHashesByName map[string]uint64
uncheckedCollectors []Collector
pedanticChecksEnabled bool
}
// Register implements Registerer.
func (r *Registry) Register(c Collector) error {
var (
descChan = make(chan *Desc, capDescChan)
newDescIDs = map[uint64]struct{}{}
newDimHashesByName = map[string]uint64{}
collectorID uint64 // All desc IDs XOR'd together.
duplicateDescErr error
)
go func() {
c.Describe(descChan)
close(descChan)
}()
r.mtx.Lock()
defer func() {
// Drain channel in case of premature return to not leak a goroutine.
for range descChan {
}
r.mtx.Unlock()
}()
// Conduct various tests...
for desc := range descChan {
// Is the descriptor valid at all?
if desc.err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("descriptor %s is invalid: %s", desc, desc.err)
}
// Is the descID unique?
// (In other words: Is the fqName + constLabel combination unique?)
if _, exists := r.descIDs[desc.id]; exists {
duplicateDescErr = fmt.Errorf("descriptor %s already exists with the same fully-qualified name and const label values", desc)
}
// If it is not a duplicate desc in this collector, XOR it to
// the collectorID. (We allow duplicate descs within the same
// collector, but their existence must be a no-op.)
if _, exists := newDescIDs[desc.id]; !exists {
newDescIDs[desc.id] = struct{}{}
collectorID ^= desc.id
}
// Are all the label names and the help string consistent with
// previous descriptors of the same name?
// First check existing descriptors...
if dimHash, exists := r.dimHashesByName[desc.fqName]; exists {
if dimHash != desc.dimHash {
return fmt.Errorf("a previously registered descriptor with the same fully-qualified name as %s has different label names or a different help string", desc)
}
} else {
// ...then check the new descriptors already seen.
if dimHash, exists := newDimHashesByName[desc.fqName]; exists {
if dimHash != desc.dimHash {
return fmt.Errorf("descriptors reported by collector have inconsistent label names or help strings for the same fully-qualified name, offender is %s", desc)
}
} else {
newDimHashesByName[desc.fqName] = desc.dimHash
}
}
}
// A Collector yielding no Desc at all is considered unchecked.
if len(newDescIDs) == 0 {
r.uncheckedCollectors = append(r.uncheckedCollectors, c)
return nil
}
if existing, exists := r.collectorsByID[collectorID]; exists {
switch e := existing.(type) {
case *wrappingCollector:
return AlreadyRegisteredError{
ExistingCollector: e.unwrapRecursively(),
NewCollector: c,
}
default:
return AlreadyRegisteredError{
ExistingCollector: e,
NewCollector: c,
}
}
}
// If the collectorID is new, but at least one of the descs existed
// before, we are in trouble.
if duplicateDescErr != nil {
return duplicateDescErr
}
// Only after all tests have passed, actually register.
r.collectorsByID[collectorID] = c
for hash := range newDescIDs {
r.descIDs[hash] = struct{}{}
}
for name, dimHash := range newDimHashesByName {
r.dimHashesByName[name] = dimHash
}
return nil
}
// Unregister implements Registerer.
func (r *Registry) Unregister(c Collector) bool {
var (
descChan = make(chan *Desc, capDescChan)
descIDs = map[uint64]struct{}{}
collectorID uint64 // All desc IDs XOR'd together.
)
go func() {
c.Describe(descChan)
close(descChan)
}()
for desc := range descChan {
if _, exists := descIDs[desc.id]; !exists {
collectorID ^= desc.id
descIDs[desc.id] = struct{}{}
}
}
r.mtx.RLock()
if _, exists := r.collectorsByID[collectorID]; !exists {
r.mtx.RUnlock()
return false
}
r.mtx.RUnlock()
r.mtx.Lock()
defer r.mtx.Unlock()
delete(r.collectorsByID, collectorID)
for id := range descIDs {
delete(r.descIDs, id)
}
// dimHashesByName is left untouched as those must be consistent
// throughout the lifetime of a program.
return true
}
// MustRegister implements Registerer.
func (r *Registry) MustRegister(cs ...Collector) {
for _, c := range cs {
if err := r.Register(c); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
}
// Gather implements Gatherer.
func (r *Registry) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
var (
checkedMetricChan = make(chan Metric, capMetricChan)
uncheckedMetricChan = make(chan Metric, capMetricChan)
metricHashes = map[uint64]struct{}{}
wg sync.WaitGroup
errs MultiError // The collected errors to return in the end.
registeredDescIDs map[uint64]struct{} // Only used for pedantic checks
)
r.mtx.RLock()
goroutineBudget := len(r.collectorsByID) + len(r.uncheckedCollectors)
metricFamiliesByName := make(map[string]*dto.MetricFamily, len(r.dimHashesByName))
checkedCollectors := make(chan Collector, len(r.collectorsByID))
uncheckedCollectors := make(chan Collector, len(r.uncheckedCollectors))
for _, collector := range r.collectorsByID {
checkedCollectors <- collector
}
for _, collector := range r.uncheckedCollectors {
uncheckedCollectors <- collector
}
// In case pedantic checks are enabled, we have to copy the map before
// giving up the RLock.
if r.pedanticChecksEnabled {
registeredDescIDs = make(map[uint64]struct{}, len(r.descIDs))
for id := range r.descIDs {
registeredDescIDs[id] = struct{}{}
}
}
r.mtx.RUnlock()
wg.Add(goroutineBudget)
collectWorker := func() {
for {
select {
case collector := <-checkedCollectors:
collector.Collect(checkedMetricChan)
case collector := <-uncheckedCollectors:
collector.Collect(uncheckedMetricChan)
default:
return
}
wg.Done()
}
}
// Start the first worker now to make sure at least one is running.
go collectWorker()
goroutineBudget--
// Close checkedMetricChan and uncheckedMetricChan once all collectors
// are collected.
go func() {
wg.Wait()
close(checkedMetricChan)
close(uncheckedMetricChan)
}()
// Drain checkedMetricChan and uncheckedMetricChan in case of premature return.
defer func() {
if checkedMetricChan != nil {
for range checkedMetricChan {
}
}
if uncheckedMetricChan != nil {
for range uncheckedMetricChan {
}
}
}()
// Copy the channel references so we can nil them out later to remove
// them from the select statements below.
cmc := checkedMetricChan
umc := uncheckedMetricChan
for {
select {
case metric, ok := <-cmc:
if !ok {
cmc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
registeredDescIDs,
))
case metric, ok := <-umc:
if !ok {
umc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
nil,
))
default:
if goroutineBudget <= 0 || len(checkedCollectors)+len(uncheckedCollectors) == 0 {
// All collectors are already being worked on or
// we have already as many goroutines started as
// there are collectors. Do the same as above,
// just without the default.
select {
case metric, ok := <-cmc:
if !ok {
cmc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
registeredDescIDs,
))
case metric, ok := <-umc:
if !ok {
umc = nil
break
}
errs.Append(processMetric(
metric, metricFamiliesByName,
metricHashes,
nil,
))
}
break
}
// Start more workers.
go collectWorker()
goroutineBudget--
runtime.Gosched()
}
// Once both checkedMetricChan and uncheckdMetricChan are closed
// and drained, the contraption above will nil out cmc and umc,
// and then we can leave the collect loop here.
if cmc == nil && umc == nil {
break
}
}
return internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName), errs.MaybeUnwrap()
}
// WriteToTextfile calls Gather on the provided Gatherer, encodes the result in the
// Prometheus text format, and writes it to a temporary file. Upon success, the
// temporary file is renamed to the provided filename.
//
// This is intended for use with the textfile collector of the node exporter.
// Note that the node exporter expects the filename to be suffixed with ".prom".
func WriteToTextfile(filename string, g Gatherer) error {
tmp, err := ioutil.TempFile(filepath.Dir(filename), filepath.Base(filename))
if err != nil {
return err
}
defer os.Remove(tmp.Name())
mfs, err := g.Gather()
if err != nil {
return err
}
for _, mf := range mfs {
if _, err := expfmt.MetricFamilyToText(tmp, mf); err != nil {
return err
}
}
if err := tmp.Close(); err != nil {
return err
}
if err := os.Chmod(tmp.Name(), 0644); err != nil {
return err
}
return os.Rename(tmp.Name(), filename)
}
// processMetric is an internal helper method only used by the Gather method.
func processMetric(
metric Metric,
metricFamiliesByName map[string]*dto.MetricFamily,
metricHashes map[uint64]struct{},
registeredDescIDs map[uint64]struct{},
) error {
desc := metric.Desc()
// Wrapped metrics collected by an unchecked Collector can have an
// invalid Desc.
if desc.err != nil {
return desc.err
}
dtoMetric := &dto.Metric{}
if err := metric.Write(dtoMetric); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("error collecting metric %v: %s", desc, err)
}
metricFamily, ok := metricFamiliesByName[desc.fqName]
if ok { // Existing name.
if metricFamily.GetHelp() != desc.help {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s has help %q but should have %q",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric, desc.help, metricFamily.GetHelp(),
)
}
// TODO(beorn7): Simplify switch once Desc has type.
switch metricFamily.GetType() {
case dto.MetricType_COUNTER:
if dtoMetric.Counter == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Counter",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_GAUGE:
if dtoMetric.Gauge == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Gauge",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_SUMMARY:
if dtoMetric.Summary == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Summary",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_UNTYPED:
if dtoMetric.Untyped == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be Untyped",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM:
if dtoMetric.Histogram == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s should be a Histogram",
desc.fqName, dtoMetric,
)
}
default:
panic("encountered MetricFamily with invalid type")
}
} else { // New name.
metricFamily = &dto.MetricFamily{}
metricFamily.Name = proto.String(desc.fqName)
metricFamily.Help = proto.String(desc.help)
// TODO(beorn7): Simplify switch once Desc has type.
switch {
case dtoMetric.Gauge != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_GAUGE.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Counter != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_COUNTER.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Summary != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_SUMMARY.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Untyped != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_UNTYPED.Enum()
case dtoMetric.Histogram != nil:
metricFamily.Type = dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM.Enum()
default:
return fmt.Errorf("empty metric collected: %s", dtoMetric)
}
if err := checkSuffixCollisions(metricFamily, metricFamiliesByName); err != nil {
return err
}
metricFamiliesByName[desc.fqName] = metricFamily
}
if err := checkMetricConsistency(metricFamily, dtoMetric, metricHashes); err != nil {
return err
}
if registeredDescIDs != nil {
// Is the desc registered at all?
if _, exist := registeredDescIDs[desc.id]; !exist {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s with unregistered descriptor %s",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, desc,
)
}
if err := checkDescConsistency(metricFamily, dtoMetric, desc); err != nil {
return err
}
}
metricFamily.Metric = append(metricFamily.Metric, dtoMetric)
return nil
}
// Gatherers is a slice of Gatherer instances that implements the Gatherer
// interface itself. Its Gather method calls Gather on all Gatherers in the
// slice in order and returns the merged results. Errors returned from the
// Gather calls are all returned in a flattened MultiError. Duplicate and
// inconsistent Metrics are skipped (first occurrence in slice order wins) and
// reported in the returned error.
//
// Gatherers can be used to merge the Gather results from multiple
// Registries. It also provides a way to directly inject existing MetricFamily
// protobufs into the gathering by creating a custom Gatherer with a Gather
// method that simply returns the existing MetricFamily protobufs. Note that no
// registration is involved (in contrast to Collector registration), so
// obviously registration-time checks cannot happen. Any inconsistencies between
// the gathered MetricFamilies are reported as errors by the Gather method, and
// inconsistent Metrics are dropped. Invalid parts of the MetricFamilies
// (e.g. syntactically invalid metric or label names) will go undetected.
type Gatherers []Gatherer
// Gather implements Gatherer.
func (gs Gatherers) Gather() ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
var (
metricFamiliesByName = map[string]*dto.MetricFamily{}
metricHashes = map[uint64]struct{}{}
errs MultiError // The collected errors to return in the end.
)
for i, g := range gs {
mfs, err := g.Gather()
if err != nil {
if multiErr, ok := err.(MultiError); ok {
for _, err := range multiErr {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf("[from Gatherer #%d] %s", i+1, err))
}
} else {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf("[from Gatherer #%d] %s", i+1, err))
}
}
for _, mf := range mfs {
existingMF, exists := metricFamiliesByName[mf.GetName()]
if exists {
if existingMF.GetHelp() != mf.GetHelp() {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"gathered metric family %s has help %q but should have %q",
mf.GetName(), mf.GetHelp(), existingMF.GetHelp(),
))
continue
}
if existingMF.GetType() != mf.GetType() {
errs = append(errs, fmt.Errorf(
"gathered metric family %s has type %s but should have %s",
mf.GetName(), mf.GetType(), existingMF.GetType(),
))
continue
}
} else {
existingMF = &dto.MetricFamily{}
existingMF.Name = mf.Name
existingMF.Help = mf.Help
existingMF.Type = mf.Type
if err := checkSuffixCollisions(existingMF, metricFamiliesByName); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
continue
}
metricFamiliesByName[mf.GetName()] = existingMF
}
for _, m := range mf.Metric {
if err := checkMetricConsistency(existingMF, m, metricHashes); err != nil {
errs = append(errs, err)
continue
}
existingMF.Metric = append(existingMF.Metric, m)
}
}
}
return internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(metricFamiliesByName), errs.MaybeUnwrap()
}
// checkSuffixCollisions checks for collisions with the “magic” suffixes the
// Prometheus text format and the internal metric representation of the
// Prometheus server add while flattening Summaries and Histograms.
func checkSuffixCollisions(mf *dto.MetricFamily, mfs map[string]*dto.MetricFamily) error {
var (
newName = mf.GetName()
newType = mf.GetType()
newNameWithoutSuffix = ""
)
switch {
case strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_count"):
newNameWithoutSuffix = newName[:len(newName)-6]
case strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_sum"):
newNameWithoutSuffix = newName[:len(newName)-4]
case strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_bucket"):
newNameWithoutSuffix = newName[:len(newName)-7]
}
if newNameWithoutSuffix != "" {
if existingMF, ok := mfs[newNameWithoutSuffix]; ok {
switch existingMF.GetType() {
case dto.MetricType_SUMMARY:
if !strings.HasSuffix(newName, "_bucket") {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric named %q collides with previously collected summary named %q",
newName, newNameWithoutSuffix,
)
}
case dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM:
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric named %q collides with previously collected histogram named %q",
newName, newNameWithoutSuffix,
)
}
}
}
if newType == dto.MetricType_SUMMARY || newType == dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM {
if _, ok := mfs[newName+"_count"]; ok {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected histogram or summary named %q collides with previously collected metric named %q",
newName, newName+"_count",
)
}
if _, ok := mfs[newName+"_sum"]; ok {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected histogram or summary named %q collides with previously collected metric named %q",
newName, newName+"_sum",
)
}
}
if newType == dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM {
if _, ok := mfs[newName+"_bucket"]; ok {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected histogram named %q collides with previously collected metric named %q",
newName, newName+"_bucket",
)
}
}
return nil
}
// checkMetricConsistency checks if the provided Metric is consistent with the
// provided MetricFamily. It also hashes the Metric labels and the MetricFamily
// name. If the resulting hash is already in the provided metricHashes, an error
// is returned. If not, it is added to metricHashes.
func checkMetricConsistency(
metricFamily *dto.MetricFamily,
dtoMetric *dto.Metric,
metricHashes map[uint64]struct{},
) error {
name := metricFamily.GetName()
// Type consistency with metric family.
if metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_GAUGE && dtoMetric.Gauge == nil ||
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_COUNTER && dtoMetric.Counter == nil ||
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_SUMMARY && dtoMetric.Summary == nil ||
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_HISTOGRAM && dtoMetric.Histogram == nil ||
metricFamily.GetType() == dto.MetricType_UNTYPED && dtoMetric.Untyped == nil {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} is not a %s",
name, dtoMetric, metricFamily.GetType(),
)
}
previousLabelName := ""
for _, labelPair := range dtoMetric.GetLabel() {
labelName := labelPair.GetName()
if labelName == previousLabelName {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} has two or more labels with the same name: %s",
name, dtoMetric, labelName,
)
}
if !checkLabelName(labelName) {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} has a label with an invalid name: %s",
name, dtoMetric, labelName,
)
}
if dtoMetric.Summary != nil && labelName == quantileLabel {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} must not have an explicit %q label",
name, dtoMetric, quantileLabel,
)
}
if !utf8.ValidString(labelPair.GetValue()) {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} has a label named %q whose value is not utf8: %#v",
name, dtoMetric, labelName, labelPair.GetValue())
}
previousLabelName = labelName
}
// Is the metric unique (i.e. no other metric with the same name and the same labels)?
h := xxhash.New()
h.WriteString(name)
h.Write(separatorByteSlice)
// Make sure label pairs are sorted. We depend on it for the consistency
// check.
if !sort.IsSorted(labelPairSorter(dtoMetric.Label)) {
// We cannot sort dtoMetric.Label in place as it is immutable by contract.
copiedLabels := make([]*dto.LabelPair, len(dtoMetric.Label))
copy(copiedLabels, dtoMetric.Label)
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(copiedLabels))
dtoMetric.Label = copiedLabels
}
for _, lp := range dtoMetric.Label {
h.WriteString(lp.GetName())
h.Write(separatorByteSlice)
h.WriteString(lp.GetValue())
h.Write(separatorByteSlice)
}
hSum := h.Sum64()
if _, exists := metricHashes[hSum]; exists {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %q { %s} was collected before with the same name and label values",
name, dtoMetric,
)
}
metricHashes[hSum] = struct{}{}
return nil
}
func checkDescConsistency(
metricFamily *dto.MetricFamily,
dtoMetric *dto.Metric,
desc *Desc,
) error {
// Desc help consistency with metric family help.
if metricFamily.GetHelp() != desc.help {
return fmt.Errorf(
"collected metric %s %s has help %q but should have %q",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, metricFamily.GetHelp(), desc.help,
)
}
// Is the desc consistent with the content of the metric?
lpsFromDesc := make([]*dto.LabelPair, len(desc.constLabelPairs), len(dtoMetric.Label))
copy(lpsFromDesc, desc.constLabelPairs)
for _, l := range desc.variableLabels {
lpsFromDesc = append(lpsFromDesc, &dto.LabelPair{
Name: proto.String(l),
})
}
if len(lpsFromDesc) != len(dtoMetric.Label) {
return fmt.Errorf(
"labels in collected metric %s %s are inconsistent with descriptor %s",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, desc,
)
}
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(lpsFromDesc))
for i, lpFromDesc := range lpsFromDesc {
lpFromMetric := dtoMetric.Label[i]
if lpFromDesc.GetName() != lpFromMetric.GetName() ||
lpFromDesc.Value != nil && lpFromDesc.GetValue() != lpFromMetric.GetValue() {
return fmt.Errorf(
"labels in collected metric %s %s are inconsistent with descriptor %s",
metricFamily.GetName(), dtoMetric, desc,
)
}
}
return nil
}

View File

@ -1,737 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"math"
"runtime"
"sort"
"sync"
"sync/atomic"
"time"
"github.com/beorn7/perks/quantile"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// quantileLabel is used for the label that defines the quantile in a
// summary.
const quantileLabel = "quantile"
// A Summary captures individual observations from an event or sample stream and
// summarizes them in a manner similar to traditional summary statistics: 1. sum
// of observations, 2. observation count, 3. rank estimations.
//
// A typical use-case is the observation of request latencies. By default, a
// Summary provides the median, the 90th and the 99th percentile of the latency
// as rank estimations. However, the default behavior will change in the
// upcoming v1.0.0 of the library. There will be no rank estimations at all by
// default. For a sane transition, it is recommended to set the desired rank
// estimations explicitly.
//
// Note that the rank estimations cannot be aggregated in a meaningful way with
// the Prometheus query language (i.e. you cannot average or add them). If you
// need aggregatable quantiles (e.g. you want the 99th percentile latency of all
// queries served across all instances of a service), consider the Histogram
// metric type. See the Prometheus documentation for more details.
//
// To create Summary instances, use NewSummary.
type Summary interface {
Metric
Collector
// Observe adds a single observation to the summary.
Observe(float64)
}
var errQuantileLabelNotAllowed = fmt.Errorf(
"%q is not allowed as label name in summaries", quantileLabel,
)
// Default values for SummaryOpts.
const (
// DefMaxAge is the default duration for which observations stay
// relevant.
DefMaxAge time.Duration = 10 * time.Minute
// DefAgeBuckets is the default number of buckets used to calculate the
// age of observations.
DefAgeBuckets = 5
// DefBufCap is the standard buffer size for collecting Summary observations.
DefBufCap = 500
)
// SummaryOpts bundles the options for creating a Summary metric. It is
// mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. While all other fields are
// optional and can safely be left at their zero value, it is recommended to set
// a help string and to explicitly set the Objectives field to the desired value
// as the default value will change in the upcoming v1.0.0 of the library.
type SummaryOpts struct {
// Namespace, Subsystem, and Name are components of the fully-qualified
// name of the Summary (created by joining these components with
// "_"). Only Name is mandatory, the others merely help structuring the
// name. Note that the fully-qualified name of the Summary must be a
// valid Prometheus metric name.
Namespace string
Subsystem string
Name string
// Help provides information about this Summary.
//
// Metrics with the same fully-qualified name must have the same Help
// string.
Help string
// ConstLabels are used to attach fixed labels to this metric. Metrics
// with the same fully-qualified name must have the same label names in
// their ConstLabels.
//
// Due to the way a Summary is represented in the Prometheus text format
// and how it is handled by the Prometheus server internally, “quantile”
// is an illegal label name. Construction of a Summary or SummaryVec
// will panic if this label name is used in ConstLabels.
//
// ConstLabels are only used rarely. In particular, do not use them to
// attach the same labels to all your metrics. Those use cases are
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
// Objectives defines the quantile rank estimates with their respective
// absolute error. If Objectives[q] = e, then the value reported for q
// will be the φ-quantile value for some φ between q-e and q+e. The
// default value is an empty map, resulting in a summary without
// quantiles.
Objectives map[float64]float64
// MaxAge defines the duration for which an observation stays relevant
// for the summary. Must be positive. The default value is DefMaxAge.
MaxAge time.Duration
// AgeBuckets is the number of buckets used to exclude observations that
// are older than MaxAge from the summary. A higher number has a
// resource penalty, so only increase it if the higher resolution is
// really required. For very high observation rates, you might want to
// reduce the number of age buckets. With only one age bucket, you will
// effectively see a complete reset of the summary each time MaxAge has
// passed. The default value is DefAgeBuckets.
AgeBuckets uint32
// BufCap defines the default sample stream buffer size. The default
// value of DefBufCap should suffice for most uses. If there is a need
// to increase the value, a multiple of 500 is recommended (because that
// is the internal buffer size of the underlying package
// "github.com/bmizerany/perks/quantile").
BufCap uint32
}
// Problem with the sliding-window decay algorithm... The Merge method of
// perk/quantile is actually not working as advertised - and it might be
// unfixable, as the underlying algorithm is apparently not capable of merging
// summaries in the first place. To avoid using Merge, we are currently adding
// observations to _each_ age bucket, i.e. the effort to add a sample is
// essentially multiplied by the number of age buckets. When rotating age
// buckets, we empty the previous head stream. On scrape time, we simply take
// the quantiles from the head stream (no merging required). Result: More effort
// on observation time, less effort on scrape time, which is exactly the
// opposite of what we try to accomplish, but at least the results are correct.
//
// The quite elegant previous contraption to merge the age buckets efficiently
// on scrape time (see code up commit 6b9530d72ea715f0ba612c0120e6e09fbf1d49d0)
// can't be used anymore.
// NewSummary creates a new Summary based on the provided SummaryOpts.
func NewSummary(opts SummaryOpts) Summary {
return newSummary(
NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
),
opts,
)
}
func newSummary(desc *Desc, opts SummaryOpts, labelValues ...string) Summary {
if len(desc.variableLabels) != len(labelValues) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, labelValues))
}
for _, n := range desc.variableLabels {
if n == quantileLabel {
panic(errQuantileLabelNotAllowed)
}
}
for _, lp := range desc.constLabelPairs {
if lp.GetName() == quantileLabel {
panic(errQuantileLabelNotAllowed)
}
}
if opts.Objectives == nil {
opts.Objectives = map[float64]float64{}
}
if opts.MaxAge < 0 {
panic(fmt.Errorf("illegal max age MaxAge=%v", opts.MaxAge))
}
if opts.MaxAge == 0 {
opts.MaxAge = DefMaxAge
}
if opts.AgeBuckets == 0 {
opts.AgeBuckets = DefAgeBuckets
}
if opts.BufCap == 0 {
opts.BufCap = DefBufCap
}
if len(opts.Objectives) == 0 {
// Use the lock-free implementation of a Summary without objectives.
s := &noObjectivesSummary{
desc: desc,
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
counts: [2]*summaryCounts{{}, {}},
}
s.init(s) // Init self-collection.
return s
}
s := &summary{
desc: desc,
objectives: opts.Objectives,
sortedObjectives: make([]float64, 0, len(opts.Objectives)),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
hotBuf: make([]float64, 0, opts.BufCap),
coldBuf: make([]float64, 0, opts.BufCap),
streamDuration: opts.MaxAge / time.Duration(opts.AgeBuckets),
}
s.headStreamExpTime = time.Now().Add(s.streamDuration)
s.hotBufExpTime = s.headStreamExpTime
for i := uint32(0); i < opts.AgeBuckets; i++ {
s.streams = append(s.streams, s.newStream())
}
s.headStream = s.streams[0]
for qu := range s.objectives {
s.sortedObjectives = append(s.sortedObjectives, qu)
}
sort.Float64s(s.sortedObjectives)
s.init(s) // Init self-collection.
return s
}
type summary struct {
selfCollector
bufMtx sync.Mutex // Protects hotBuf and hotBufExpTime.
mtx sync.Mutex // Protects every other moving part.
// Lock bufMtx before mtx if both are needed.
desc *Desc
objectives map[float64]float64
sortedObjectives []float64
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
sum float64
cnt uint64
hotBuf, coldBuf []float64
streams []*quantile.Stream
streamDuration time.Duration
headStream *quantile.Stream
headStreamIdx int
headStreamExpTime, hotBufExpTime time.Time
}
func (s *summary) Desc() *Desc {
return s.desc
}
func (s *summary) Observe(v float64) {
s.bufMtx.Lock()
defer s.bufMtx.Unlock()
now := time.Now()
if now.After(s.hotBufExpTime) {
s.asyncFlush(now)
}
s.hotBuf = append(s.hotBuf, v)
if len(s.hotBuf) == cap(s.hotBuf) {
s.asyncFlush(now)
}
}
func (s *summary) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
sum := &dto.Summary{}
qs := make([]*dto.Quantile, 0, len(s.objectives))
s.bufMtx.Lock()
s.mtx.Lock()
// Swap bufs even if hotBuf is empty to set new hotBufExpTime.
s.swapBufs(time.Now())
s.bufMtx.Unlock()
s.flushColdBuf()
sum.SampleCount = proto.Uint64(s.cnt)
sum.SampleSum = proto.Float64(s.sum)
for _, rank := range s.sortedObjectives {
var q float64
if s.headStream.Count() == 0 {
q = math.NaN()
} else {
q = s.headStream.Query(rank)
}
qs = append(qs, &dto.Quantile{
Quantile: proto.Float64(rank),
Value: proto.Float64(q),
})
}
s.mtx.Unlock()
if len(qs) > 0 {
sort.Sort(quantSort(qs))
}
sum.Quantile = qs
out.Summary = sum
out.Label = s.labelPairs
return nil
}
func (s *summary) newStream() *quantile.Stream {
return quantile.NewTargeted(s.objectives)
}
// asyncFlush needs bufMtx locked.
func (s *summary) asyncFlush(now time.Time) {
s.mtx.Lock()
s.swapBufs(now)
// Unblock the original goroutine that was responsible for the mutation
// that triggered the compaction. But hold onto the global non-buffer
// state mutex until the operation finishes.
go func() {
s.flushColdBuf()
s.mtx.Unlock()
}()
}
// rotateStreams needs mtx AND bufMtx locked.
func (s *summary) maybeRotateStreams() {
for !s.hotBufExpTime.Equal(s.headStreamExpTime) {
s.headStream.Reset()
s.headStreamIdx++
if s.headStreamIdx >= len(s.streams) {
s.headStreamIdx = 0
}
s.headStream = s.streams[s.headStreamIdx]
s.headStreamExpTime = s.headStreamExpTime.Add(s.streamDuration)
}
}
// flushColdBuf needs mtx locked.
func (s *summary) flushColdBuf() {
for _, v := range s.coldBuf {
for _, stream := range s.streams {
stream.Insert(v)
}
s.cnt++
s.sum += v
}
s.coldBuf = s.coldBuf[0:0]
s.maybeRotateStreams()
}
// swapBufs needs mtx AND bufMtx locked, coldBuf must be empty.
func (s *summary) swapBufs(now time.Time) {
if len(s.coldBuf) != 0 {
panic("coldBuf is not empty")
}
s.hotBuf, s.coldBuf = s.coldBuf, s.hotBuf
// hotBuf is now empty and gets new expiration set.
for now.After(s.hotBufExpTime) {
s.hotBufExpTime = s.hotBufExpTime.Add(s.streamDuration)
}
}
type summaryCounts struct {
// sumBits contains the bits of the float64 representing the sum of all
// observations. sumBits and count have to go first in the struct to
// guarantee alignment for atomic operations.
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
sumBits uint64
count uint64
}
type noObjectivesSummary struct {
// countAndHotIdx enables lock-free writes with use of atomic updates.
// The most significant bit is the hot index [0 or 1] of the count field
// below. Observe calls update the hot one. All remaining bits count the
// number of Observe calls. Observe starts by incrementing this counter,
// and finish by incrementing the count field in the respective
// summaryCounts, as a marker for completion.
//
// Calls of the Write method (which are non-mutating reads from the
// perspective of the summary) swap the hotcold under the writeMtx
// lock. A cooldown is awaited (while locked) by comparing the number of
// observations with the initiation count. Once they match, then the
// last observation on the now cool one has completed. All cool fields must
// be merged into the new hot before releasing writeMtx.
// Fields with atomic access first! See alignment constraint:
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG
countAndHotIdx uint64
selfCollector
desc *Desc
writeMtx sync.Mutex // Only used in the Write method.
// Two counts, one is "hot" for lock-free observations, the other is
// "cold" for writing out a dto.Metric. It has to be an array of
// pointers to guarantee 64bit alignment of the histogramCounts, see
// http://golang.org/pkg/sync/atomic/#pkg-note-BUG.
counts [2]*summaryCounts
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (s *noObjectivesSummary) Desc() *Desc {
return s.desc
}
func (s *noObjectivesSummary) Observe(v float64) {
// We increment h.countAndHotIdx so that the counter in the lower
// 63 bits gets incremented. At the same time, we get the new value
// back, which we can use to find the currently-hot counts.
n := atomic.AddUint64(&s.countAndHotIdx, 1)
hotCounts := s.counts[n>>63]
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + v)
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
break
}
}
// Increment count last as we take it as a signal that the observation
// is complete.
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.count, 1)
}
func (s *noObjectivesSummary) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// For simplicity, we protect this whole method by a mutex. It is not in
// the hot path, i.e. Observe is called much more often than Write. The
// complication of making Write lock-free isn't worth it, if possible at
// all.
s.writeMtx.Lock()
defer s.writeMtx.Unlock()
// Adding 1<<63 switches the hot index (from 0 to 1 or from 1 to 0)
// without touching the count bits. See the struct comments for a full
// description of the algorithm.
n := atomic.AddUint64(&s.countAndHotIdx, 1<<63)
// count is contained unchanged in the lower 63 bits.
count := n & ((1 << 63) - 1)
// The most significant bit tells us which counts is hot. The complement
// is thus the cold one.
hotCounts := s.counts[n>>63]
coldCounts := s.counts[(^n)>>63]
// Await cooldown.
for count != atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.count) {
runtime.Gosched() // Let observations get work done.
}
sum := &dto.Summary{
SampleCount: proto.Uint64(count),
SampleSum: proto.Float64(math.Float64frombits(atomic.LoadUint64(&coldCounts.sumBits))),
}
out.Summary = sum
out.Label = s.labelPairs
// Finally add all the cold counts to the new hot counts and reset the cold counts.
atomic.AddUint64(&hotCounts.count, count)
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.count, 0)
for {
oldBits := atomic.LoadUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits)
newBits := math.Float64bits(math.Float64frombits(oldBits) + sum.GetSampleSum())
if atomic.CompareAndSwapUint64(&hotCounts.sumBits, oldBits, newBits) {
atomic.StoreUint64(&coldCounts.sumBits, 0)
break
}
}
return nil
}
type quantSort []*dto.Quantile
func (s quantSort) Len() int {
return len(s)
}
func (s quantSort) Swap(i, j int) {
s[i], s[j] = s[j], s[i]
}
func (s quantSort) Less(i, j int) bool {
return s[i].GetQuantile() < s[j].GetQuantile()
}
// SummaryVec is a Collector that bundles a set of Summaries that all share the
// same Desc, but have different values for their variable labels. This is used
// if you want to count the same thing partitioned by various dimensions
// (e.g. HTTP request latencies, partitioned by status code and method). Create
// instances with NewSummaryVec.
type SummaryVec struct {
*MetricVec
}
// NewSummaryVec creates a new SummaryVec based on the provided SummaryOpts and
// partitioned by the given label names.
//
// Due to the way a Summary is represented in the Prometheus text format and how
// it is handled by the Prometheus server internally, “quantile” is an illegal
// label name. NewSummaryVec will panic if this label name is used.
func NewSummaryVec(opts SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *SummaryVec {
for _, ln := range labelNames {
if ln == quantileLabel {
panic(errQuantileLabelNotAllowed)
}
}
desc := NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
labelNames,
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &SummaryVec{
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newSummary(desc, opts, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Summary for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Summary is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Summary to only
// create the new Summary but leave it at its starting value, a Summary without
// any observations.
//
// Keeping the Summary for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Summary from the SummaryVec. In that case,
// the Summary will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Summary with the same label values is created later. See also the CounterVec
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
return nil, err
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Summary for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Summary is created. Implications of
// creating a Summary without using it and keeping the Summary for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
return nil, err
}
// WithLabelValues works as GetMetricWithLabelValues, but panics where
// GetMetricWithLabelValues would have returned an error. Not returning an
// error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.WithLabelValues("404", "GET").Observe(42.21)
func (v *SummaryVec) WithLabelValues(lvs ...string) Observer {
s, err := v.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return s
}
// With works as GetMetricWith, but panics where GetMetricWithLabels would have
// returned an error. Not returning an error allows shortcuts like
// myVec.With(prometheus.Labels{"code": "404", "method": "GET"}).Observe(42.21)
func (v *SummaryVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
s, err := v.GetMetricWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return s
}
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the SummaryVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *SummaryVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (ObserverVec, error) {
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &SummaryVec{vec}, err
}
return nil, err
}
// MustCurryWith works as CurryWith but panics where CurryWith would have
// returned an error.
func (v *SummaryVec) MustCurryWith(labels Labels) ObserverVec {
vec, err := v.CurryWith(labels)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return vec
}
type constSummary struct {
desc *Desc
count uint64
sum float64
quantiles map[float64]float64
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (s *constSummary) Desc() *Desc {
return s.desc
}
func (s *constSummary) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
sum := &dto.Summary{}
qs := make([]*dto.Quantile, 0, len(s.quantiles))
sum.SampleCount = proto.Uint64(s.count)
sum.SampleSum = proto.Float64(s.sum)
for rank, q := range s.quantiles {
qs = append(qs, &dto.Quantile{
Quantile: proto.Float64(rank),
Value: proto.Float64(q),
})
}
if len(qs) > 0 {
sort.Sort(quantSort(qs))
}
sum.Quantile = qs
out.Summary = sum
out.Label = s.labelPairs
return nil
}
// NewConstSummary returns a metric representing a Prometheus summary with fixed
// values for the count, sum, and quantiles. As those parameters cannot be
// changed, the returned value does not implement the Summary interface (but
// only the Metric interface). Users of this package will not have much use for
// it in regular operations. However, when implementing custom Collectors, it is
// useful as a throw-away metric that is generated on the fly to send it to
// Prometheus in the Collect method.
//
// quantiles maps ranks to quantile values. For example, a median latency of
// 0.23s and a 99th percentile latency of 0.56s would be expressed as:
// map[float64]float64{0.5: 0.23, 0.99: 0.56}
//
// NewConstSummary returns an error if the length of labelValues is not
// consistent with the variable labels in Desc or if Desc is invalid.
func NewConstSummary(
desc *Desc,
count uint64,
sum float64,
quantiles map[float64]float64,
labelValues ...string,
) (Metric, error) {
if desc.err != nil {
return nil, desc.err
}
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(desc.variableLabels)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &constSummary{
desc: desc,
count: count,
sum: sum,
quantiles: quantiles,
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}, nil
}
// MustNewConstSummary is a version of NewConstSummary that panics where
// NewConstMetric would have returned an error.
func MustNewConstSummary(
desc *Desc,
count uint64,
sum float64,
quantiles map[float64]float64,
labelValues ...string,
) Metric {
m, err := NewConstSummary(desc, count, sum, quantiles, labelValues...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return m
}

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@ -1,54 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2016 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.
package prometheus
import "time"
// Timer is a helper type to time functions. Use NewTimer to create new
// instances.
type Timer struct {
begin time.Time
observer Observer
}
// NewTimer creates a new Timer. The provided Observer is used to observe a
// duration in seconds. Timer is usually used to time a function call in the
// following way:
// func TimeMe() {
// timer := NewTimer(myHistogram)
// defer timer.ObserveDuration()
// // Do actual work.
// }
func NewTimer(o Observer) *Timer {
return &Timer{
begin: time.Now(),
observer: o,
}
}
// ObserveDuration records the duration passed since the Timer was created with
// NewTimer. It calls the Observe method of the Observer provided during
// construction with the duration in seconds as an argument. The observed
// duration is also returned. ObserveDuration is usually called with a defer
// statement.
//
// Note that this method is only guaranteed to never observe negative durations
// if used with Go1.9+.
func (t *Timer) ObserveDuration() time.Duration {
d := time.Since(t.begin)
if t.observer != nil {
t.observer.Observe(d.Seconds())
}
return d
}

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@ -1,42 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
// UntypedOpts is an alias for Opts. See there for doc comments.
type UntypedOpts Opts
// UntypedFunc works like GaugeFunc but the collected metric is of type
// "Untyped". UntypedFunc is useful to mirror an external metric of unknown
// type.
//
// To create UntypedFunc instances, use NewUntypedFunc.
type UntypedFunc interface {
Metric
Collector
}
// NewUntypedFunc creates a new UntypedFunc based on the provided
// UntypedOpts. The value reported is determined by calling the given function
// from within the Write method. Take into account that metric collection may
// happen concurrently. If that results in concurrent calls to Write, like in
// the case where an UntypedFunc is directly registered with Prometheus, the
// provided function must be concurrency-safe.
func NewUntypedFunc(opts UntypedOpts, function func() float64) UntypedFunc {
return newValueFunc(NewDesc(
BuildFQName(opts.Namespace, opts.Subsystem, opts.Name),
opts.Help,
nil,
opts.ConstLabels,
), UntypedValue, function)
}

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@ -1,212 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
"time"
"unicode/utf8"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/ptypes"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// ValueType is an enumeration of metric types that represent a simple value.
type ValueType int
// Possible values for the ValueType enum. Use UntypedValue to mark a metric
// with an unknown type.
const (
_ ValueType = iota
CounterValue
GaugeValue
UntypedValue
)
// valueFunc is a generic metric for simple values retrieved on collect time
// from a function. It implements Metric and Collector. Its effective type is
// determined by ValueType. This is a low-level building block used by the
// library to back the implementations of CounterFunc, GaugeFunc, and
// UntypedFunc.
type valueFunc struct {
selfCollector
desc *Desc
valType ValueType
function func() float64
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
// newValueFunc returns a newly allocated valueFunc with the given Desc and
// ValueType. The value reported is determined by calling the given function
// from within the Write method. Take into account that metric collection may
// happen concurrently. If that results in concurrent calls to Write, like in
// the case where a valueFunc is directly registered with Prometheus, the
// provided function must be concurrency-safe.
func newValueFunc(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, function func() float64) *valueFunc {
result := &valueFunc{
desc: desc,
valType: valueType,
function: function,
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, nil),
}
result.init(result)
return result
}
func (v *valueFunc) Desc() *Desc {
return v.desc
}
func (v *valueFunc) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
return populateMetric(v.valType, v.function(), v.labelPairs, nil, out)
}
// NewConstMetric returns a metric with one fixed value that cannot be
// changed. Users of this package will not have much use for it in regular
// operations. However, when implementing custom Collectors, it is useful as a
// throw-away metric that is generated on the fly to send it to Prometheus in
// the Collect method. NewConstMetric returns an error if the length of
// labelValues is not consistent with the variable labels in Desc or if Desc is
// invalid.
func NewConstMetric(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, value float64, labelValues ...string) (Metric, error) {
if desc.err != nil {
return nil, desc.err
}
if err := validateLabelValues(labelValues, len(desc.variableLabels)); err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return &constMetric{
desc: desc,
valType: valueType,
val: value,
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}, nil
}
// MustNewConstMetric is a version of NewConstMetric that panics where
// NewConstMetric would have returned an error.
func MustNewConstMetric(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, value float64, labelValues ...string) Metric {
m, err := NewConstMetric(desc, valueType, value, labelValues...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return m
}
type constMetric struct {
desc *Desc
valType ValueType
val float64
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
}
func (m *constMetric) Desc() *Desc {
return m.desc
}
func (m *constMetric) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
return populateMetric(m.valType, m.val, m.labelPairs, nil, out)
}
func populateMetric(
t ValueType,
v float64,
labelPairs []*dto.LabelPair,
e *dto.Exemplar,
m *dto.Metric,
) error {
m.Label = labelPairs
switch t {
case CounterValue:
m.Counter = &dto.Counter{Value: proto.Float64(v), Exemplar: e}
case GaugeValue:
m.Gauge = &dto.Gauge{Value: proto.Float64(v)}
case UntypedValue:
m.Untyped = &dto.Untyped{Value: proto.Float64(v)}
default:
return fmt.Errorf("encountered unknown type %v", t)
}
return nil
}
// MakeLabelPairs is a helper function to create protobuf LabelPairs from the
// variable and constant labels in the provided Desc. The values for the
// variable labels are defined by the labelValues slice, which must be in the
// same order as the corresponding variable labels in the Desc.
//
// This function is only needed for custom Metric implementations. See MetricVec
// example.
func MakeLabelPairs(desc *Desc, labelValues []string) []*dto.LabelPair {
totalLen := len(desc.variableLabels) + len(desc.constLabelPairs)
if totalLen == 0 {
// Super fast path.
return nil
}
if len(desc.variableLabels) == 0 {
// Moderately fast path.
return desc.constLabelPairs
}
labelPairs := make([]*dto.LabelPair, 0, totalLen)
for i, n := range desc.variableLabels {
labelPairs = append(labelPairs, &dto.LabelPair{
Name: proto.String(n),
Value: proto.String(labelValues[i]),
})
}
labelPairs = append(labelPairs, desc.constLabelPairs...)
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(labelPairs))
return labelPairs
}
// ExemplarMaxRunes is the max total number of runes allowed in exemplar labels.
const ExemplarMaxRunes = 64
// newExemplar creates a new dto.Exemplar from the provided values. An error is
// returned if any of the label names or values are invalid or if the total
// number of runes in the label names and values exceeds ExemplarMaxRunes.
func newExemplar(value float64, ts time.Time, l Labels) (*dto.Exemplar, error) {
e := &dto.Exemplar{}
e.Value = proto.Float64(value)
tsProto, err := ptypes.TimestampProto(ts)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
e.Timestamp = tsProto
labelPairs := make([]*dto.LabelPair, 0, len(l))
var runes int
for name, value := range l {
if !checkLabelName(name) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("exemplar label name %q is invalid", name)
}
runes += utf8.RuneCountInString(name)
if !utf8.ValidString(value) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("exemplar label value %q is not valid UTF-8", value)
}
runes += utf8.RuneCountInString(value)
labelPairs = append(labelPairs, &dto.LabelPair{
Name: proto.String(name),
Value: proto.String(value),
})
}
if runes > ExemplarMaxRunes {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("exemplar labels have %d runes, exceeding the limit of %d", runes, ExemplarMaxRunes)
}
e.Label = labelPairs
return e, nil
}

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@ -1,556 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2014 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.
package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"sync"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
)
// MetricVec is a Collector to bundle metrics of the same name that differ in
// their label values. MetricVec is not used directly but as a building block
// for implementations of vectors of a given metric type, like GaugeVec,
// CounterVec, SummaryVec, and HistogramVec. It is exported so that it can be
// used for custom Metric implementations.
//
// To create a FooVec for custom Metric Foo, embed a pointer to MetricVec in
// FooVec and initialize it with NewMetricVec. Implement wrappers for
// GetMetricWithLabelValues and GetMetricWith that return (Foo, error) rather
// than (Metric, error). Similarly, create a wrapper for CurryWith that returns
// (*FooVec, error) rather than (*MetricVec, error). It is recommended to also
// add the convenience methods WithLabelValues, With, and MustCurryWith, which
// panic instead of returning errors. See also the MetricVec example.
type MetricVec struct {
*metricMap
curry []curriedLabelValue
// hashAdd and hashAddByte can be replaced for testing collision handling.
hashAdd func(h uint64, s string) uint64
hashAddByte func(h uint64, b byte) uint64
}
// NewMetricVec returns an initialized metricVec.
func NewMetricVec(desc *Desc, newMetric func(lvs ...string) Metric) *MetricVec {
return &MetricVec{
metricMap: &metricMap{
metrics: map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues{},
desc: desc,
newMetric: newMetric,
},
hashAdd: hashAdd,
hashAddByte: hashAddByte,
}
}
// DeleteLabelValues removes the metric where the variable labels are the same
// as those passed in as labels (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). It
// returns true if a metric was deleted.
//
// It is not an error if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc. However, such inconsistent label count can
// never match an actual metric, so the method will always return false in that
// case.
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider Delete(Labels) as an
// alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the CounterVec example.
func (m *MetricVec) DeleteLabelValues(lvs ...string) bool {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return false
}
return m.metricMap.deleteByHashWithLabelValues(h, lvs, m.curry)
}
// Delete deletes the metric where the variable labels are the same as those
// passed in as labels. It returns true if a metric was deleted.
//
// It is not an error if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc. However, such inconsistent Labels
// can never match an actual metric, so the method will always return false in
// that case.
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as DeleteLabelValues(...string). See
// there for pros and cons of the two methods.
func (m *MetricVec) Delete(labels Labels) bool {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return false
}
return m.metricMap.deleteByHashWithLabels(h, labels, m.curry)
}
// Without explicit forwarding of Describe, Collect, Reset, those methods won't
// show up in GoDoc.
// Describe implements Collector.
func (m *MetricVec) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) { m.metricMap.Describe(ch) }
// Collect implements Collector.
func (m *MetricVec) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) { m.metricMap.Collect(ch) }
// Reset deletes all metrics in this vector.
func (m *MetricVec) Reset() { m.metricMap.Reset() }
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the MetricVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
//
// Note that CurryWith is usually not called directly but through a wrapper
// around MetricVec, implementing a vector for a specific Metric
// implementation, for example GaugeVec.
func (m *MetricVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*MetricVec, error) {
var (
newCurry []curriedLabelValue
oldCurry = m.curry
iCurry int
)
for i, label := range m.desc.variableLabels {
val, ok := labels[label]
if iCurry < len(oldCurry) && oldCurry[iCurry].index == i {
if ok {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("label name %q is already curried", label)
}
newCurry = append(newCurry, oldCurry[iCurry])
iCurry++
} else {
if !ok {
continue // Label stays uncurried.
}
newCurry = append(newCurry, curriedLabelValue{i, val})
}
}
if l := len(oldCurry) + len(labels) - len(newCurry); l > 0 {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("%d unknown label(s) found during currying", l)
}
return &MetricVec{
metricMap: m.metricMap,
curry: newCurry,
hashAdd: m.hashAdd,
hashAddByte: m.hashAddByte,
}, nil
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Metric for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Metric is created (by
// calling the newMetric function provided during construction of the
// MetricVec).
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Metry to only
// create the new Metric but leave it in its intitial state.
//
// Keeping the Metric for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Metric from the MetricVec. In that case, the
// Metric will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Metric with the same label values is created later.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
//
// Note that GetMetricWithLabelValues is usually not called directly but through
// a wrapper around MetricVec, implementing a vector for a specific Metric
// implementation, for example GaugeVec.
func (m *MetricVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return m.metricMap.getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(h, lvs, m.curry), nil
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Metric for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Metric is created. Implications of
// creating a Metric without using it and keeping the Metric for later use
// are the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
//
// Note that GetMetricWith is usually not called directly but through a wrapper
// around MetricVec, implementing a vector for a specific Metric implementation,
// for example GaugeVec.
func (m *MetricVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
}
return m.metricMap.getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(h, labels, m.curry), nil
}
func (m *MetricVec) hashLabelValues(vals []string) (uint64, error) {
if err := validateLabelValues(vals, len(m.desc.variableLabels)-len(m.curry)); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
var (
h = hashNew()
curry = m.curry
iVals, iCurry int
)
for i := 0; i < len(m.desc.variableLabels); i++ {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
h = m.hashAdd(h, curry[iCurry].value)
iCurry++
} else {
h = m.hashAdd(h, vals[iVals])
iVals++
}
h = m.hashAddByte(h, model.SeparatorByte)
}
return h, nil
}
func (m *MetricVec) hashLabels(labels Labels) (uint64, error) {
if err := validateValuesInLabels(labels, len(m.desc.variableLabels)-len(m.curry)); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
var (
h = hashNew()
curry = m.curry
iCurry int
)
for i, label := range m.desc.variableLabels {
val, ok := labels[label]
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
if ok {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("label name %q is already curried", label)
}
h = m.hashAdd(h, curry[iCurry].value)
iCurry++
} else {
if !ok {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("label name %q missing in label map", label)
}
h = m.hashAdd(h, val)
}
h = m.hashAddByte(h, model.SeparatorByte)
}
return h, nil
}
// metricWithLabelValues provides the metric and its label values for
// disambiguation on hash collision.
type metricWithLabelValues struct {
values []string
metric Metric
}
// curriedLabelValue sets the curried value for a label at the given index.
type curriedLabelValue struct {
index int
value string
}
// metricMap is a helper for metricVec and shared between differently curried
// metricVecs.
type metricMap struct {
mtx sync.RWMutex // Protects metrics.
metrics map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues
desc *Desc
newMetric func(labelValues ...string) Metric
}
// Describe implements Collector. It will send exactly one Desc to the provided
// channel.
func (m *metricMap) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
ch <- m.desc
}
// Collect implements Collector.
func (m *metricMap) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
m.mtx.RLock()
defer m.mtx.RUnlock()
for _, metrics := range m.metrics {
for _, metric := range metrics {
ch <- metric.metric
}
}
}
// Reset deletes all metrics in this vector.
func (m *metricMap) Reset() {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
for h := range m.metrics {
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
}
// deleteByHashWithLabelValues removes the metric from the hash bucket h. If
// there are multiple matches in the bucket, use lvs to select a metric and
// remove only that metric.
func (m *metricMap) deleteByHashWithLabelValues(
h uint64, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) bool {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if !ok {
return false
}
i := findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics, lvs, curry)
if i >= len(metrics) {
return false
}
if len(metrics) > 1 {
old := metrics
m.metrics[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
old[len(old)-1] = metricWithLabelValues{}
} else {
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
return true
}
// deleteByHashWithLabels removes the metric from the hash bucket h. If there
// are multiple matches in the bucket, use lvs to select a metric and remove
// only that metric.
func (m *metricMap) deleteByHashWithLabels(
h uint64, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) bool {
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if !ok {
return false
}
i := findMetricWithLabels(m.desc, metrics, labels, curry)
if i >= len(metrics) {
return false
}
if len(metrics) > 1 {
old := metrics
m.metrics[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
old[len(old)-1] = metricWithLabelValues{}
} else {
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
return true
}
// getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues retrieves the metric by hash and label value
// or creates it and returns the new one.
//
// This function holds the mutex.
func (m *metricMap) getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(
hash uint64, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) Metric {
m.mtx.RLock()
metric, ok := m.getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues(hash, lvs, curry)
m.mtx.RUnlock()
if ok {
return metric
}
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metric, ok = m.getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues(hash, lvs, curry)
if !ok {
inlinedLVs := inlineLabelValues(lvs, curry)
metric = m.newMetric(inlinedLVs...)
m.metrics[hash] = append(m.metrics[hash], metricWithLabelValues{values: inlinedLVs, metric: metric})
}
return metric
}
// getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues retrieves the metric by hash and label value
// or creates it and returns the new one.
//
// This function holds the mutex.
func (m *metricMap) getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(
hash uint64, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) Metric {
m.mtx.RLock()
metric, ok := m.getMetricWithHashAndLabels(hash, labels, curry)
m.mtx.RUnlock()
if ok {
return metric
}
m.mtx.Lock()
defer m.mtx.Unlock()
metric, ok = m.getMetricWithHashAndLabels(hash, labels, curry)
if !ok {
lvs := extractLabelValues(m.desc, labels, curry)
metric = m.newMetric(lvs...)
m.metrics[hash] = append(m.metrics[hash], metricWithLabelValues{values: lvs, metric: metric})
}
return metric
}
// getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues gets a metric while handling possible
// collisions in the hash space. Must be called while holding the read mutex.
func (m *metricMap) getMetricWithHashAndLabelValues(
h uint64, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) (Metric, bool) {
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if ok {
if i := findMetricWithLabelValues(metrics, lvs, curry); i < len(metrics) {
return metrics[i].metric, true
}
}
return nil, false
}
// getMetricWithHashAndLabels gets a metric while handling possible collisions in
// the hash space. Must be called while holding read mutex.
func (m *metricMap) getMetricWithHashAndLabels(
h uint64, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) (Metric, bool) {
metrics, ok := m.metrics[h]
if ok {
if i := findMetricWithLabels(m.desc, metrics, labels, curry); i < len(metrics) {
return metrics[i].metric, true
}
}
return nil, false
}
// findMetricWithLabelValues returns the index of the matching metric or
// len(metrics) if not found.
func findMetricWithLabelValues(
metrics []metricWithLabelValues, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) int {
for i, metric := range metrics {
if matchLabelValues(metric.values, lvs, curry) {
return i
}
}
return len(metrics)
}
// findMetricWithLabels returns the index of the matching metric or len(metrics)
// if not found.
func findMetricWithLabels(
desc *Desc, metrics []metricWithLabelValues, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue,
) int {
for i, metric := range metrics {
if matchLabels(desc, metric.values, labels, curry) {
return i
}
}
return len(metrics)
}
func matchLabelValues(values []string, lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue) bool {
if len(values) != len(lvs)+len(curry) {
return false
}
var iLVs, iCurry int
for i, v := range values {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
if v != curry[iCurry].value {
return false
}
iCurry++
continue
}
if v != lvs[iLVs] {
return false
}
iLVs++
}
return true
}
func matchLabels(desc *Desc, values []string, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue) bool {
if len(values) != len(labels)+len(curry) {
return false
}
iCurry := 0
for i, k := range desc.variableLabels {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
if values[i] != curry[iCurry].value {
return false
}
iCurry++
continue
}
if values[i] != labels[k] {
return false
}
}
return true
}
func extractLabelValues(desc *Desc, labels Labels, curry []curriedLabelValue) []string {
labelValues := make([]string, len(labels)+len(curry))
iCurry := 0
for i, k := range desc.variableLabels {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
labelValues[i] = curry[iCurry].value
iCurry++
continue
}
labelValues[i] = labels[k]
}
return labelValues
}
func inlineLabelValues(lvs []string, curry []curriedLabelValue) []string {
labelValues := make([]string, len(lvs)+len(curry))
var iCurry, iLVs int
for i := range labelValues {
if iCurry < len(curry) && curry[iCurry].index == i {
labelValues[i] = curry[iCurry].value
iCurry++
continue
}
labelValues[i] = lvs[iLVs]
iLVs++
}
return labelValues
}

View File

@ -1,214 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2018 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.
package prometheus
import (
"fmt"
"sort"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
)
// WrapRegistererWith returns a Registerer wrapping the provided
// Registerer. Collectors registered with the returned Registerer will be
// registered with the wrapped Registerer in a modified way. The modified
// Collector adds the provided Labels to all Metrics it collects (as
// ConstLabels). The Metrics collected by the unmodified Collector must not
// duplicate any of those labels. Wrapping a nil value is valid, resulting
// in a no-op Registerer.
//
// WrapRegistererWith provides a way to add fixed labels to a subset of
// Collectors. It should not be used to add fixed labels to all metrics
// exposed. See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
//
// Conflicts between Collectors registered through the original Registerer with
// Collectors registered through the wrapping Registerer will still be
// detected. Any AlreadyRegisteredError returned by the Register method of
// either Registerer will contain the ExistingCollector in the form it was
// provided to the respective registry.
//
// The Collector example demonstrates a use of WrapRegistererWith.
func WrapRegistererWith(labels Labels, reg Registerer) Registerer {
return &wrappingRegisterer{
wrappedRegisterer: reg,
labels: labels,
}
}
// WrapRegistererWithPrefix returns a Registerer wrapping the provided
// Registerer. Collectors registered with the returned Registerer will be
// registered with the wrapped Registerer in a modified way. The modified
// Collector adds the provided prefix to the name of all Metrics it collects.
// Wrapping a nil value is valid, resulting in a no-op Registerer.
//
// WrapRegistererWithPrefix is useful to have one place to prefix all metrics of
// a sub-system. To make this work, register metrics of the sub-system with the
// wrapping Registerer returned by WrapRegistererWithPrefix. It is rarely useful
// to use the same prefix for all metrics exposed. In particular, do not prefix
// metric names that are standardized across applications, as that would break
// horizontal monitoring, for example the metrics provided by the Go collector
// (see NewGoCollector) and the process collector (see NewProcessCollector). (In
// fact, those metrics are already prefixed with “go_” or “process_”,
// respectively.)
//
// Conflicts between Collectors registered through the original Registerer with
// Collectors registered through the wrapping Registerer will still be
// detected. Any AlreadyRegisteredError returned by the Register method of
// either Registerer will contain the ExistingCollector in the form it was
// provided to the respective registry.
func WrapRegistererWithPrefix(prefix string, reg Registerer) Registerer {
return &wrappingRegisterer{
wrappedRegisterer: reg,
prefix: prefix,
}
}
type wrappingRegisterer struct {
wrappedRegisterer Registerer
prefix string
labels Labels
}
func (r *wrappingRegisterer) Register(c Collector) error {
if r.wrappedRegisterer == nil {
return nil
}
return r.wrappedRegisterer.Register(&wrappingCollector{
wrappedCollector: c,
prefix: r.prefix,
labels: r.labels,
})
}
func (r *wrappingRegisterer) MustRegister(cs ...Collector) {
if r.wrappedRegisterer == nil {
return
}
for _, c := range cs {
if err := r.Register(c); err != nil {
panic(err)
}
}
}
func (r *wrappingRegisterer) Unregister(c Collector) bool {
if r.wrappedRegisterer == nil {
return false
}
return r.wrappedRegisterer.Unregister(&wrappingCollector{
wrappedCollector: c,
prefix: r.prefix,
labels: r.labels,
})
}
type wrappingCollector struct {
wrappedCollector Collector
prefix string
labels Labels
}
func (c *wrappingCollector) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) {
wrappedCh := make(chan Metric)
go func() {
c.wrappedCollector.Collect(wrappedCh)
close(wrappedCh)
}()
for m := range wrappedCh {
ch <- &wrappingMetric{
wrappedMetric: m,
prefix: c.prefix,
labels: c.labels,
}
}
}
func (c *wrappingCollector) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) {
wrappedCh := make(chan *Desc)
go func() {
c.wrappedCollector.Describe(wrappedCh)
close(wrappedCh)
}()
for desc := range wrappedCh {
ch <- wrapDesc(desc, c.prefix, c.labels)
}
}
func (c *wrappingCollector) unwrapRecursively() Collector {
switch wc := c.wrappedCollector.(type) {
case *wrappingCollector:
return wc.unwrapRecursively()
default:
return wc
}
}
type wrappingMetric struct {
wrappedMetric Metric
prefix string
labels Labels
}
func (m *wrappingMetric) Desc() *Desc {
return wrapDesc(m.wrappedMetric.Desc(), m.prefix, m.labels)
}
func (m *wrappingMetric) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
if err := m.wrappedMetric.Write(out); err != nil {
return err
}
if len(m.labels) == 0 {
// No wrapping labels.
return nil
}
for ln, lv := range m.labels {
out.Label = append(out.Label, &dto.LabelPair{
Name: proto.String(ln),
Value: proto.String(lv),
})
}
sort.Sort(labelPairSorter(out.Label))
return nil
}
func wrapDesc(desc *Desc, prefix string, labels Labels) *Desc {
constLabels := Labels{}
for _, lp := range desc.constLabelPairs {
constLabels[*lp.Name] = *lp.Value
}
for ln, lv := range labels {
if _, alreadyUsed := constLabels[ln]; alreadyUsed {
return &Desc{
fqName: desc.fqName,
help: desc.help,
variableLabels: desc.variableLabels,
constLabelPairs: desc.constLabelPairs,
err: fmt.Errorf("attempted wrapping with already existing label name %q", ln),
}
}
constLabels[ln] = lv
}
// NewDesc will do remaining validations.
newDesc := NewDesc(prefix+desc.fqName, desc.help, desc.variableLabels, constLabels)
// Propagate errors if there was any. This will override any errer
// created by NewDesc above, i.e. earlier errors get precedence.
if desc.err != nil {
newDesc.err = desc.err
}
return newDesc
}