This is a cache of https://docs.openshift.com/container-platform/4.17/observability/monitoring/common-monitoring-configuration-scenarios.html. It is a snapshot of the page at 2024-11-24T07:27:46.387+0000.
Common monitoring configuration scenarios - Monitoring | Observability | OpenShift Container Platform 4.17
×

After OpenShift Container Platform is installed, core platform monitoring components immediately begin collecting metrics, which you can query and view. The default in-cluster monitoring stack includes the core platform Prometheus instance that collects metrics from your cluster and the core Alertmanager instance that routes alerts, among other components. Depending on who will use the monitoring stack and for what purposes, as a cluster administrator, you can further configure these monitoring components to suit the needs of different users in various scenarios.

In addition to core platform monitoring, you can also optionally enable monitoring for user-defined projects for user workload monitoring. users can then monitor their own services and workloads without the need for an additional monitoring solution.

Configuring core platform monitoring: Postinstallation steps

After OpenShift Container Platform is installed, cluster administrators typically configure core platform monitoring to suit their needs. These activities include setting up storage and configuring options for Prometheus, Alertmanager, and other monitoring components.

By default, in a newly installed OpenShift Container Platform system, users can query and view collected metrics. You need only configure an alert receiver if you want users to receive alert notifications. Any other configuration options listed here are optional.

With the monitoring stack configured to suit your needs, Prometheus collects metrics from the specified services and stores these metrics according to your settings. You can go to the Observe pages in the OpenShift Container Platform web console to view and query collected metrics, manage alerts, identify performance bottlenecks, and scale resources as needed:

  • View dashboards to visualize collected metrics, troubleshoot alerts, and monitor other information about your cluster.

  • Query collected metrics by creating PromQL queries or using predefined queries.

Configuring monitoring for user-defined projects: Getting started

As a cluster administrator, you can optionally enable monitoring for user-defined projects in addition to core platform monitoring. Non-administrator users such as developers can then monitor their own projects outside of core platform monitoring.

Cluster administrators typically complete the following activities to configure user-defined projects so that users can view collected metrics, query these metrics, and receive alerts for their own projects:

After monitoring for user-defined projects is enabled and configured, developers and other non-administrator users can then perform the following activities to set up and use monitoring for their own projects: