$ oc -n ns1 get service prometheus-example-app -o yaml
Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS includes a preconfigured, preinstalled, and self-updating monitoring stack that provides monitoring for core platform components. In Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS , cluster administrators can optionally enable monitoring for user-defined projects.
Use these procedures if the following issues occur:
Your own metrics are unavailable.
Prometheus is consuming a lot of disk space.
The KubePersistentVolumeFillingUp
alert is firing for Prometheus.
serviceMonitor
resources enable you to determine how to use the metrics exposed by a service in user-defined projects. Follow the steps outlined in this procedure if you have created a serviceMonitor
resource but cannot see any corresponding metrics in the Metrics UI.
You have access to the cluster as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
You have enabled and configured monitoring for user-defined projects.
You have created a serviceMonitor
resource.
Check that the corresponding labels match in the service and serviceMonitor
resource configurations.
Obtain the label defined in the service. The following example queries the prometheus-example-app
service in the ns1
project:
$ oc -n ns1 get service prometheus-example-app -o yaml
labels:
app: prometheus-example-app
Check that the matchLabels
definition in the serviceMonitor
resource configuration matches the label output in the preceding step. The following example queries the prometheus-example-monitor
service monitor in the ns1
project:
$ oc -n ns1 get servicemonitor prometheus-example-monitor -o yaml
apiVersion: v1
kind: serviceMonitor
metadata:
name: prometheus-example-monitor
namespace: ns1
spec:
endpoints:
- interval: 30s
port: web
scheme: http
selector:
matchLabels:
app: prometheus-example-app
You can check service and |
Inspect the logs for the Prometheus Operator in the openshift-user-workload-monitoring
project.
List the pods in the openshift-user-workload-monitoring
project:
$ oc -n openshift-user-workload-monitoring get pods
NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
prometheus-operator-776fcbbd56-2nbfm 2/2 Running 0 132m
prometheus-user-workload-0 5/5 Running 1 132m
prometheus-user-workload-1 5/5 Running 1 132m
thanos-ruler-user-workload-0 3/3 Running 0 132m
thanos-ruler-user-workload-1 3/3 Running 0 132m
Obtain the logs from the prometheus-operator
container in the prometheus-operator
pod. In the following example, the pod is called prometheus-operator-776fcbbd56-2nbfm
:
$ oc -n openshift-user-workload-monitoring logs prometheus-operator-776fcbbd56-2nbfm -c prometheus-operator
If there is a issue with the service monitor, the logs might include an error similar to this example:
level=warn ts=2020-08-10T11:48:20.906739623Z caller=operator.go:1829 component=prometheusoperator msg="skipping servicemonitor" error="it accesses file system via bearer token file which Prometheus specification prohibits" servicemonitor=eagle/eagle namespace=openshift-user-workload-monitoring prometheus=user-workload
Review the target status for your endpoint on the Metrics targets page in the Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS web console UI.
Log in to the Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS web console and navigate to Observe → Targets in the Administrator perspective.
Locate the metrics endpoint in the list, and review the status of the target in the Status column.
If the Status is Down, click the URL for the endpoint to view more information on the Target Details page for that metrics target.
Configure debug level logging for the Prometheus Operator in the openshift-user-workload-monitoring
project.
Edit the user-workload-monitoring-config
ConfigMap
object in the openshift-user-workload-monitoring
project:
$ oc -n openshift-user-workload-monitoring edit configmap user-workload-monitoring-config
Add logLevel: debug
for prometheusOperator
under data/config.yaml
to set the log level to debug
:
apiVersion: v1
kind: ConfigMap
metadata:
name: user-workload-monitoring-config
namespace: openshift-user-workload-monitoring
data:
config.yaml: |
prometheusOperator:
logLevel: debug
# ...
Save the file to apply the changes. The affected prometheus-operator
pod is automatically redeployed.
Confirm that the debug
log-level has been applied to the prometheus-operator
deployment in the openshift-user-workload-monitoring
project:
$ oc -n openshift-user-workload-monitoring get deploy prometheus-operator -o yaml | grep "log-level"
- --log-level=debug
Debug level logging will show all calls made by the Prometheus Operator.
Check that the prometheus-operator
pod is running:
$ oc -n openshift-user-workload-monitoring get pods
If an unrecognized Prometheus Operator |
Review the debug logs to see if the Prometheus Operator is using the serviceMonitor
resource. Review the logs for other related errors.
See Specifying how a service is monitored for details on how to create a service monitor or pod monitor
Developers can create labels to define attributes for metrics in the form of key-value pairs. The number of potential key-value pairs corresponds to the number of possible values for an attribute. An attribute that has an unlimited number of potential values is called an unbound attribute. For example, a customer_id
attribute is unbound because it has an infinite number of possible values.
Every assigned key-value pair has a unique time series. The use of many unbound attributes in labels can result in an exponential increase in the number of time series created. This can impact Prometheus performance and can consume a lot of disk space.
You can use the following measures when Prometheus consumes a lot of disk:
Check the time series database (TSDB) status using the Prometheus HTTP API for more information about which labels are creating the most time series data. Doing so requires cluster administrator privileges.
Check the number of scrape samples that are being collected.
Reduce the number of unique time series that are created by reducing the number of unbound attributes that are assigned to user-defined metrics.
Using attributes that are bound to a limited set of possible values reduces the number of potential key-value pair combinations. |
Enforce limits on the number of samples that can be scraped across user-defined projects. This requires cluster administrator privileges.
You have access to the cluster as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
In the Administrator perspective, navigate to Observe → Metrics.
Enter a Prometheus Query Language (PromQL) query in the Expression field. The following example queries help to identify high cardinality metrics that might result in high disk space consumption:
By running the following query, you can identify the ten jobs that have the highest number of scrape samples:
topk(10, max by(namespace, job) (topk by(namespace, job) (1, scrape_samples_post_metric_relabeling)))
By running the following query, you can pinpoint time series churn by identifying the ten jobs that have created the most time series data in the last hour:
topk(10, sum by(namespace, job) (sum_over_time(scrape_series_added[1h])))
Investigate the number of unbound label values assigned to metrics with higher than expected scrape sample counts:
If the metrics relate to a user-defined project, review the metrics key-value pairs assigned to your workload. These are implemented through Prometheus client libraries at the application level. Try to limit the number of unbound attributes referenced in your labels.
If the metrics relate to a core Red Hat OpenShift service on AWS project, create a Red Hat support case on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
Review the TSDB status using the Prometheus HTTP API by following these steps when logged in as a
dedicated-admin
:
Get the Prometheus API route URL by running the following command:
$ HOST=$(oc -n openshift-monitoring get route prometheus-k8s -ojsonpath={.status.ingress[].host})
Extract an authentication token by running the following command:
$ TOKEN=$(oc whoami -t)
Query the TSDB status for Prometheus by running the following command:
$ curl -H "Authorization: Bearer $TOKEN" -k "https://$HOST/api/v1/status/tsdb"
"status": "success","data":{"headStats":{"numSeries":507473,
"numLabelPairs":19832,"chunkCount":946298,"minTime":1712253600010,
"maxTime":1712257935346},"seriesCountByMetricName":
[{"name":"etcd_request_duration_seconds_bucket","value":51840},
{"name":"apiserver_request_sli_duration_seconds_bucket","value":47718},
...
See Setting a scrape sample limit for user-defined projects for details on how to set a scrape sample limit and create related alerting rules
As a cluster administrator, you can resolve the KubePersistentVolumeFillingUp
alert being triggered for Prometheus.
The critical alert fires when a persistent volume (PV) claimed by a prometheus-k8s-*
pod in the openshift-monitoring
project has less than 3% total space remaining. This can cause Prometheus to function abnormally.
There are two
|
To address this issue, you can remove Prometheus time-series database (TSDB) blocks to create more space for the PV.
You have access to the cluster as a user with the dedicated-admin
role.
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (oc
).
List the size of all TSDB blocks, sorted from oldest to newest, by running the following command:
$ oc debug <prometheus_k8s_pod_name> -n openshift-monitoring \(1)
-c prometheus --image=$(oc get po -n openshift-monitoring <prometheus_k8s_pod_name> \(1)
-o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[?(@.name=="prometheus")].image}') \
-- sh -c 'cd /prometheus/;du -hs $(ls -dt */ | grep -Eo "[0-9|A-Z]{26}")'
1 | Replace <prometheus_k8s_pod_name> with the pod mentioned in the KubePersistentVolumeFillingUp alert description. |
308M 01HVKMPKQWZYWS8WVDAYQHNMW6
52M 01HVK64DTDA81799TBR9QDECEZ
102M 01HVK64DS7TRZRWF2756KHST5X
140M 01HVJS59K11FBVAPVY57K88Z11
90M 01HVH2A5Z58SKT810EM6B9AT50
152M 01HV8ZDVQMX41MKCN84S32RRZ1
354M 01HV6Q2N26BK63G4RYTST71FBF
156M 01HV664H9J9Z1FTZD73RD1563E
216M 01HTHXB60A7F239HN7S2TENPNS
104M 01HTHMGRXGS0WXA3WATRXHR36B
Identify which and how many blocks could be removed, then remove the blocks. The following example command removes the three oldest Prometheus TSDB blocks from the prometheus-k8s-0
pod:
$ oc debug prometheus-k8s-0 -n openshift-monitoring \
-c prometheus --image=$(oc get po -n openshift-monitoring prometheus-k8s-0 \
-o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[?(@.name=="prometheus")].image}') \
-- sh -c 'ls -latr /prometheus/ | egrep -o "[0-9|A-Z]{26}" | head -3 | \
while read BLOCK; do rm -r /prometheus/$BLOCK; done'
Verify the usage of the mounted PV and ensure there is enough space available by running the following command:
$ oc debug <prometheus_k8s_pod_name> -n openshift-monitoring \(1)
--image=$(oc get po -n openshift-monitoring <prometheus_k8s_pod_name> \(1)
-o jsonpath='{.spec.containers[?(@.name=="prometheus")].image}') -- df -h /prometheus/
1 | Replace <prometheus_k8s_pod_name> with the pod mentioned in the KubePersistentVolumeFillingUp alert description. |
The following example output shows the mounted PV claimed by the prometheus-k8s-0
pod that has 63% of space remaining:
Starting pod/prometheus-k8s-0-debug-j82w4 ...
Filesystem Size Used Avail Use% Mounted on
/dev/nvme0n1p4 40G 15G 40G 37% /prometheus
Removing debug pod ...