Skip to content

A Puppet module for installing and configuring InfluxData's Telegraf

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

olevole/puppet-telegraf

 
 

Repository files navigation

telegraf puppet module

License Build Status Puppet Forge Puppet Forge - downloads Puppet Forge - endorsement Puppet Forge - scores

Table of Contents

  1. Overview
  2. Setup
  3. Usage
  4. Limitations
  5. Development

Overview

A reasonably simple yet flexible Puppet module to manage configuration of InfluxData's Telegraf metrics collection agent.

Setup

This module has the following dependencies:

NB: On some apt-based distributions you'll need to ensure you have support for TLS-enabled repos in place. This can be achieved by installing the apt-transport-https package.

This module requires the toml-rb gem. Either install the gem using puppet's native gem provider, puppetserver_gem, pe_gem, pe_puppetserver_gem, or manually using one of the following methods:

  # apply or puppet-master
  gem install toml-rb
  # PE apply
  /opt/puppetlabs/puppet/bin/gem install toml-rb
  # AIO or PE puppetserver
  /opt/puppet/bin/puppetserver gem install toml-rb

In addition, for Windows, the following dependencies must be met:

Usage

Telegraf's configuration is split into four main sections - global tags, options specific to the agent, input plugins, and output plugins. The documentation for these sections is here, and this module aims to be flexible enough to handle configuration of any of these stanzas.

To get started, Telegraf can be installed with a very basic configuration by just including the class:

include telegraf

However, to customise your configuration you'll want to do something like the following:

class { 'telegraf':
    hostname => $facts['hostname'],
    outputs  => {
        'influxdb' => [
            {
                'urls'     => [ "http://influxdb0.${facts['domain']}:8086", "http://influxdb1.${facts['domain']}:8086" ],
                'database' => 'telegraf',
                'username' => 'telegraf',
                'password' => 'metricsmetricsmetrics',
            }
        ]
    },
    inputs   => {
        'cpu' => [
            {
                'percpu'   => true,
                'totalcpu' => true,
            }
        ]
    }
}

Or here's a Hiera-based example (which is the recommended approach):

---
telegraf::global_tags:
  role: "%{::role}"
  hostgroup: "%{::hostgroup}"
  domain: "%{::domain}"
telegraf::inputs:
  cpu:
    - percpu: true
      totalcpu: true
  exec:
    - commands:
        - who | wc -l
    - commands:
        - cat /proc/uptime | awk '{print $1}'
  mem: [{}]
  io: [{}]
  net: [{}]
  disk: [{}]
  swap: [{}]
  system: [{}]
telegraf::outputs:
  influxdb:
    - urls:
        - "http://influxdb0.%{::domain}:8086"
        - "http://influxdb1.%{::domain}:8086"
      database: 'influxdb'
      username: 'telegraf'
      password: 'telegraf'

telegraf::inputs accepts a hash of any inputs that you'd like to configure. However, you can also optionally define individual inputs using the telegraf::input type - this suits installations where, for example, a core module sets the defaults and other modules import it.

Example 1:

telegraf::input { 'my_exec':
  plugin_type => 'exec',
  options     => [{
    'commands'    => ['/usr/local/bin/my_input.py',],
    'name_suffix' => '_my_input',
    'data_format' => 'json',
  }],
  require     => File['/usr/local/bin/my_input.py'],
}

Will create the file /etc/telegraf/telegraf.d/my_exec.conf:

[[inputs.exec]]
  commands = ['/usr/local/bin/my_input.py']
  name_suffix = '_my_input'
  data_format = 'json'

Example 2:

telegraf::input { 'influxdb-dc':
  plugin_type => 'influxdb',
  options     => [
    {'urls' => ['http://remote-dc:8086',],},
  ],
}

Will create the file /etc/telegraf/telegraf.d/influxdb-dc.conf:

[[inputs.influxdb]]
  urls = ["http://remote-dc:8086"]

Example 3:

telegraf::input { 'my_snmp':
  plugin_type    => 'snmp',
  options        => {
    'interval' => '60s',
    'host' => [
      {
        'address'   => 'snmp_host1:161',
        'community' => 'read_only',
        'version'   => 2,
        'get_oids'  => ['1.3.6.1.2.1.1.5',],
      }
    ],
    'tags' => {
      'environment' => 'development',
    },
  },
}

Will create the file /etc/telegraf/telegraf.d/snmp.conf:

[[inputs.snmp]]
  interval = "60s"

[[inputs.snmp.host]]
  address = "snmp_host1:161"
  community = "read_only"
  version = 2
  get_oids = ["1.3.6.1.2.1.1.5"]

[inputs.snmp.tags]
  environment = "development"

Example 4:

Outputs, Processors and Aggregators are available in the same way:

telegraf::output { 'my_influxdb':
  plugin_type => 'influxdb',
  options     => [
    {
      'urls'     => [ "http://influxdb.example.come:8086"],
      'database' => 'telegraf',
      'username' => 'telegraf',
      'password' => 'metricsmetricsmetrics',
    }
  ]
}

telegraf::processor { 'my_regex':
  plugin_type => 'regex',
  options     => [
    {
      tags => [
        {
          key         => 'foo',
          pattern     => String(/^a*b+\d$/),
          replacement => 'c${1}d',
        }
      ]
    }
  ]
}

telegraf::aggregator { 'my_basicstats':
  plugin_type => 'basicstats',
  options     => [
    {
      period        => '30s',
      drop_original => false,
    },
  ],
}

Example 5:

class { 'telegraf':
    ensure              => '1.0.1',
    hostname            => $facts['hostname'],
    windows_package_url => http://internal_repo:8080/chocolatey,
}

Will install telegraf version 1.0.1 on Windows using an internal chocolatey repo

Hierarchical configuration from multiple files

Hiera YAML and JSON backends support deep hash merging which is needed for inheriting configuration from multiple files.

First of all, make sure that the deep_merge gem is installed on your Puppet Master.

An example of hiera.yaml:

---
:hierarchy:
    - "roles/%{role}"
    - "type/%{virtual}"
    - "domain/%{domain}"
    - "os/%{osfamily}"
    - "common"
:backends:
    - yaml
:yaml:
    :datadir: /etc/puppet/hiera
:merge_behavior: deeper

Then you can define configuration shared for all physical servers and place it into type/physical.yaml:

telegraf::inputs:
  cpu:
    - percpu: true
      totalcpu: true
  mem: [{}]
  io: [{}]
  net: [{}]
  disk: [{}]

Specific roles will include some extra plugins, e.g. role/frontend.yaml:

telegraf::inputs:
  nginx:
    - urls: ["http://localhost/server_status"]

Limitations

The latest version (2.0) of this module requires Puppet 4 or newer. If you're looking for support under Puppet 3.x, then you'll want to make use of an older release.

Furthermore, the introduction of toml-rb means that Ruby 1.9 or newer is also a requirement.

This module has been developed and tested against:

  • Ubuntu 14.04
  • Ubuntu 16.04
  • Debian 8
  • CentOS / RHEL 6
  • CentOS / RHEL 7
  • Windows 2008, 2008 R2, 2012, 2012 R2
  • FreeBSD 12, 13

Support for other distributions / operating systems is planned. Feel free to assist with development in this regard!

The configuration generated with this module is only compatible with newer releases of Telegraf, i.e 0.11.x. It won't work with the 0.2.x series.

Development

Please fork this repository, hack away on your branch, run the tests:

$ bundle exec rake test acceptance

And then submit a pull request. Succinct, well-described and atomic commits preferred.

About

A Puppet module for installing and configuring InfluxData's Telegraf

Resources

License

Stars

Watchers

Forks

Packages

No packages published

Languages

  • Ruby 61.5%
  • Puppet 34.1%
  • HTML 2.2%
  • Dockerfile 1.2%
  • Shell 1.0%