Postgres Custom Metric Collection
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feel free to reach out to us!To collect custom metrics with the Postgres integration, use the custom_queries
option in the conf.d/postgres.d/conf.yaml
file at the root of your Agent’s configuration directory. See the sample postgres.d/conf.yaml for more details.
Note: When generating custom metrics that require querying additional tables, you may need to grant the SELECT
permission on those tables to the Postgres user. Example: grant SELECT on <TABLE_NAME> to <USER>;
Configuration
custom_queries
has the following options:
Option | Required | Description |
---|
metric_prefix | Yes | Each metric starts with the chosen prefix. |
query | Yes | This is the SQL to execute. It can be a simple statement or a multi-line script. All of the rows of the results are evaluated. Use the pipe if you require a multi-line script. |
columns | Yes | This is a list representing each column ordered sequentially from left to right.
There are 2 required pieces of data: - name : This is the suffix to append to the metric_prefix to form the full metric name. If the type is specified as tag , the column is instead applied as a tag to every metric collected by this query. - type : This is the submission method (gauge , count , rate , etc.). This can also be set to tag to tag each metric in the row with the name and value (<name>:<row_value> ) of the item in this column. |
tags | No | A list of static tags to apply to each metric. |
Notes
At least one of the items in defined columns
should be a metric type (gauge
, count
, rate
, etc.).
The number of items defined in columns
must equal the number of columns returned in the query.
The order in which the items in columns
are defined must be same order returned in the query.
custom_queries:
- query: Select F3, F2, F1 from Table;
columns:
- {name: f3_metric_alias, type: gauge}
- {name: f2_tagkey , type: tag }
- {name: f1_metric_alias, type: count}
[...]
Example
Database and table
Below is the company
table from testdb
database. The table contains 3 employee records:
testdb=# SELECT * FROM company;
id| name | age| address |salary | entry_date | last_raise_time
-------------------------------------------------------------------
1 | Paul | 32 | California | 20000 | 1457570000 | 1457570300
2 | Allen | 25 | Texas | 30000 | 1457570060 | 1457570300
3 | Teddy | 23 | Norway | 45000 | 1457570120 | 1457570300
From a SQL query to the YAML configuration
The goal is to capture the age and salary of Paul as metric values with his name and address as tags.
SQL query:
SELECT age,salary,name,address FROM company WHERE name = 'Paul'
Corresponding custom_queries
YAML configuration:
custom_queries:
- metric_prefix: postgresql
query: SELECT age,salary,name,address FROM company WHERE name = 'Paul'
columns:
- name: employee_age
type: gauge
- name: employee_salary
type: gauge
- name: name
type: tag
- name: localisation
type: tag
tags:
- query:custom
After updating the Postgres YAML file, restart the Datadog Agent.
Validation
To verify the result, search for the metrics using the Metrics Explorer:
Debugging
Run the Agent’s status subcommand and look for postgres
under the Checks section:
postgres
--------
- instance #0 [ERROR]: 'Missing metric_prefix parameter in custom_queries'
- Collected 0 metrics, 0 events & 0 service checks
Additionally, the Agent’s logs may provide useful information.
Further Reading
Más enlaces, artículos y documentación útiles: