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Connecting PostgreSQL Exporter

Updated on 2024-10-30 GMT+08:00

Application Scenario

When using PostgreSQL, you need to monitor their status and locate their faults in a timely manner. The Prometheus monitoring function monitors PostgreSQL running using Exporter in the CCE container scenario. This section describes how to deploy PostgreSQL Exporter and implement alarm access.

Prerequisites

Deploying PostgreSQL Exporter

  1. Log in to the CCE console.
  2. Click the connected cluster. The cluster management page is displayed.
  3. Perform the following operations to deploy Exporter:

    1. Use Secret to manage PostgreSQL passwords.

      In the navigation pane, choose Workloads. In the upper right corner, click Create from YAML to configure a YAML file. In the YAML file, use Kubernetes Secret to manage and encrypt passwords. When starting PostgreSQL Exporter, the secret key can be directly used but the corresponding password needs to be changed as required.

      YAML configuration example:

      apiVersion: v1
      kind: Secret
      metadata:
          name: postgres-test
      type: Opaque
      stringData:
          username: postgres
          password: you-guess # PostgreSQL password.
    2. Deploy PostgreSQL Exporter.

      In the navigation pane, choose Workloads. In the upper right corner, click Create from YAML to deploy Exporter.

      YAML configuration example (Change the parameters if needed):

      apiVersion: apps/v1
      kind: Deployment
      metadata:
        name: postgres-test # Change the name based on requirements. You are advised to add the PostgreSQL instance information.
        namespace: default # Must be the same as the namespace of the PostgreSQL service.
        labels:
          app: postgres
          app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
      spec:
        replicas: 1
        selector:
          matchLabels:
            app: postgres
            app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
        template:
          metadata:
            labels:
              app: postgres
              app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
          spec:
            containers:
            - name: postgres-exporter
              image: swr.cn-north-4.myhuaweicloud.com/aom-exporter/postgres-exporter:v0.8.0 # postgres-exporter image uploaded to SWR.
              args:
                - "--web.listen-address=:9187" # Enabled port of Exporter.
                - "--log.level=debug" # Log level.
              env:
                - name: DATA_SOURCE_USER
                  valueFrom:
                    secretKeyRef:
                      name: postgres-test # Secret name specified in the previous step.
                      key: username  # Secret key specified in the previous step.
                - name: DATA_SOURCE_PASS 
                  valueFrom:
                    secretKeyRef:
                      name: postgres-test # Secret name specified in the previous step.
                      key: password  # Secret key specified in the previous step.
                - name: DATA_SOURCE_URI
                  value: "x.x.x.x:5432/postgres?sslmode=disable"  # Connection information.
              ports:
              - name: http-metrics
                containerPort: 9187
    3. Obtain metrics.
      The running time of the Postgres instance cannot be obtained by running the curl http://exporter:9187/metrics command. To obtain this metric, customize a queries.yaml file.
      1. Create a configuration that contains queries.yaml.
      2. Mount the configuration as a volume to a directory of Exporter.
      3. Use the configuration through extend.query-path. The following shows Secret and Deployment:
        # The following shows the queries.yaml file that contains custom metrics:
        ---
        apiVersion: v1
        kind: ConfigMap
        metadata:
          name: postgres-test-configmap
          namespace: default
        data:
          queries.yaml: |
            pg_postmaster:
              query: "SELECT pg_postmaster_start_time as start_time_seconds from pg_postmaster_start_time()"
              master: true
              metrics:
                - start_time_seconds:
                    usage: "GAUGE"
                    description: "Time at which postmaster started"
        
        # The following shows the mounted Secret and ConfigMap, and defines Exporter deployment parameters (such as the image):
        ---
        apiVersion: apps/v1
        kind: Deployment
        metadata:
          name: postgres-test
          namespace: default
          labels:
            app: postgres
            app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
        spec:
          replicas: 1
          selector:
            matchLabels:
              app: postgres
              app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
          template:
            metadata:
              labels:
                app: postgres
                app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
            spec:
              containers:
                - name: postgres-exporter
                  image: wrouesnel/postgres_exporter:latest
                  args:
                    - "--web.listen-address=:9187"
                    - "--extend.query-path=/etc/config/queries.yaml"
                    - "--log.level=debug"
                  env:
                    - name: DATA_SOURCE_USER
                      valueFrom:
                        secretKeyRef:
                          name: postgres-test-secret
                          key: username
                    - name: DATA_SOURCE_PASS
                      valueFrom:
                        secretKeyRef:
                          name: postgres-test-secret
                          key: password
                    - name: DATA_SOURCE_URI
                      value: "x.x.x.x:5432/postgres?sslmode=disable"
                  ports:
                    - name: http-metrics
                      containerPort: 9187
                  volumeMounts:
                    - name: config-volume
                      mountPath: /etc/config
              volumes:
                - name: config-volume
                  configMap:
                    name: postgres-test-configmap
        ---
        apiVersion: v1
        kind: Service
        metadata:
          name: postgres
        spec:
          type: NodePort
          selector:
            app: postgres
            app.kubernetes.io/name: postgresql
          ports:
            - protocol: TCP
              nodePort: 30433
              port: 9187
              targetPort: 9187
      4. Access the following address:
        http://{Public IP address of any node in the cluster}:30433/metrics. You can then use the custom queries.yaml file to query the Postgres instance startup time.
        Figure 1 Accessing a cluster node

Adding a Collection Task

Add PodMonitor to configure a collection rule for monitoring the service data of applications deployed in the CCE cluster.
NOTE:

In the following example, metrics are collected every 30s. Therefore, you can check the reported metrics on the AOM page about 30s later.

apiVersion: monitoring.coreos.com/v1
kind: PodMonitor
metadata:
  name: postgres-exporter
  namespace: default
spec:
  namespaceSelector:
    matchNames:
      - default # Namespace where Exporter is located.
  podMetricsEndpoints:
  - interval: 30s
    path: /metrics
    port: http-metrics
  selector:
    matchLabels:
      app: postgres

Verifying that Metrics Can Be Reported to AOM

  1. Log in to the AOM 2.0 console.
  2. In the navigation pane on the left, choose Prometheus Monitoring > Instances.
  3. Click the Prometheus instance connected to the CCE cluster. The instance details page is displayed.
  4. On the Metrics tab page of the Metric Management page, select your target cluster.
  5. Select job {namespace}/postgres-exporter to query metrics starting with pg.

Setting a Dashboard and Alarm Rule on AOM

By setting a dashboard, you can monitor CCE cluster data on the same screen. By setting an alarm rule, you can detect cluster faults and implement warning in a timely manner.

  • Setting a dashboard
    1. Log in to the AOM 2.0 console.
    2. In the navigation pane, choose Dashboard. On the displayed page, click Add Dashboard to add a dashboard. For details, see Creating a Dashboard.
    3. On the Dashboard page, select a Prometheus instance for CCE and click Add Graph. For details, see Adding a Graph to a Dashboard.
  • Setting an alarm rule
    1. Log in to the AOM 2.0 console.
    2. In the navigation pane, choose Alarm Management > Alarm Rules.
    3. On the Metric/Event Alarm Rules tab page, click Create to create an alarm rule. For details, see Creating a Metric Alarm Rule.

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