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Mastering Prometheus

Mastering Prometheus

By : Hegedus
3.7 (6)
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Mastering Prometheus

Mastering Prometheus

3.7 (6)
By: Hegedus

Overview of this book

With an increased focus on observability and reliability, establishing a scalable and reliable monitoring environment is more important than ever. Over the last decade, Prometheus has emerged as the leading open-source, time-series based monitoring software catering to this demand. This book is your guide to scaling, operating, and extending Prometheus from small on-premises workloads to multi-cloud globally distributed workloads and everything in between. Starting with an introduction to Prometheus and its role in observability, the book provides a walkthrough of its deployment. You’ll explore Prometheus’s query language and TSDB data model, followed by dynamic service discovery for monitoring targets and refining alerting through custom templates and formatting. The book then demonstrates horizontal scaling of Prometheus via sharding and federation, while equipping you with debugging techniques and strategies to fine-tune data ingestion. Advancing through the chapters, you’ll manage Prometheus at scale through CI validations and templating with Jsonnet, and integrate Prometheus with other projects such as OpenTelemetry, Thanos, VictoriaMetrics, and Mimir. By the end of this book, you’ll have practical knowledge of Prometheus and its ecosystem, which will help you discern when, why, and how to scale it to meet your ever-growing needs.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)
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1
Part 1: Fundamentals of Prometheus
7
Part 2: Scaling Prometheus
11
Part 3: Extending Prometheus

Extending observability past Prometheus

Setting aside the obvious nuance that “no system is truly and fully observable,” let’s focus on how we can get as close as possible to a fully observable system. Observability is all about the concept of being able to account for “unknown unknowns.” In other words, you shouldn’t need to know in advance the various ways that a system can break in order to monitor and observe it effectively.

Knowing what you don’t know

The concept of “unknown unknowns” was popularized by former United States Secretary of Defense, Donald Rumsfeld. It has to do with the idea of not knowing what you don’t know or your ignorance of the extent of your ignorance. In contrast, a “known unknown” would be something that you are aware but do not know. When relating this concept to Prometheus, an “unknown unknown” would be a metric that doesn’t exist, but a known...

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