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Hands-On Infrastructure Monitoring with Prometheus

You're reading from   Hands-On Infrastructure Monitoring with Prometheus Implement and scale queries, dashboards, and alerting across machines and containers

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Product type Paperback
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789612349
Length 442 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Authors (3):
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Pedro Araujo Pedro Araujo
Author Profile Icon Pedro Araujo
Pedro Araujo
Joel Bastos Joel Bastos
Author Profile Icon Joel Bastos
Joel Bastos
Pedro Ara√∫jo Pedro Ara√∫jo
Author Profile Icon Pedro Ara√∫jo
Pedro Ara√∫jo
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Toc

Table of Contents (21) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introduction FREE CHAPTER
2. Monitoring Fundamentals 3. An Overview of the Prometheus Ecosystem 4. Setting Up a Test Environment 5. Section 2: Getting Started with Prometheus
6. Prometheus Metrics Fundamentals 7. Running a Prometheus Server 8. Exporters and Integrations 9. Prometheus Query Language - PromQL 10. Troubleshooting and Validation 11. Section 3: Dashboards and Alerts
12. Defining Alerting and Recording Rules 13. Discovering and Creating Grafana Dashboards 14. Understanding and Extending Alertmanager 15. Section 4: Scalability, Resilience, and Maintainability
16. Choosing the Right Service Discovery 17. Scaling and Federating Prometheus 18. Integrating Long-Term Storage with Prometheus 19. Assessments 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Summary

In this chapter, we had the opportunity to observe a different way to produce a derivative time series. Recording rules help improve monitoring system stability and performance when recurrent heavy queries are required by pre-computing them into new time series that are comparatively cheap to consult. Alerting rules bring the power and flexibility of PromQL to alerts; they enable triggering alerts for complex and dynamic thresholds as well as targeting multiple instances or even different applications using a single alert rule. Having a good grasp on how delays are introduced in alerts will now help you tailor them to your needs, but remember, a little delay is better than noisy alerts. Finally, we explored how to create unit tests for our rules and validate them even before a Prometheus server is running.

The next chapter will step into another component of monitoring...

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