3.2 KiB
3.2 KiB
Telegraf is entirely plugin driven. This interface allows for operators to pick and chose what is gathered as well as makes it easy for developers to create new ways of generating metrics.
Plugin authorship is kept as simple as possible to promote people to develop and submit new plugins.
Guidelines
- A plugin must conform to the
plugins.Plugin
interface. - Telegraf promises to run each plugin's Gather function serially. This means developers don't have to worry about thread safety within these functions.
- Each generated metric automatically has the name of the plugin that generated it prepended. This is to keep plugins honest.
- Plugins should call
plugins.Add
in theirinit
function to register themselves. See below for a quick example. - To be available within Telegraf itself, plugins must add themselves to the
github.com/influxdb/telegraf/plugins/all/all.go
file. - The
SampleConfig
function should return valid toml that describes how the plugin can be configured. This is include intelegraf -sample-config
. - The
Description
function should say in one line what this plugin does.
Plugin interface
type Plugin interface {
SampleConfig() string
Description() string
Gather(Accumulator) error
}
type Accumulator interface {
Add(name string, value interface{}, tags map[string]string)
}
Accumulator
The way that a plugin emits metrics is by interacting with the Accumulator.
The Add
function takes 3 arguments:
- name: A string which names the metric. For instance
bytes_read
orfaults
. - value: A value for the metric. Ths accepts 5 different types of value:
- int: The most common type. All int types are accepted but favor using
int64
Useful for counters, etc. - float: Favor
float64
, useful for gauges, percentages, etc. - bool:
true
orfalse
, useful to indicate the presence of a state.light_on
, etc. - string: Typically used to indicate a message, or some kind of freeform information.
- time.Time: Useful for indicating when a state last occured, for instance
light_on_since
.
- int: The most common type. All int types are accepted but favor using
- tags: This is a map of strings to strings to describe the where or who about the metric. For instance, the
net
plugin adds a tag named"interface"
set to the name of the network interface, like"eth0"
.
Let's say you've written a plugin that emits metrics abuot processes on the current host.
type Process struct {
CPUTime float64
MemoryBytes int64
PID int
}
func Gather(acc plugins.Accumulator) error {
for _, process := range system.Processes() {
tags := map[string]string {
"pid": fmt.Sprintf("%d", process.Pid),
}
acc.Add("cpu", process.CPUTime, tags)
acc.Add("memoory", process.MemoryBytes, tags)
}
}
Example
// simple.go
import "github.com/influxdb/telegraf/plugins"
type Simple struct {
Ok bool
}
func (s *Simple) Description() string {
return "a demo plugin"
}
func (s *Simple) SampleConfig() string {
return "ok = true # indicate if everything is fine"
}
func (s *Simple) Gather(acc plugins.Accumulator) error {
if s.Ok {
acc.Add("state", "pretty good", nil)
} else {
acc.Add("state", "not great", nil)
}
return nil
}
func init() {
plugins.Add("simple", func() plugins.Plugin { &Simple{} })
}