telegraf/etc/telegraf_windows.conf

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# Telegraf configuration
# Telegraf is entirely plugin driven. All metrics are gathered from the
# declared inputs, and sent to the declared outputs.
# Plugins must be declared in here to be active.
# To deactivate a plugin, comment out the name and any variables.
# Use 'telegraf -config telegraf.conf -test' to see what metrics a config
# file would generate.
# Global tags can be specified here in key="value" format.
[global_tags]
# dc = "us-east-1" # will tag all metrics with dc=us-east-1
# rack = "1a"
# Configuration for telegraf agent
[agent]
## Default data collection interval for all inputs
interval = "10s"
## Rounds collection interval to 'interval'
## ie, if interval="10s" then always collect on :00, :10, :20, etc.
round_interval = true
## Telegraf will cache metric_buffer_limit metrics for each output, and will
## flush this buffer on a successful write.
metric_buffer_limit = 1000
## Flush the buffer whenever full, regardless of flush_interval.
flush_buffer_when_full = true
## Collection jitter is used to jitter the collection by a random amount.
## Each plugin will sleep for a random time within jitter before collecting.
## This can be used to avoid many plugins querying things like sysfs at the
## same time, which can have a measurable effect on the system.
collection_jitter = "0s"
## Default flushing interval for all outputs. You shouldn't set this below
## interval. Maximum flush_interval will be flush_interval + flush_jitter
flush_interval = "10s"
## Jitter the flush interval by a random amount. This is primarily to avoid
## large write spikes for users running a large number of telegraf instances.
## ie, a jitter of 5s and interval 10s means flushes will happen every 10-15s
flush_jitter = "0s"
## Logging configuration:
## Run telegraf in debug mode
debug = false
## Run telegraf in quiet mode
quiet = false
## Specify the log file name. The empty string means to log to stdout.
logfile = "/Program Files/Telegraf/telegraf.log"
## Override default hostname, if empty use os.Hostname()
hostname = ""
###############################################################################
# OUTPUTS #
###############################################################################
# Configuration for influxdb server to send metrics to
[[outputs.influxdb]]
# The full HTTP or UDP endpoint URL for your InfluxDB instance.
# Multiple urls can be specified but it is assumed that they are part of the same
# cluster, this means that only ONE of the urls will be written to each interval.
# urls = ["udp://127.0.0.1:8089"] # UDP endpoint example
urls = ["http://127.0.0.1:8086"] # required
# The target database for metrics (telegraf will create it if not exists)
database = "telegraf" # required
# Precision of writes, valid values are "ns", "us" (or "µs"), "ms", "s", "m", "h".
# note: using second precision greatly helps InfluxDB compression
precision = "s"
## Write timeout (for the InfluxDB client), formatted as a string.
## If not provided, will default to 5s. 0s means no timeout (not recommended).
timeout = "5s"
# username = "telegraf"
# password = "metricsmetricsmetricsmetrics"
# Set the user agent for HTTP POSTs (can be useful for log differentiation)
# user_agent = "telegraf"
# Set UDP payload size, defaults to InfluxDB UDP Client default (512 bytes)
# udp_payload = 512
###############################################################################
# INPUTS #
###############################################################################
# Windows Performance Counters plugin.
# These are the recommended method of monitoring system metrics on windows,
# as the regular system plugins (inputs.cpu, inputs.mem, etc.) rely on WMI,
# which utilize more system resources.
#
# See more configuration examples at:
# https://github.com/influxdata/telegraf/tree/master/plugins/inputs/win_perf_counters
[[inputs.win_perf_counters]]
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
# Processor usage, alternative to native, reports on a per core.
ObjectName = "Processor"
Instances = ["*"]
Counters = [
"% Idle Time",
"% Interrupt Time",
"% Privileged Time",
"% User Time",
"% Processor Time",
"% DPC Time",
]
Measurement = "win_cpu"
# Set to true to include _Total instance when querying for all (*).
IncludeTotal=true
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
# Disk times and queues
ObjectName = "LogicalDisk"
Instances = ["*"]
Counters = [
"% Idle Time",
"% Disk Time",
"% Disk Read Time",
"% Disk Write Time",
"Current Disk Queue Length",
"% Free Space",
"Free Megabytes",
]
Measurement = "win_disk"
# Set to true to include _Total instance when querying for all (*).
#IncludeTotal=false
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
ObjectName = "PhysicalDisk"
Instances = ["*"]
Counters = [
"Disk Read Bytes/sec",
"Disk Write Bytes/sec",
"Current Disk Queue Length",
"Disk Reads/sec",
"Disk Writes/sec",
"% Disk Time",
"% Disk Read Time",
"% Disk Write Time",
]
Measurement = "win_diskio"
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
ObjectName = "Network Interface"
Instances = ["*"]
Counters = [
"Bytes Received/sec",
"Bytes Sent/sec",
"Packets Received/sec",
"Packets Sent/sec",
"Packets Received Discarded",
"Packets Outbound Discarded",
"Packets Received Errors",
"Packets Outbound Errors",
]
Measurement = "win_net"
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
ObjectName = "System"
Counters = [
"Context Switches/sec",
"System Calls/sec",
"Processor Queue Length",
"System Up Time",
]
Instances = ["------"]
Measurement = "win_system"
# Set to true to include _Total instance when querying for all (*).
#IncludeTotal=false
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
# Example query where the Instance portion must be removed to get data back,
# such as from the Memory object.
ObjectName = "Memory"
Counters = [
"Available Bytes",
"Cache Faults/sec",
"Demand Zero Faults/sec",
"Page Faults/sec",
"Pages/sec",
"Transition Faults/sec",
"Pool Nonpaged Bytes",
"Pool Paged Bytes",
"Standby Cache Reserve Bytes",
"Standby Cache Normal Priority Bytes",
"Standby Cache Core Bytes",
]
# Use 6 x - to remove the Instance bit from the query.
Instances = ["------"]
Measurement = "win_mem"
# Set to true to include _Total instance when querying for all (*).
#IncludeTotal=false
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
# Example query where the Instance portion must be removed to get data back,
# such as from the Paging File object.
ObjectName = "Paging File"
Counters = [
"% Usage",
]
Instances = ["_Total"]
Measurement = "win_swap"
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
ObjectName = "Network Interface"
Instances = ["*"]
Counters = [
"Bytes Sent/sec",
"Bytes Received/sec",
"Packets Sent/sec",
"Packets Received/sec",
"Packets Received Discarded",
"Packets Received Errors",
"Packets Outbound Discarded",
"Packets Outbound Errors",
]
# Windows system plugins using WMI (disabled by default, using
# win_perf_counters over WMI is recommended)
# # Read metrics about cpu usage
# [[inputs.cpu]]
# ## Whether to report per-cpu stats or not
# percpu = true
# ## Whether to report total system cpu stats or not
# totalcpu = true
# ## Comment this line if you want the raw CPU time metrics
# fielddrop = ["time_*"]
# # Read metrics about disk usage by mount point
# [[inputs.disk]]
# ## By default, telegraf gather stats for all mountpoints.
# ## Setting mountpoints will restrict the stats to the specified mountpoints.
# ## mount_points=["/"]
#
# ## Ignore some mountpoints by filesystem type. For example (dev)tmpfs (usually
# ## present on /run, /var/run, /dev/shm or /dev).
# # ignore_fs = ["tmpfs", "devtmpfs", "devfs", "overlay", "aufs", "squashfs"]
# # Read metrics about disk IO by device
# [[inputs.diskio]]
# ## By default, telegraf will gather stats for all devices including
# ## disk partitions.
# ## Setting devices will restrict the stats to the specified devices.
# ## devices = ["sda", "sdb"]
# ## Uncomment the following line if you do not need disk serial numbers.
# ## skip_serial_number = true
# # Read metrics about memory usage
# [[inputs.mem]]
# # no configuration
# # Read metrics about swap memory usage
# [[inputs.swap]]
# # no configuration