# 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. # # Environment variables can be used anywhere in this config file, simply prepend # them with $. For strings the variable must be within quotes (ie, "$STR_VAR"), # for numbers and booleans they should be plain (ie, $INT_VAR, $BOOL_VAR) # Global tags can be specified here in key="value" format. [global_tags] dc = "us-east-1" # will tag all metrics with dc=us-east-1 rack = "1a" ## Environment variables can be used as tags, and throughout the config file user = "$USER" # Configuration for telegraf agent [agent] ## Default data collection interval for all inputs interval = "30s" ## Rounds collection interval to 'interval' ## ie, if interval="10s" then always collect on :00, :10, :20, etc. round_interval = true ## Telegraf will send metrics to outputs in batches of at most ## metric_batch_size metrics. ## This controls the size of writes that Telegraf sends to output plugins. metric_batch_size = 1000 ## For failed writes, telegraf will cache metric_buffer_limit metrics for each ## output, and will flush this buffer on a successful write. Oldest metrics ## are dropped first when this buffer fills. ## This buffer only fills when writes fail to output plugin(s). metric_buffer_limit = 10000 ## 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" ## By default or when set to "0s", precision will be set to the same ## timestamp order as the collection interval, with the maximum being 1s. ## ie, when interval = "10s", precision will be "1s" ## when interval = "250ms", precision will be "1ms" ## Precision will NOT be used for service inputs. It is up to each individual ## service input to set the timestamp at the appropriate precision. ## Valid time units are "ns", "us" (or "µs"), "ms", "s". precision = "" ## Logging configuration: ## Run telegraf with debug log messages. debug = false ## Run telegraf in quiet mode (error log messages only). quiet = false ## Specify the log file name. The empty string means to log to stderr. logfile = "" ## Override default hostname, if empty use os.Hostname() hostname = "" ## If set to true, do no set the "host" tag in the telegraf agent. omit_hostname = false ############################################################################### # OUTPUT PLUGINS # ############################################################################### # Configuration for influxdb server to send metrics to [[outputs.influxdb]] ## The full HTTP or UDP URL for your InfluxDB instance. ## ## Multiple urls can be specified as 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 = ["https://meiling.example.com:8086"] # required ## The target database for metrics (telegraf will create it if not exists). database = "hath_client_metrics" # required ## Name of existing retention policy to write to. Empty string writes to ## the default retention policy. retention_policy = "" ## Write consistency (clusters only), can be: "any", "one", "quorum", "all" write_consistency = "any" ## 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 = "hath_client_telegraf" password = "clientpass" ## 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 ## Optional SSL Config # ssl_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem" # ssl_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem" # ssl_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem" ## Use SSL but skip chain & host verification # insecure_skip_verify = false ## HTTP Proxy Config # http_proxy = "http://corporate.proxy:3128" ## Optional HTTP headers # http_headers = {"X-Special-Header" = "Special-Value"} ## Compress each HTTP request payload using GZIP. # content_encoding = "gzip" ############################################################################### # INPUT PLUGINS # ############################################################################### # 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 ## If true, collect raw CPU time metrics. collect_cpu_time = false ## If true, compute and report the sum of all non-idle CPU states. report_active = false # 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"] # 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 need disk serial numbers. # skip_serial_number = false # ## On systems which support it, device metadata can be added in the form of ## tags. ## Currently only Linux is supported via udev properties. You can view ## available properties for a device by running: ## 'udevadm info -q property -n /dev/sda' # device_tags = ["ID_FS_TYPE", "ID_FS_USAGE"] # ## Using the same metadata source as device_tags, you can also customize the ## name of the device via templates. ## The 'name_templates' parameter is a list of templates to try and apply to ## the device. The template may contain variables in the form of '$PROPERTY' or ## '${PROPERTY}'. The first template which does not contain any variables not ## present for the device is used as the device name tag. ## The typical use case is for LVM volumes, to get the VG/LV name instead of ## the near-meaningless DM-0 name. # name_templates = ["$ID_FS_LABEL","$DM_VG_NAME/$DM_LV_NAME"] # Read metrics about memory usage [[inputs.mem]] # no configuration # Read metrics about swap memory usage [[inputs.swap]] # no configuration # Read metrics about system load & uptime [[inputs.system]] # no configuration # # Read metrics about network interface usage [[inputs.net]] # ## By default, telegraf gathers stats from any up interface (excluding loopback) # ## Setting interfaces will tell it to gather these explicit interfaces, # ## regardless of status. # ## # # interfaces = ["eth0"]