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Preferring Kustomize to make last-mile alterations, instead of relying on the Helm template generation, allows the helm chart to be included in the base. |
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charts/kube-state-metrics | ||
templates | ||
.helmignore | ||
Chart.lock | ||
Chart.yaml | ||
README.md | ||
values.yaml |
README.md
Prometheus
Prometheus, a Cloud Native Computing Foundation project, is a systems and service monitoring system. It collects metrics from configured targets at given intervals, evaluates rule expressions, displays the results, and can trigger alerts if some condition is observed to be true.
This chart bootstraps a Prometheus deployment on a Kubernetes cluster using the Helm package manager.
Prerequisites
- Kubernetes 1.16+
- Helm 3+
Get Repo Info
helm repo add prometheus-community https://prometheus-community.github.io/helm-charts
helm repo update
See helm repo for command documentation.
Install Chart
helm install [RELEASE_NAME] prometheus-community/prometheus
See configuration below.
See helm install for command documentation.
Dependencies
By default this chart installs additional, dependent charts:
To disable the dependency during installation, set kubeStateMetrics.enabled
to false
.
See helm dependency for command documentation.
Uninstall Chart
helm uninstall [RELEASE_NAME]
This removes all the Kubernetes components associated with the chart and deletes the release.
See helm uninstall for command documentation.
Upgrading Chart
helm upgrade [RELEASE_NAME] [CHART] --install
See helm upgrade for command documentation.
To 15.0
Version 15.0.0 changes the relabeling config, aligning it with the Prometheus community conventions. If you've made manual changes to the relabeling config, you have to adapt your changes.
Before you update please execute the following command, to be able to update kube-state-metrics:
kubectl delete deployments.apps -l app.kubernetes.io/instance=prometheus,app.kubernetes.io/name=kube-state-metrics --cascade=orphan
To 9.0
Version 9.0 adds a new option to enable or disable the Prometheus Server. This supports the use case of running a Prometheus server in one k8s cluster and scraping exporters in another cluster while using the same chart for each deployment. To install the server server.enabled
must be set to true
.
To 5.0
As of version 5.0, this chart uses Prometheus 2.x. This version of prometheus introduces a new data format and is not compatible with prometheus 1.x. It is recommended to install this as a new release, as updating existing releases will not work. See the prometheus docs for instructions on retaining your old data.
Prometheus version 2.x has made changes to alertmanager, storage and recording rules. Check out the migration guide here.
Users of this chart will need to update their alerting rules to the new format before they can upgrade.
Example Migration
Assuming you have an existing release of the prometheus chart, named prometheus-old
. In order to update to prometheus 2.x while keeping your old data do the following:
- Update the
prometheus-old
release. Disable scraping on every component besides the prometheus server, similar to the configuration below:
alertmanager:
enabled: false
alertmanagerFiles:
alertmanager.yml: ""
kubeStateMetrics:
enabled: false
nodeExporter:
enabled: false
pushgateway:
enabled: false
server:
extraArgs:
storage.local.retention: 720h
serverFiles:
alerts: ""
prometheus.yml: ""
rules: ""
-
Deploy a new release of the chart with version 5.0+ using prometheus 2.x. In the values.yaml set the scrape config as usual, and also add the
prometheus-old
instance as a remote-read target.prometheus.yml: ... remote_read: - url: http://prometheus-old/api/v1/read ...
Old data will be available when you query the new prometheus instance.
Configuration
See Customizing the Chart Before Installing. To see all configurable options with detailed comments, visit the chart's values.yaml, or run these configuration commands:
helm show values prometheus-community/prometheus
You may similarly use the above configuration commands on each chart dependency to see it's configurations.
Scraping Pod Metrics via Annotations
This chart uses a default configuration that causes prometheus to scrape a variety of kubernetes resource types, provided they have the correct annotations. In this section we describe how to configure pods to be scraped; for information on how other resource types can be scraped you can do a helm template
to get the kubernetes resource definitions, and then reference the prometheus configuration in the ConfigMap against the prometheus documentation for relabel_config and kubernetes_sd_config.
In order to get prometheus to scrape pods, you must add annotations to the the pods as below:
metadata:
annotations:
prometheus.io/scrape: "true"
prometheus.io/path: /metrics
prometheus.io/port: "8080"
You should adjust prometheus.io/path
based on the URL that your pod serves metrics from. prometheus.io/port
should be set to the port that your pod serves metrics from. Note that the values for prometheus.io/scrape
and prometheus.io/port
must be enclosed in double quotes.
Sharing Alerts Between Services
Note that when installing or upgrading you may use multiple values override files. This is particularly useful when you have alerts belonging to multiple services in the cluster. For example,
# values.yaml
# ...
# service1-alert.yaml
serverFiles:
alerts:
service1:
- alert: anAlert
# ...
# service2-alert.yaml
serverFiles:
alerts:
service2:
- alert: anAlert
# ...
helm install [RELEASE_NAME] prometheus-community/prometheus -f values.yaml -f service1-alert.yaml -f service2-alert.yaml
RBAC Configuration
Roles and RoleBindings resources will be created automatically for server
service.
To manually setup RBAC you need to set the parameter rbac.create=false
and specify the service account to be used for each service by setting the parameters: serviceAccounts.{{ component }}.create
to false
and serviceAccounts.{{ component }}.name
to the name of a pre-existing service account.
Tip: You can refer to the default
*-clusterrole.yaml
and*-clusterrolebinding.yaml
files in templates to customize your own.
ConfigMap Files
AlertManager is configured through alertmanager.yml. This file (and any others listed in alertmanagerFiles
) will be mounted into the alertmanager
pod.
Prometheus is configured through prometheus.yml. This file (and any others listed in serverFiles
) will be mounted into the server
pod.
Ingress TLS
If your cluster allows automatic creation/retrieval of TLS certificates (e.g. cert-manager), please refer to the documentation for that mechanism.
To manually configure TLS, first create/retrieve a key & certificate pair for the address(es) you wish to protect. Then create a TLS secret in the namespace:
kubectl create secret tls prometheus-server-tls --cert=path/to/tls.cert --key=path/to/tls.key
Include the secret's name, along with the desired hostnames, in the alertmanager/server Ingress TLS section of your custom values.yaml
file:
server:
ingress:
## If true, Prometheus server Ingress will be created
##
enabled: true
## Prometheus server Ingress hostnames
## Must be provided if Ingress is enabled
##
hosts:
- prometheus.domain.com
## Prometheus server Ingress TLS configuration
## Secrets must be manually created in the namespace
##
tls:
- secretName: prometheus-server-tls
hosts:
- prometheus.domain.com
NetworkPolicy
Enabling Network Policy for Prometheus will secure connections to Alert Manager and Kube State Metrics by only accepting connections from Prometheus Server. All inbound connections to Prometheus Server are still allowed.
To enable network policy for Prometheus, install a networking plugin that implements the Kubernetes NetworkPolicy spec, and set networkPolicy.enabled
to true.
If NetworkPolicy is enabled for Prometheus' scrape targets, you may also need to manually create a networkpolicy which allows it.