DNS and Cortex Integration
Powerful performance with an easy integration, powered by Telegraf, the open source data connector built by InfluxData.
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Table of Contents
Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale
Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.
See Ways to Get Started
Input and output integration overview
The DNS plugin enables users to monitor and gather statistics on DNS query times, facilitating performance analysis of DNS resolutions.
This plugin enables Telegraf to send metrics to Cortex using the Prometheus remote write protocol, allowing seamless ingestion into Cortex’s scalable, multi-tenant time series storage.
Integration details
DNS
This plugin gathers DNS query times in milliseconds, utilizing the capabilities of DNS queries similar to the Dig command. It provides a means to monitor and analyze DNS performance by measuring the response time from specified DNS servers, allowing network administrators and engineers to ensure optimal DNS resolution times. The plugin can be configured to target specific servers and customize the types of records queried, encompassing various DNS features such as resolving domain names to IP addresses, or retrieving details from specific records as needed, while also clearly reporting on the success or failure of each query, alongside relevant metadata.
Cortex
With Telegraf’s HTTP output plugin and the prometheusremotewrite
data format you can send metrics directly to Cortex, a horizontally scalable, long-term storage backend for Prometheus. Cortex supports multi-tenancy and accepts remote write requests using the Prometheus protobuf format. By using Telegraf as the collection agent and Remote Write as the transport mechanism, organizations can extend observability into sources not natively supported by Prometheus—such as Windows hosts, SNMP-enabled devices, or custom application metrics—while leveraging Cortex’s high-availability and long-retention capabilities.
Configuration
DNS
[[inputs.dns_query]]
servers = ["8.8.8.8"]
# network = "udp"
# domains = ["."]
# record_type = "A"
# port = 53
# timeout = "2s"
# include_fields = []
Cortex
[[outputs.http]]
## Cortex Remote Write endpoint
url = "http://cortex.example.com/api/v1/push"
## Use POST to send data
method = "POST"
## Send metrics using Prometheus remote write format
data_format = "prometheusremotewrite"
## Optional HTTP headers for authentication
# [outputs.http.headers]
# X-Scope-OrgID = "your-tenant-id"
# Authorization = "Bearer YOUR_API_TOKEN"
## Optional TLS configuration
# tls_ca = "/path/to/ca.pem"
# tls_cert = "/path/to/cert.pem"
# tls_key = "/path/to/key.pem"
# insecure_skip_verify = false
## Request timeout
timeout = "10s"
Input and output integration examples
DNS
-
Monitor DNS Performance for Multiple Servers: By deploying the DNS plugin, a user can simultaneously monitor the performance of different DNS servers, such as Google DNS and Cloudflare DNS, by specifying them in the
servers
array. This scenario enables comparisons of response times and reliability across different DNS providers, assisting in selecting the best option based on empirical data. -
Analyze Query Times for High-Traffic Domains: Integrate the plugin to measure response times specifically for high-traffic domains relevant to an organization’s operations, such as internal services or customer-facing sites. By focusing on performance metrics for these domains, organizations can proactively address latency issues, ensuring service reliability and improving user experiences.
-
Alerting on DNS Timeouts: Utilize the plugin in combination with alerting systems to notify administrators whenever a DNS query exceeds a defined timeout threshold. This setup can help in proactive troubleshooting of networking issues or server misconfigurations, fostering a rapid response to potential downtime scenarios.
-
Gather Historical Data for Performance Trends: Use the plugin to collect historical data on DNS query times over extended periods. This data can be used to analyze trends and patterns in DNS performance, enabling better capacity planning, identifying periodic issues, and justifying infrastructure upgrades or changes to DNS architectures.
Cortex
-
Unified Multi-Tenant Monitoring: Use Telegraf to collect metrics from different teams or environments and push them to Cortex with separate
X-Scope-OrgID
headers. This enables isolated data ingestion and querying per tenant, ideal for managed services and platform teams. -
Extending Prometheus Coverage to Edge Devices: Deploy Telegraf on edge or IoT devices to collect system metrics and send them to a centralized Cortex cluster. This approach ensures consistent observability even for environments without local Prometheus scrapers.
-
Global Service Observability with Federated Tenants: Aggregate metrics from global infrastructure by configuring Telegraf agents to push data into regional Cortex clusters, each tagged with tenant identifiers. Cortex handles deduplication and centralized access across regions.
-
Custom App Telemetry Pipeline: Collect app-specific telemetry via Telegraf’s
exec
orhttp
input plugins and forward it to Cortex. This allows DevOps teams to monitor app-specific KPIs in a scalable, query-efficient format while keeping metrics logically grouped by tenant or service.
Feedback
Thank you for being part of our community! If you have any general feedback or found any bugs on these pages, we welcome and encourage your input. Please submit your feedback in the InfluxDB community Slack.
Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale
Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.
See Ways to Get Started
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