Azure Event Hubs and MongoDB Integration
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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 Azure Event Hubs Input Plugin allows Telegraf to consume data from Azure Event Hubs and Azure IoT Hub, enabling efficient data processing and monitoring of event streams from these cloud services.
The MongoDB Telegraf Plugin enables users to send metrics to a MongoDB database, automatically managing time series collections.
Integration details
Azure Event Hubs
This plugin serves as a consumer for Azure Event Hubs and Azure IoT Hub, allowing users to ingest data streams from these platforms efficiently. Azure Event Hubs is a highly scalable data streaming platform and event ingestion service capable of receiving and processing millions of events per second, while Azure IoT Hub enables secure device-to-cloud and cloud-to-device communication in IoT applications. The Event Hub Input Plugin interacts seamlessly with these services, providing reliable message consumption and stream processing capabilities. Key features include dynamic management of consumer groups, message tracking to prevent data loss, and customizable settings for prefetch counts, user agents, and metadata handling. This plugin is designed to support a range of use cases, including real-time telemetry data collection, IoT data processing, and integration with various data analysis and monitoring tools within the broader Azure ecosystem.
MongoDB
This plugin sends metrics to MongoDB and seamlessly integrates with its time series functionality, allowing for automatic creation of collections as time series when they don’t already exist. It requires MongoDB version 5.0 or higher to utilize the time series collections feature, which is vital for efficiently storing and querying time-based data. This plugin enhances the monitoring capabilities by ensuring that all relevant metrics are stored and organized correctly within MongoDB, providing users the ability to leverage MongoDB’s powerful querying and aggregation features for time series analysis.
Configuration
Azure Event Hubs
[[inputs.eventhub_consumer]]
## The default behavior is to create a new Event Hub client from environment variables.
## This requires one of the following sets of environment variables to be set:
##
## 1) Expected Environment Variables:
## - "EVENTHUB_CONNECTION_STRING"
##
## 2) Expected Environment Variables:
## - "EVENTHUB_NAMESPACE"
## - "EVENTHUB_NAME"
## - "EVENTHUB_KEY_NAME"
## - "EVENTHUB_KEY_VALUE"
## 3) Expected Environment Variables:
## - "EVENTHUB_NAMESPACE"
## - "EVENTHUB_NAME"
## - "AZURE_TENANT_ID"
## - "AZURE_CLIENT_ID"
## - "AZURE_CLIENT_SECRET"
## Uncommenting the option below will create an Event Hub client based solely on the connection string.
## This can either be the associated environment variable or hard coded directly.
## If this option is uncommented, environment variables will be ignored.
## Connection string should contain EventHubName (EntityPath)
# connection_string = ""
## Set persistence directory to a valid folder to use a file persister instead of an in-memory persister
# persistence_dir = ""
## Change the default consumer group
# consumer_group = ""
## By default the event hub receives all messages present on the broker, alternative modes can be set below.
## The timestamp should be in https://github.com/toml-lang/toml#offset-date-time format (RFC 3339).
## The 3 options below only apply if no valid persister is read from memory or file (e.g. first run).
# from_timestamp =
# latest = true
## Set a custom prefetch count for the receiver(s)
# prefetch_count = 1000
## Add an epoch to the receiver(s)
# epoch = 0
## Change to set a custom user agent, "telegraf" is used by default
# user_agent = "telegraf"
## To consume from a specific partition, set the partition_ids option.
## An empty array will result in receiving from all partitions.
# partition_ids = ["0","1"]
## Max undelivered messages
## This plugin uses tracking metrics, which ensure messages are read to
## outputs before acknowledging them to the original broker to ensure data
## is not lost. This option sets the maximum messages to read from the
## broker that have not been written by an output.
##
## This value needs to be picked with awareness of the agent's
## metric_batch_size value as well. Setting max undelivered messages too high
## can result in a constant stream of data batches to the output. While
## setting it too low may never flush the broker's messages.
# max_undelivered_messages = 1000
## Set either option below to true to use a system property as timestamp.
## You have the choice between EnqueuedTime and IoTHubEnqueuedTime.
## It is recommended to use this setting when the data itself has no timestamp.
# enqueued_time_as_ts = true
# iot_hub_enqueued_time_as_ts = true
## Tags or fields to create from keys present in the application property bag.
## These could for example be set by message enrichments in Azure IoT Hub.
# application_property_tags = []
# application_property_fields = []
## Tag or field name to use for metadata
## By default all metadata is disabled
# sequence_number_field = "SequenceNumber"
# enqueued_time_field = "EnqueuedTime"
# offset_field = "Offset"
# partition_id_tag = "PartitionID"
# partition_key_tag = "PartitionKey"
# iot_hub_device_connection_id_tag = "IoTHubDeviceConnectionID"
# iot_hub_auth_generation_id_tag = "IoTHubAuthGenerationID"
# iot_hub_connection_auth_method_tag = "IoTHubConnectionAuthMethod"
# iot_hub_connection_module_id_tag = "IoTHubConnectionModuleID"
# iot_hub_enqueued_time_field = "IoTHubEnqueuedTime"
## Data format to consume.
## Each data format has its own unique set of configuration options, read
## more about them here:
## https://github.com/influxdata/telegraf/blob/master/docs/DATA_FORMATS_INPUT.md
data_format = "influx"
MongoDB
[[outputs.mongodb]]
# connection string examples for mongodb
dsn = "mongodb://localhost:27017"
# dsn = "mongodb://mongod1:27017,mongod2:27017,mongod3:27017/admin&replicaSet=myReplSet&w=1"
# overrides serverSelectionTimeoutMS in dsn if set
# timeout = "30s"
# default authentication, optional
# authentication = "NONE"
# for SCRAM-SHA-256 authentication
# authentication = "SCRAM"
# username = "root"
# password = "***"
# for x509 certificate authentication
# authentication = "X509"
# tls_ca = "ca.pem"
# tls_key = "client.pem"
# # tls_key_pwd = "changeme" # required for encrypted tls_key
# insecure_skip_verify = false
# database to store measurements and time series collections
# database = "telegraf"
# granularity can be seconds, minutes, or hours.
# configuring this value will be based on your input collection frequency.
# see https://docs.mongodb.com/manual/core/timeseries-collections/#create-a-time-series-collection
# granularity = "seconds"
# optionally set a TTL to automatically expire documents from the measurement collections.
# ttl = "360h"
Input and output integration examples
Azure Event Hubs
-
Real-Time IoT Device Monitoring: Use the Azure Event Hubs Plugin to monitor telemetry data from IoT devices like sensors and actuators. By streaming device data into monitoring dashboards, organizations can gain insights into system performances, track usage patterns, and quickly respond to irregularities. This setup allows for proactive management of devices, improving operational efficiency and reducing downtime.
-
Event-Driven Data Processing Workflows: Leverage this plugin to trigger data processing workflows in response to events received from Azure Event Hubs. For instance, when a new event arrives, it can initiate data transformation, aggregation, or storage processes, allowing businesses to automate their workflows more effectively. This integration enhances responsiveness and streamlines operations across systems.
-
Integration with Analytics Platforms: Implement the plugin to funnel event data into analytics platforms like Azure Synapse or Power BI. By integrating real-time streaming data into analytics tools, organizations can perform comprehensive data analysis, drive business intelligence efforts, and create interactive visualizations that inform decision-making.
-
Cross-Platform Data Sync: Utilize the Azure Event Hubs Plugin to synchronize data streams across diverse systems or platforms. By consuming data from Azure Event Hubs and forwarding it to other systems like databases or cloud storage, organizations can maintain consistent and up-to-date information across their entire architecture, enabling cohesive data strategies.
MongoDB
-
Dynamic Logging to MongoDB for IoT Devices: Utilize this plugin to collect and store metrics from a fleet of IoT devices in real-time. By sending device logs directly to MongoDB, you can create a centralized database that allows for easy access and querying of health metrics and performance data, enabling proactive maintenance and troubleshooting based on historical trends.
-
Time Series Analysis of Web Traffic: Use the MongoDB Telegraf Plugin to gather and analyze web traffic metrics over time. This application can help you understand peak usage times, user interactions, and behavior patterns, which can guide marketing strategies and infrastructure scaling decisions for improved user experience.
-
Automated Monitoring and Alerting System: Integrate the MongoDB plugin into an automated monitoring system that tracks application performance metrics. With time series collections, you can set up alerts based on specific thresholds, allowing your team to respond to potential issues before they affect users. This proactive management can enhance service reliability and overall performance.
-
Data Retention and TTL Management in Metrics Storage: Leverage the TTL feature for documents within MongoDB collections to auto-expire outdated metrics. This is particularly useful for environments where only recent performance data is relevant, preventing your MongoDB database from becoming cluttered with old metrics and ensuring efficient data management.
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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