Kafka and Graphite Integration
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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
This plugin allows you to gather metrics from Kafka topics in real-time, enhancing data monitoring and collection capabilities within your Telegraf setup.
The Graphite plugin enables users to send metrics collected by Telegraf into Graphite via TCP. This integration allows for efficient storage and visualization of time-series data using Graphite’s powerful capabilities.
Integration details
Kafka
The Kafka Telegraf plugin is designed to read data from Kafka topics and create metrics using supported input data formats. As a service input plugin, it listens continuously for incoming metrics and events, differing from standard input plugins that operate at fixed intervals. This particular plugin can utilize features from various Kafka versions and is capable of consuming messages from specified topics, applying configurations such as security credentials using SASL, and managing message processing with options for message offsets and consumer groups. The flexibility of this plugin allows it to handle a wide array of message formats and use cases, making it a valuable asset for applications relying on Kafka for data ingestion.
Graphite
This plugin writes metrics to Graphite via raw TCP, allowing for seamless integration of Telegraf collected metrics into the Graphite ecosystem. With this plugin, users can configure multiple TCP endpoints for load balancing, ensuring high availability and reliability in metric transmission. The ability to customize metric naming with prefixes and utilize various templating options enhances flexibility in how data is represented within Graphite. Additionally, support for Graphite tags and options for strict sanitization of metric names allow for robust data management, catering to the varying needs of users. This capability is essential for organizations looking to leverage Graphite’s powerful metrics storage and visualization while maintaining control over data representation.
Configuration
Kafka
[[inputs.kafka_consumer]]
## Kafka brokers.
brokers = ["localhost:9092"]
## Set the minimal supported Kafka version. Should be a string contains
## 4 digits in case if it is 0 version and 3 digits for versions starting
## from 1.0.0 separated by dot. This setting enables the use of new
## Kafka features and APIs. Must be 0.10.2.0(used as default) or greater.
## Please, check the list of supported versions at
## https://pkg.go.dev/github.com/Shopify/sarama#SupportedVersions
## ex: kafka_version = "2.6.0"
## ex: kafka_version = "0.10.2.0"
# kafka_version = "0.10.2.0"
## Topics to consume.
topics = ["telegraf"]
## Topic regular expressions to consume. Matches will be added to topics.
## Example: topic_regexps = [ "*test", "metric[0-9A-z]*" ]
# topic_regexps = [ ]
## When set this tag will be added to all metrics with the topic as the value.
# topic_tag = ""
## The list of Kafka message headers that should be pass as metric tags
## works only for Kafka version 0.11+, on lower versions the message headers
## are not available
# msg_headers_as_tags = []
## The name of kafka message header which value should override the metric name.
## In case when the same header specified in current option and in msg_headers_as_tags
## option, it will be excluded from the msg_headers_as_tags list.
# msg_header_as_metric_name = ""
## Set metric(s) timestamp using the given source.
## Available options are:
## metric -- do not modify the metric timestamp
## inner -- use the inner message timestamp (Kafka v0.10+)
## outer -- use the outer (compressed) block timestamp (Kafka v0.10+)
# timestamp_source = "metric"
## Optional Client id
# client_id = "Telegraf"
## Optional TLS Config
# enable_tls = false
# tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
# tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
# tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = false
## Period between keep alive probes.
## Defaults to the OS configuration if not specified or zero.
# keep_alive_period = "15s"
## SASL authentication credentials. These settings should typically be used
## with TLS encryption enabled
# sasl_username = "kafka"
# sasl_password = "secret"
## Optional SASL:
## one of: OAUTHBEARER, PLAIN, SCRAM-SHA-256, SCRAM-SHA-512, GSSAPI
## (defaults to PLAIN)
# sasl_mechanism = ""
## used if sasl_mechanism is GSSAPI
# sasl_gssapi_service_name = ""
# ## One of: KRB5_USER_AUTH and KRB5_KEYTAB_AUTH
# sasl_gssapi_auth_type = "KRB5_USER_AUTH"
# sasl_gssapi_kerberos_config_path = "/"
# sasl_gssapi_realm = "realm"
# sasl_gssapi_key_tab_path = ""
# sasl_gssapi_disable_pafxfast = false
## used if sasl_mechanism is OAUTHBEARER
# sasl_access_token = ""
## SASL protocol version. When connecting to Azure EventHub set to 0.
# sasl_version = 1
# Disable Kafka metadata full fetch
# metadata_full = false
## Name of the consumer group.
# consumer_group = "telegraf_metrics_consumers"
## Compression codec represents the various compression codecs recognized by
## Kafka in messages.
## 0 : None
## 1 : Gzip
## 2 : Snappy
## 3 : LZ4
## 4 : ZSTD
# compression_codec = 0
## Initial offset position; one of "oldest" or "newest".
# offset = "oldest"
## Consumer group partition assignment strategy; one of "range", "roundrobin" or "sticky".
# balance_strategy = "range"
## Maximum number of retries for metadata operations including
## connecting. Sets Sarama library's Metadata.Retry.Max config value. If 0 or
## unset, use the Sarama default of 3,
# metadata_retry_max = 0
## Type of retry backoff. Valid options: "constant", "exponential"
# metadata_retry_type = "constant"
## Amount of time to wait before retrying. When metadata_retry_type is
## "constant", each retry is delayed this amount. When "exponential", the
## first retry is delayed this amount, and subsequent delays are doubled. If 0
## or unset, use the Sarama default of 250 ms
# metadata_retry_backoff = 0
## Maximum amount of time to wait before retrying when metadata_retry_type is
## "exponential". Ignored for other retry types. If 0, there is no backoff
## limit.
# metadata_retry_max_duration = 0
## When set to true, this turns each bootstrap broker address into a set of
## IPs, then does a reverse lookup on each one to get its canonical hostname.
## This list of hostnames then replaces the original address list.
## resolve_canonical_bootstrap_servers_only = false
## Strategy for making connection to kafka brokers. Valid options: "startup",
## "defer". If set to "defer" the plugin is allowed to start before making a
## connection. This is useful if the broker may be down when telegraf is
## started, but if there are any typos in the broker setting, they will cause
## connection failures without warning at startup
# connection_strategy = "startup"
## Maximum length of a message to consume, in bytes (default 0/unlimited);
## larger messages are dropped
max_message_len = 1000000
## 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
## Maximum amount of time the consumer should take to process messages. If
## the debug log prints messages from sarama about 'abandoning subscription
## to [topic] because consuming was taking too long', increase this value to
## longer than the time taken by the output plugin(s).
##
## Note that the effective timeout could be between 'max_processing_time' and
## '2 * max_processing_time'.
# max_processing_time = "100ms"
## The default number of message bytes to fetch from the broker in each
## request (default 1MB). This should be larger than the majority of
## your messages, or else the consumer will spend a lot of time
## negotiating sizes and not actually consuming. Similar to the JVM's
## `fetch.message.max.bytes`.
# consumer_fetch_default = "1MB"
## 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"
Graphite
# Configuration for Graphite server to send metrics to
[[outputs.graphite]]
## TCP endpoint for your graphite instance.
## If multiple endpoints are configured, the output will be load balanced.
## Only one of the endpoints will be written to with each iteration.
servers = ["localhost:2003"]
## Local address to bind when connecting to the server
## If empty or not set, the local address is automatically chosen.
# local_address = ""
## Prefix metrics name
prefix = ""
## Graphite output template
## see https://github.com/influxdata/telegraf/blob/master/docs/DATA_FORMATS_OUTPUT.md
template = "host.tags.measurement.field"
## Strict sanitization regex
## This is the default sanitization regex that is used on data passed to the
## graphite serializer. Users can add additional characters here if required.
## Be aware that the characters, '/' '@' '*' are always replaced with '_',
## '..' is replaced with '.', and '\' is removed even if added to the
## following regex.
# graphite_strict_sanitize_regex = '[^a-zA-Z0-9-:._=\p{L}]'
## Enable Graphite tags support
# graphite_tag_support = false
## Applied sanitization mode when graphite tag support is enabled.
## * strict - uses the regex specified above
## * compatible - allows for greater number of characters
# graphite_tag_sanitize_mode = "strict"
## Character for separating metric name and field for Graphite tags
# graphite_separator = "."
## Graphite templates patterns
## 1. Template for cpu
## 2. Template for disk*
## 3. Default template
# templates = [
# "cpu tags.measurement.host.field",
# "disk* measurement.field",
# "host.measurement.tags.field"
#]
## timeout in seconds for the write connection to graphite
# timeout = "2s"
## Optional TLS Config
# tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
# tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
# tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = false
Input and output integration examples
Kafka
-
Real-Time Data Processing: Use the Kafka plugin to feed live data from a Kafka topic into a monitoring system. This can be particularly useful for applications that require instant feedback on performance metrics or user activity, allowing businesses to react more swiftly to changing conditions in their environments.
-
Dynamic Metrics Collection: Leverage this plugin to dynamically adjust the metrics being captured based on events occurring within Kafka. For instance, by integrating with other services, users can have the plugin reconfigure itself on-the-fly, ensuring relevant metrics are always collected according to the needs of the business or application.
-
Centralized Logging and Monitoring: Implement a centralized logging system using the Kafka Consumer Plugin to aggregate logs from multiple services into a unified monitoring dashboard. This setup can help identify issues across different services and improve overall system observability and troubleshooting capabilities.
-
Anomaly Detection System: Combine Kafka with machine learning algorithms for real-time anomaly detection. By constantly analyzing streaming data, this setup can automatically identify unusual patterns, triggering alerts and mitigating potential issues more effectively.
Graphite
-
Dynamic Metric Visualization: The Graphite plugin can be utilized to feed real-time metrics from various sources, such as application performance data or server health metrics, into Graphite. This dynamic integration allows teams to create interactive dashboards that visualize key performance indicators, track trends over time, and make data-driven decisions to enhance system performance.
-
Load Balanced Metrics Collection: By configuring multiple TCP endpoints within the plugin, organizations can implement load balancing for metric transmission. This use case ensures that metric delivery is both resilient and efficient, reducing the risk of data loss during high-traffic periods and maintaining a reliable flow of information to Graphite.
-
Customized Metrics Tagging: With support for Graphite tags, users can employ the Graphite plugin to enhance the granularity of their metrics. Tagging metrics with relevant information, such as application environment or service type, allows for more refined queries and analytics, enabling teams to drill down into specific areas of interest for better operational insights.
-
Enhanced Data Sanitization: Leveraging the plugin’s strict sanitization options, users can ensure that their metric names comply with Graphite’s requirements. This proactive measure eliminates potential issues arising from invalid characters in metric names, allowing for cleaner data management and more accurate visualizations.
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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