LDAP and Prometheus 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.
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Input and output integration overview
The LDAP plugin collects monitoring metrics from LDAP servers, including OpenLDAP and 389 Directory Server. This plugin is essential for tracking the performance and health of LDAP services, enabling administrators to gain insights into their directory operations.
The Prometheus Output Plugin enables Telegraf to expose metrics at an HTTP endpoint for scraping by a Prometheus server. This integration allows users to collect and aggregate metrics from various sources in a format that Prometheus can process efficiently.
Integration details
LDAP
This plugin gathers metrics from LDAP servers’ monitoring backend, specifically from the cn=Monitor
entries. It supports two prominent LDAP implementations: OpenLDAP and 389 Directory Server (389ds). With a focus on collecting various operational metrics, the LDAP plugin enables administrators to monitor performance, connection status, and server health in real-time, which is vital for maintaining robust directory services. By allowing customizable connection parameters and security configurations, such as TLS support, the plugin ensures compliance with best practices for security and performance. Metrics gathered can be instrumental in identifying trends, optimizing server configurations, and enforcing service-level agreements with stakeholders.
Prometheus
This plugin for facilitates the integration with Prometheus, a well-known open-source monitoring and alerting toolkit designed for reliability and efficiency in large-scale environments. By working as a Prometheus client, it allows users to expose a defined set of metrics via an HTTP server that Prometheus can scrape at specified intervals. This plugin plays a crucial role in monitoring diverse systems by allowing them to publish performance metrics in a standardized format, enabling extensive visibility into system health and behavior. Key features include support for configuring various endpoints, enabling TLS for secure communication, and options for HTTP basic authentication. The plugin also integrates seamlessly with global Telegraf configuration settings, supporting extensive customization to fit specific monitoring needs. This promotes interoperability in environments where different systems must communicate performance data effectively. Leveraging Prometheus’s metric format, it allows for flexible metric management through advanced configurations such as metric expiration and collectors control, offering a sophisticated solution for monitoring and alerting workflows.
Configuration
LDAP
[[inputs.ldap]]
## Server to monitor
## The scheme determines the mode to use for connection with
## ldap://... -- unencrypted (non-TLS) connection
## ldaps://... -- TLS connection
## starttls://... -- StartTLS connection
## If no port is given, the default ports, 389 for ldap and starttls and
## 636 for ldaps, are used.
server = "ldap://localhost"
## Server dialect, can be "openldap" or "389ds"
# dialect = "openldap"
# DN and password to bind with
## If bind_dn is empty an anonymous bind is performed.
bind_dn = ""
bind_password = ""
## Reverse the field names constructed from the monitoring DN
# reverse_field_names = false
## Optional TLS Config
## Set to true/false to enforce TLS being enabled/disabled. If not set,
## enable TLS only if any of the other options are specified.
# tls_enable =
## Trusted root certificates for server
# tls_ca = "/path/to/cafile"
## Used for TLS client certificate authentication
# tls_cert = "/path/to/certfile"
## Used for TLS client certificate authentication
# tls_key = "/path/to/keyfile"
## Password for the key file if it is encrypted
# tls_key_pwd = ""
## Send the specified TLS server name via SNI
# tls_server_name = "kubernetes.example.com"
## Minimal TLS version to accept by the client
# tls_min_version = "TLS12"
## List of ciphers to accept, by default all secure ciphers will be accepted
## See https://pkg.go.dev/crypto/tls#pkg-constants for supported values.
## Use "all", "secure" and "insecure" to add all support ciphers, secure
## suites or insecure suites respectively.
# tls_cipher_suites = ["secure"]
## Renegotiation method, "never", "once" or "freely"
# tls_renegotiation_method = "never"
## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
# insecure_skip_verify = false
Prometheus
[[outputs.prometheus_client]]
## Address to listen on.
## ex:
## listen = ":9273"
## listen = "vsock://:9273"
listen = ":9273"
## Maximum duration before timing out read of the request
# read_timeout = "10s"
## Maximum duration before timing out write of the response
# write_timeout = "10s"
## Metric version controls the mapping from Prometheus metrics into Telegraf metrics.
## See "Metric Format Configuration" in plugins/inputs/prometheus/README.md for details.
## Valid options: 1, 2
# metric_version = 1
## Use HTTP Basic Authentication.
# basic_username = "Foo"
# basic_password = "Bar"
## If set, the IP Ranges which are allowed to access metrics.
## ex: ip_range = ["192.168.0.0/24", "192.168.1.0/30"]
# ip_range = []
## Path to publish the metrics on.
# path = "/metrics"
## Expiration interval for each metric. 0 == no expiration
# expiration_interval = "60s"
## Collectors to enable, valid entries are "gocollector" and "process".
## If unset, both are enabled.
# collectors_exclude = ["gocollector", "process"]
## Send string metrics as Prometheus labels.
## Unless set to false all string metrics will be sent as labels.
# string_as_label = true
## If set, enable TLS with the given certificate.
# tls_cert = "/etc/ssl/telegraf.crt"
# tls_key = "/etc/ssl/telegraf.key"
## Set one or more allowed client CA certificate file names to
## enable mutually authenticated TLS connections
# tls_allowed_cacerts = ["/etc/telegraf/clientca.pem"]
## Export metric collection time.
# export_timestamp = false
## Specify the metric type explicitly.
## This overrides the metric-type of the Telegraf metric. Globbing is allowed.
# [outputs.prometheus_client.metric_types]
# counter = []
# gauge = []
Input and output integration examples
LDAP
-
Monitoring Directory Performance: Use the LDAP Telegraf plugin to continuously track and analyze the number of operations completed, initiated connections, and server response times. By visualizing this data over time, administrators can identify performance bottlenecks in directory services, enabling proactive optimization.
-
Alerting on Security Events: Integrate the plugin with an alerting system to notify administrators when certain metrics, such as
bind_security_errors
orunauth_binds
, exceed predefined thresholds. This setup can enhance security monitoring by providing real-time insights into potential unauthorized access attempts. -
Capacity Planning: Leverage the metrics collected by the LDAP plugin to perform capacity planning. Analyze connection trends, maximum threads in use, and operational statistics to forecast future resource needs, ensuring the LDAP server can handle expected peak loads without degrading performance.
-
Compliance and Auditing: Use the operational metrics obtained via this plugin to assist in compliance audits. By regularly checking metrics like
anonymous_binds
andsecurity_errors
, organizations can ensure that their directory services adhere to security policies and regulatory requirements.
Prometheus
-
Monitoring Multi-cloud Deployments: Utilize the Prometheus plugin to collect metrics from applications running across multiple cloud providers. This scenario allows teams to centralize monitoring through a single Prometheus instance that scrapes metrics from different environments, providing a unified view of performance metrics across hybrid infrastructures. It streamlines reporting and alerting, enhancing operational efficiency without needing complex integrations.
-
Enhancing Microservices Visibility: Implement the plugin to expose metrics from various microservices within a Kubernetes cluster. Using Prometheus, teams can visualize service metrics in real time, identify bottlenecks, and maintain system health checks. This setup supports adaptive scaling and resource utilization optimization based on insights generated from the collected metrics. It enhances the ability to troubleshoot service interactions, significantly improving the resilience of the microservice architecture.
-
Real-time Anomaly Detection in E-commerce: By leveraging this plugin alongside Prometheus, an e-commerce platform can monitor key performance indicators such as response times and error rates. Integrating anomaly detection algorithms with scraped metrics allows the identification of unexpected patterns indicating potential issues, such as sudden traffic spikes or backend service failure. This proactive monitoring empowers business continuity and operational efficiency, minimizing potential downtimes while ensuring service reliability.
-
Performance Metrics Reporting for APIs: Utilize the Prometheus Output Plugin to gather and report API performance metrics, which can then be visualized in Grafana dashboards. This use case enables detailed analysis of API response times, throughput, and error rates, promoting continuous improvement of API services. By closely monitoring these metrics, teams can quickly react to degradation, ensuring optimal API performance and maintaining a high level of service availability.
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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
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