This document describes the design and interaction between the third party resources that the Prometheus Operator introduces.
The third party resources that the Prometheus Operator introduces are:
Prometheus
ServiceMonitor
Alertmanager
The Prometheus
third party resource (TPR) declaratively defines a desired Prometheus setup to run in a Kubernetes cluster. It provides options to configure replication, persistent storage, and Alertmanagers to which the deployed Prometheus instances send alerts to.
For each Prometheus
TPR, the Operator deploys a properly configured StatefulSet
in the same namespace. The Prometheus Pod
s are configured to mount a Secret
called <prometheus-name>
containing the configuration for Prometheus.
The TPR allows to specify which ServiceMonitor
s should be covered by the deployed Prometheus instances based on label selection. The Operator then generates a configuration based on the included ServiceMonitor
s and updates it in the Secret
containing the configuration. It continuously does so for all changes that are made to ServiceMonitor
s or the Prometheus
TPR itself.
If no selection of ServiceMonitor
s is provided, the Operator leaves management of the Secret
to the user, which allows to provide custom configurations while still benefiting from the Operator's capabilities of managing Prometheus setups.
The ServiceMonitor
third party resource (TPR) allows to declaratively define how a dynamic set of services should be monitored. Which services are selected to be monitored with the desired configuration is defined using label selections. This allows an organization to introduce conventions around how metrics are exposed, and then following these conventions new services are automatically discovered, without the need to reconfigure the system.
For Prometheus to monitor any application within Kubernetes an Endpoints
object needs to exist. Endpoints
objects are essentially lists of IP addresses. Typically an Endpoints
object is populated by a Service
object. A Service
object discovers Pod
s by a label selector and adds those to the Endpoints
object.
A Service
may expose one or more service ports, which are backed by a list of multiple endpoints that point to a Pod
in the common case. This is reflected in the respective Endpoints
object as well.
The ServiceMonitor
object introduced by the Prometheus Operator in turn discovers those Endpoints
objects and configures Prometheus to monitor those Pod
s.
The endpoints
section of the ServiceMonitorSpec
, is used to configure which ports of these Endpoints
are going to be scraped for metrics, and with which parameters. For advanced use cases one may want to monitor ports of backing Pod
s, which are not directly part of the service endpoints. Therefore when specifying an endpoint in the endpoints
section, they are strictly used.
Note:
endpoints
(lowercase) is the TPR field, whileEndpoints
(capitalized) is the Kubernetes object kind.
While ServiceMonitor
s must live in the same namespace as the Prometheus
TPR, discovered targets may come from any namespace. This is important to allow cross-namespace monitoring use cases, e.g. for meta-monitoring. Using the namespaceSelector
of the ServiceMonitorSpec
, one can restrict the namespaces the Endpoints
objects are allowed to be discovered from.
The Alertmanager
third party resource (TPR) declaratively defines a desired Alertmanager setup to run in a Kubernetes cluster. It provides options to configure replication and persistent storage.
For each Alertmanager
TPR, the Operator deploys a properly configured StatefulSet
in the same namespace. The Alertmanager pods are configured to include a Secret
called <alertmanager-name>
which holds the used configuration file in the key alertmanager.yaml
.
When there are two or more configured replicas the operator runs the Alertmanager instances in high availability mode.