Apache Storm version 1.2 introduced a new metrics system for reporting internal statistics (e.g. acked, failed, emitted, transferred, disruptor queue metrics, etc.) as well as a new API for user defined metrics.
The new metrics system is based on Dropwizard Metrics.
To allow users to define custom metrics, the following methods have been added to the TopologyContext
class, an instance of which is passed to spout’s open()
method and bolt’s prepare()
method:
public Timer registerTimer(String name)
public Histogram registerHistogram(String name)
public Meter registerMeter(String name)
public Counter registerCounter(String name)
public Gauge registerGauge(String name, Gauge gauge)
API documentation: Timer, Histogram, Meter, Counter, Gauge
Each of these methods takes a name
parameter that acts as an identifier. When metrics are
registered, Storm will add additional information such as hostname, port, topology ID, etc. to form a unique metric
identifier. For example, if we register a metric named myCounter
as follows:
Counter myCounter = topologyContext.registerCounter("myCounter");
the resulting name sent to metrics reporters will expand to:
storm.topology.{topology ID}.{hostname}.{component ID}.{task ID}.{worker port}-myCounter
The additional information allows for the unique identification of metrics for component instances across the cluster.
Important Note: In order to ensure metric names can be reliably parsed, any .
characters in name components will
be replaced with an underscore (_
) character. For example, the hostname storm.example.com
will appear as
storm_example_com
in the metric name. This character substitution *is not applied to the user-supplied name
parameter.
The following example is a simple bolt implementation that will report the running total up tuples received by a bolt:
public class TupleCountingBolt extends BaseRichBolt {
private Counter tupleCounter;
@Override
public void prepare(Map stormConf, TopologyContext context, OutputCollector collector) {
this.tupleCounter = context.registerCounter("tupleCount");
}
@Override
public void execute(Tuple input) {
this.tupleCounter.inc();
}
}
For metrics to be useful they must be reported, in other words sent somewhere where they can be consumed and analyzed. That can be as simple as writing them to a log file, sending them to a time series database, or exposing them via JMX.
As of Storm 1.2.0 the following metric reporters are supported
org.apache.storm.metrics2.reporters.ConsoleStormReporter
):
Reports metrics to System.out
.org.apache.storm.metrics2.reporters.CsvStormReporter
):
Reports metrics to a CSV file.org.apache.storm.metrics2.reporters.GraphiteStormReporter
):
Reports metrics to a Graphite server.org.apache.storm.metrics2.reporters.JmxStormReporter
):
Exposes metrics via JMX.Metrics reporters are configured in the storm.yaml
file. By default, Storm will collect metrics but not “report” or
send the collected metrics anywhere. To enable metrics reporting, add a storm.metrics.reporters
section to storm.yaml
and configure one or more reporters.
The following example configuration sets up two reporters: a Graphite Reporter and a Console Reporter:
storm.metrics.reporters:
# Graphite Reporter
- class: "org.apache.storm.metrics2.reporters.GraphiteStormReporter"
daemons:
- "supervisor"
- "nimbus"
- "worker"
report.period: 60
report.period.units: "SECONDS"
graphite.host: "localhost"
graphite.port: 2003
# Console Reporter
- class: "org.apache.storm.metrics2.reporters.ConsoleStormReporter"
daemons:
- "worker"
report.period: 10
report.period.units: "SECONDS"
filter:
class: "org.apache.storm.metrics2.filters.RegexFilter"
expression: ".*my_component.*emitted.*"
Each reporter section begins with a class
parameter representing the fully-qualified class name of the reporter
implementation. The daemons
section determines which daemons the reporter will apply to (in the example Graphite
Reporter is configured to report metrics from all Storm daemons, while the Console reporter will only report worker and
topology metrics).
Many reporter implementations are scheduled, meaning they report metrics at regular intervals. The reporting interval
is determined by the report.period
and report.period.units
parameters.
Reporters can also be configured with an optional filter that determines which metrics get reported. Storm includes the
org.apache.storm.metrics2.filters.RegexFilter
filter which uses a regular expression to determine which metrics get
reported. Custom filters can be created by implementing the org.apache.storm.metrics2.filters.StormMetricFilter
interface:
public interface StormMetricsFilter extends MetricFilter {
/**
* Called after the filter is instantiated.
* @param config A map of the properties from the 'filter' section of the reporter configuration.
*/
void prepare(Map<String, Object> config);
/**
* Returns true if the given metric should be reported.
*/
boolean matches(String name, Metric metric);
}