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influx-spout: Next generation relay nodes for InfluxDB

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Overview

influx-spout consists of a number of components which receive InfluxDB line protocol measurements sent by agents such as Telegraf, efficiently filter them and then forward them on to one or more InfluxDB backends. Much effort has been put in to ensuring that high volumes of measurements can be supported. NATS is used for messaging between the various influx-spout components.

The following diagram shows a typical influx-spout deployment, and the flow of data between the various components:

                           +-----+              +------+
                           | UDP |              | HTTP |
                           +-----+              +------+
                              |                     |
                              v                     v
                     +-----------------+   +-----------------+
                     |                 |   |                 |
                     |     Listener    |   |  HTTP Listener  |
                     |                 |   |                 |
                     +-----------------+   +-----------------+
                              |                     |
                              v                     v
 +----------+   +-------------------------------------------------+
 |          |<--+                                                 |
 |  Filter  |   |                     NATS                        |
 |          +-->|                                                 |
 +----------+   +--------+----------------+----------------+------+
                         |                |                |
                         v                v                v
                   +----------+     +----------+     +----------+
                   |          |     |          |     |          |
                   |  Writer  |     |  Writer  |     |  Writer  |
                   |          |     |          |     |          |
                   +-----+----+     +-----+----+     +-----+----+
                         |                |                |
                         v                v                v
                   +----------+     +----------+     +----------+
                   | InfluxDB |     | InfluxDB |     | InfluxDB |
                   +----------+     +----------+     +----------+

All the influx-spout components may be run on a single host or may be spread across multiple hosts depending on scaling and operational requirements.

Building

Ensure the GOPATH environment is properly exported and simply run make to build influx-spout. We recommend building with Go 1.9+.

Configuration

influx-spout is a single binary which will run as any of the component modes, depending on the configuration provided. The binary takes a single mandatory positional argument which is the path to the TOML configuration file to use:

influx-spout [/path/to/config.toml]

During startup, /etc/influx-spout.toml is parsed first, if it exists. The configuration specified in the file with provided on the command line overrides any configuration in /etc/influx-spout.toml. This allows configuration common to different influx-spout components to be shared.

Modes

This section documents the various influx-spout component modes and how to configure them.

Listener

The listener is responsible for receiving InfluxDB line protocol measurements on a UDP port, batching them and sending them on to a single NATS subject. In typical deployments, a single listener will exist but it is possible to run multiple listeners.

The supported configuration options for the listener mode follow. Defaults are shown.

mode = "listener"  # Required

# UDP port to listen on.
port = 10001

# Address of NATS server.
nats_address = "nats://localhost:4222"

# Subject to publish received measurements on. This must be a list with one item.
nats_subject = ["influx-spout"]

# How many messages to collect before forwarding to the NATS server.
# Increasing this number reduces NATS communication overhead but increases
# latency.
batch = 10

# Maximum UDP socket receive buffer size in bytes. A higher value this increases
# the peak inbound traffic the listener can handle at the cost of higher memory
# consumption.
#
# The default value is good for low to medium loads but should be increased to
# support higher receive rates.
read_buffer_bytes = 4194304

# Out-of-bound metrics and diagnostic messages are published to this NATS subject
# (in InfluxDB line protocol format).
nats_subject_monitor = "influx-spout-monitor"

HTTP Listener

The HTTP listener is like the UDP listener (above) except that it receives measurements sent using HTTP request bodies to a /write endpoint on the configured port.

The supported configuration options for the HTTP listener mode follow. Defaults are shown.

mode = "listener_http"  # Required

# TCP port to server a HTTP server on. A single "/write" endpoint is available here.
port = 13337

# Address of NATS server.
nats_address = "nats://localhost:4222"

# Subject to publish received measurements on. This must be a list with one item.
nats_subject = ["influx-spout"]

# How many messages to collect before forwarding to the NATS server.
# Increasing this number reduces NATS communication overhead but increases
# latency.
batch = 10

# Maximum UDP socket receive buffer size in bytes. A higher value this increases
# the peak inbound traffic the listener can handle at the cost of higher memory
# consumption.
#
# The default value is good for low to medium loads but should be increased to
# support higher receive rates.
read_buffer_bytes = 4194304

# The maximum number of bytes that the listener should send at once to NATS.
# This should be no bigger than the NATS server's max_payload setting (which
# defaults to 1 MB).
listener_batch_bytes = 1048576

# Out-of-bound metrics and diagnostic messages are published to this NATS subject
# (in InfluxDB line protocol format).
nats_subject_monitor = "influx-spout-monitor"

Filter

The filter is responsible for filtering measurements published to NATS by the listener, and forwarding them on to other NATS subjects.

The supported configuration options for the filter mode follow. Defaults are shown.

mode = "filter"  # Required

# Address of NATS server.
nats_address = "nats://localhost:4222"

# Subject to receive measurements from (presumably from the listener).
# This must be a list with one item.
nats_subject = ["influx-spout"]

# Measurements which do not match any rule (below) are sent to this NATS subject.
nats_subject_junkyard = "influx-spout-junk"

# Out-of-bound metrics and diagnostic messages are published to this NATS subject
# (in InfluxDB line protocol format).
nats_subject_monitor = "influx-spout-monitor"

# The number of filter workers to spawn.
workers = 8

# At least one rule should be defined. Rules are defined using TOML's table
# syntax. The following examples show each rule type.

[[rule]]
# "basic" rules match a measurement name exactly.
type = "basic"

# For basic rules, "match" specifies an exact measurement name.
match = "cgroup"

# Measurements matching the rule are forwarded to this subject.
subject = "measurement.cgroup"


[[rule]]
# "regex" rules apply a regular expression to full measurement lines.
# Note: regex rules are significantly slower than basic rules. Use with care.
type = "regex"

# For regex rules, "match" specifies regular expression pattern to apply.
match = "host=web.+,"

# As above.
subject = "hosts.web"


[[rule]]
# "negregex" rules apply a regular expression to full measurement lines and
# match measurements which *don't* match the regular expression.
# Note: negregex rules are significantly slower than basic rules. Use with care.
type = "negregex"

# For negregex rules, "match" specifies regular expression pattern to apply.
match = "host=web.+,"

# As above.
subject = "not-web"

Ordering of rules in the configuration is important. Only the first rule that matches a given measurement is applied.

Writer

A writer is responsible for reading measurements from one or more NATS subjects, optionally filtering them and then writing matching them to an InfluxDB instances. A writer should be run for each InfluxDB backend that influx-spout should send measurements to.

The supported configuration options for the writer mode follow. Defaults are shown.

mode = "writer"  # Required

# Name to use for identifying a writer's internal metrics.
# (to separate metrics from different writers from each other)
name = "[default is configuration file path with directory & extension stripped]"

# Address of NATS server.
nats_address = "nats://localhost:4222"

# The NATS subjects to receive measurements from.
nats_subject = ["influx-spout"]

# Address of the InfluxDB instance to write to.
influxdb_address = "localhost"

# TCP port where the InfluxDB backend can be found.
influxdb_port = 8086

# The InfluxDB database name to write to. The default value is unlikely to be
# useful. Please set to an appropriate value.
influxdb_dbname = "influx-spout-junk"

# How many messages to collect before writing to InfluxDB.
# Increasing this number reduces InfluxDB communication overhead but increases
# latency.
batch = 10

# The maximum amount of message data a writer worker is allowed to collect. If
# this limit is reached, a write to InfluxDB is performed.
batch_max_mb = 10

# The maximum amount of time a writer worker is allowed to hold on to collected
# data. If this limit is reached, a write to InfluxDB is performed.
batch_max_secs = 300

# The number of writer workers to spawn.
workers = 8

# The maximum number of seconds a writer will wait for an InfluxDB write to
# complete. Writes which time out will be dropped.
write_timeout_secs = 30

# The maximum size that the pending buffer for a NATS subject that the writer
# is reading from may become (in megabytes). Measurements will be dropped if
# this limit is reached. This helps to deal with slow InfluxDB instances.
nats_pending_max_mb = 200

# Out-of-bound metrics and diagnostic messages are published to this NATS subject
# (in InfluxDB line protocol format).
nats_subject_monitor = "influx-spout-monitor"

A writer will batch up messages until one of the limits defined by the batch, batch_max_mb or batch_max_secs options is reached.

Writers can optionally include filter rules. When filter rules are configured measurements which don't match a rule will be dropped by the writer instead of being written to InfluxDB. Rule configuration is the same as for the filter component, but the rule subject should be omitted.

Running tests

influx-spout's tests are classified as either "small", "medium" or "large", where "small" tests are unit tests with no external dependencies and "large" test are full system tests. To simplify running of tests a runtests helper is provided.

Here's some example usage:

# Just run the small tests
$ ./runtests small

# Run the small & medium tests
$ ./runtests small medium

# Run the medium tests including benchmarks
$ ./runtests -b medium

# Run the small tests & generate coverage profiles
$ ./runtests -c medium

# Run the small tests with verbose output
$ ./runtests -v medium

Checking for performance regressions

Benchmarks have been implemented for key areas of influx-spout's functionality. The perfcheck script will compare the performance of these benchmarks in the working tree against a fixed reference revision. Any benchmarks that regress by 10% or more will be reported.

As for runtests, perfcheck takes the benchmark sizes to run:

# Just run the small benchmarks
$ ./perfcheck small

# Run the small & medium tests
$ ./perfcheck small medium

Here's an example of a detected performance regression:

$ ./perfcheck small
Comparing working tree against 948733acdff077f0e2910a4334ac8698a480ba81
>>>> Building benchcheck tool
>>>> Running current benchmarks
>>>> Setting up reference branch
Cloning to /tmp/tmp.uTPpVD1hvD/src/github.com/jumptrading/influx-spout
>>>> Running reference benchmarks
>>>> Comparing benchmarks
benchmark                 old ns/op     new ns/op     delta
BenchmarkLineLookup-4     75.5          88.4          +17.09%

3 benchmarks compared.
1 performance regressions detected.

Docker

To ease development or deployment to fancy infrastructure such as kubernetes, a Dockerfile is provided.

Building a docker image

The Makefile contains the magic to build the image easily:

$ make docker

Check the version:

$ docker images | grep influx-spout
influx-spout                                      0.1.e6514f8          4af1ff8077d5        30 seconds ago      11.62 MB

To build images for a custom docker registry pass the DOCKER_NAME variable with the full name sans the tag:

$ make docker DOCKER_NAME=quay.io/foo/influx-spout
... docker build output ...

$ docker images | grep quay\.io
quay.io/foo/influx-spout                          0.1.9adf7e6          94078aaba5f1        24 minutes ago      11.62 MB

Setting up a test influx-spout instance using Docker

This requires running a nats container and an influx-spout container with a shared network namespace. First things first, setup nats and expose the ports for either of the example http or udp listener example configurations:

$ docker run -p 11001:11001 -p 10001:10001 --rm -it --name nats-main nats
[1] 2018/01/24 18:52:33.326930 [INF] Starting nats-server version 1.0.4
[1] 2018/01/24 18:52:33.327212 [INF] Starting http monitor on 0.0.0.0:8222
[1] 2018/01/24 18:52:33.327325 [INF] Listening for client connections on 0.0.0.0:4222
[1] 2018/01/24 18:52:33.327391 [INF] Server is ready
[1] 2018/01/24 18:52:33.328545 [INF] Listening for route connections on 0.0.0.0:6222

Next, run the influx-spout container, making sure to use the right network namespace. It defaults to the http listener if no arguments are provided.

$ docker run --network=container:nats-main -it influx-spout:0.1.e6514f8
2018/01/24 19:23:03 Running /bin/influx-spout version e6514f8, built on 2018-01-24, go1.9.2
2018/01/24 19:23:03 Listener bound to HTTP socket: :11001

An example UDP listener can be setup by specifying the full config path:

$ docker run --network=container:nats-main -it influx-spout:0.1.e6514f8 /etc/influx-spout/udp-listener.toml
2018/01/24 19:24:02 Running /bin/influx-spout version e6514f8, built on 2018-01-24, go1.9.2
2018/01/24 19:24:02 Listener bound to UDP socket: 0.0.0.0:10001

Since the nats-main container is exporting both ports, they're ready to accept traffic: The HTTP listener is easiest to test:

$ curl -i -XPOST 'http://localhost:11001/write?db=mydb' --data-binary 'cpu_load_short,host=server01,region=us-west value=0.64 1434055562000000000'
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Wed, 24 Jan 2018 19:24:53 GMT
Content-Length: 0
Content-Type: text/plain; charset=utf-8

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