Sourcegraph uses Prometheus for metrics and Grafana for metrics dashboards.
If you're using the Kubernetes cluster deployment option, see the Prometheus README for more information.
Prometheus is a monitoring tool that collects application- and system-level metrics over time and makes these accessible through a query language and simple UI.
Most of the time, Sourcegraph site admins will monitor key metrics through the Grafana UI, rather than through Prometheus directly. Grafana provides the dashboards that monitor the standard metrics that indicate the health of the instance. Only if an admin wants to write a novel metrics formula or query do they need to access the Prometheus UI.
If you are using single-container Sourcegraph, you will need to restart the Sourcegraph container
with a flag --publish 9090:9090
in the docker run
command. Subsequently, you can access
Prometheus at http://localhost:9090.
If you are using the Sourcegraph Kubernetes Cluster, port-forward the Prometheus service:
kubectl port-forward svc/prometheus 9090:30090
Sourcegraph runs a slightly customized image of Prometheus, which packages a standard Prometheus installation together with rules files and target files tailored to Sourcegraph.
A directory can be mounted at /sg_prometheus_add_ons
. It can contain additional config files of two types:
_rules.yml
in their filename (ie gitserver_rules.yml
)_targets.yml
in their filename (ie local_targets.yml
)Rule files and target files must use the latest Prometheus 2.x syntax.
The environment variable PROMETHEUS_ADDITIONAL_FLAGS
can be used to pass on additional flags to the prometheus
executable running in the container.
Site admins can view the monitoring dashboards on a Sourcegraph instance:
https://sourcegraph.example.com/-/debug/grafana/?orgId=1
.Follow the instructions below to access Grafana directly, and add, modify and delete your own dashboards and panels.
If you're using the Kubernetes cluster deployment option, you can access Grafana directly using Kubernetes port forwarding to your local machine:
kubectl port-forward svc/grafana 3370:30070
Now visit http://localhost:3370/-/debug/grafana.
For simplicity, Grafana does not require authentication, as the port binding of 3370 is restricted to connections from localhost only.
Therefore, if accessing Grafana locally, the URL will be http://localhost:3370/-/debug/grafana. If Sourcegraph is deployed to a remote server, then access via an SSH tunnel using a tool
such as sshuttle is required to establish a secure connection to Grafana.
To access the remote server using sshuttle
from your local machine:
sshuttle -r user@host 0/0
Then simply visit http://host:3370 in your browser.
Sourcegraph runs a slightly customized image of Grafana, which includes a standard Grafana installation initialized with Sourcegraph-specific dashboard definitions.
A directory containing dashboard JSON specifications can be mounted in the Docker container at
/sg_grafana_additional_dashboards
. Changes to files in that directory will be detected
automatically while Grafana is running.
More behavior can be controlled with environmental variables.
It is technically possible to consume all of Sourcegraph's Prometheus metrics in any external monitoring system that supports Prometheus scraping (both Datadog and New Relic support this). However, we would advise against it because Sourcegraph is a very complex system and defining all of the alerting thresholds and rules that are needed to ensure Sourcegraph is healthy is very tedious and changes with each release of Sourcegraph.
One of the primary benefits of using Sourcegraph's builtin Prometheus and Grafana monitoring is that you get builtin dashboards and alerting thresholds out-of-the-box, and as Sourcegraph's internals change with each update you can rest assured that the metrics and information you are monitoring is up-to-date.
Most commonly Sourcegraph's monitoring is configured to send alerts to your own PagerDuty, Slack, email, etc.. Less common approaches include: