Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
 
 

execd

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

parent directory

..
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Execd Processor Plugin

The execd processor plugin runs an external program as a separate process and pipes metrics in to the process's STDIN and reads processed metrics from its STDOUT. The programs must accept influx line protocol on standard in (STDIN) and output metrics in influx line protocol to standard output (STDOUT).

Program output on standard error is mirrored to the telegraf log.

Telegraf minimum version: Telegraf 1.15.0

Caveats

  • Metrics with tracking will be considered "delivered" as soon as they are passed to the external process. There is currently no way to match up which metric coming out of the execd process relates to which metric going in (keep in mind that processors can add and drop metrics, and that this is all done asynchronously).
  • it's not currently possible to use a data_format other than "influx", due to the requirement that it is serialize-parse symmetrical and does not lose any critical type data.

Configuration:

[[processor.execd]]
  ## One program to run as daemon.
  ## NOTE: process and each argument should each be their own string
  ## eg: command = ["/path/to/your_program", "arg1", "arg2"]
  command = ["cat"]

  ## Delay before the process is restarted after an unexpected termination
  # restart_delay = "10s"

Example

Go daemon example

This go daemon reads a metric from stdin, multiplies the "count" field by 2, and writes the metric back out.

package main

import (
	"fmt"
	"os"

	"github.com/influxdata/telegraf/metric"
	"github.com/influxdata/telegraf/plugins/parsers/influx"
	"github.com/influxdata/telegraf/plugins/serializers"
)

func main() {
	parser := influx.NewStreamParser(os.Stdin)
	serializer, _ := serializers.NewInfluxSerializer()

	for {
		metric, err := parser.Next()
		if err != nil {
			if err == influx.EOF {
				return // stream ended
			}
			if parseErr, isParseError := err.(*influx.ParseError); isParseError {
				fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "parse ERR %v\n", parseErr)
				os.Exit(1)
			}
			fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "ERR %v\n", err)
			os.Exit(1)
		}

		c, found := metric.GetField("count")
		if !found {
			fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "metric has no count field\n")
			os.Exit(1)
		}
		switch t := c.(type) {
		case float64:
			t *= 2
			metric.AddField("count", t)
		case int64:
			t *= 2
			metric.AddField("count", t)
		default:
			fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "count is not an unknown type, it's a %T\n", c)
			os.Exit(1)
		}
		b, err := serializer.Serialize(metric)
		if err != nil {
			fmt.Fprintf(os.Stderr, "ERR %v\n", err)
			os.Exit(1)
		}
		fmt.Fprint(os.Stdout, string(b))
	}
}

to run it, you'd build the binary using go, eg go build -o multiplier.exe main.go

[[processors.execd]]
  command = ["multiplier.exe"]

Ruby daemon

[[processors.execd]]
  command = ["ruby", "plugins/processors/execd/examples/multiplier_line_protocol/multiplier_line_protocol.rb"]