Chapter 9. Troubleshooting monitoring issues
9.2. Determining why Prometheus is consuming a lot of disk space
Developers can create labels to define attributes for metrics in the form of key-value pairs. The number of potential key-value pairs corresponds to the number of possible values for an attribute. An attribute that has an unlimited number of potential values is called an unbound attribute. For example, a customer_id
attribute is unbound because it has an infinite number of possible values.
Every assigned key-value pair has a unique time series. The use of many unbound attributes in labels can result in an exponential increase in the number of time series created. This can impact Prometheus performance and can consume a lot of disk space.
You can use the following measures when Prometheus consumes a lot of disk:
- Check the number of scrape samples that are being collected.
- Check the time series database (TSDB) status in the Prometheus UI for more information on which labels are creating the most time series. This requires cluster administrator privileges.
Reduce the number of unique time series that are created by reducing the number of unbound attributes that are assigned to user-defined metrics.
NoteUsing attributes that are bound to a limited set of possible values reduces the number of potential key-value pair combinations.
- Enforce limits on the number of samples that can be scraped across user-defined projects. This requires cluster administrator privileges.
Prerequisites
-
You have access to the cluster as a user with the
cluster-admin
role. -
You have installed the OpenShift CLI (
oc
).
Procedure
-
In the Administrator perspective, navigate to Monitoring
Metrics. Run the following Prometheus Query Language (PromQL) query in the Expression field. This returns the ten metrics that have the highest number of scrape samples:
topk(10,count by (job)({__name__=~".+"}))
Investigate the number of unbound label values assigned to metrics with higher than expected scrape sample counts.
- If the metrics relate to a user-defined project, review the metrics key-value pairs assigned to your workload. These are implemented through Prometheus client libraries at the application level. Try to limit the number of unbound attributes referenced in your labels.
- If the metrics relate to a core OpenShift Container Platform project, create a Red Hat support case on the Red Hat Customer Portal.
Check the TSDB status in the Prometheus UI.
-
In the Administrator perspective, navigate to Networking
Routes. -
Select the
openshift-monitoring
project in the Project list. -
Select the URL in the
prometheus-k8s
row to open the login page for the Prometheus UI. - Choose Log in with OpenShift to log in using your OpenShift Container Platform credentials.
-
In the Prometheus UI, navigate to Status
TSDB Status.
-
In the Administrator perspective, navigate to Networking
Additional resources
- See Setting a scrape sample limit for user-defined projects for details on how to set a scrape sample limit and create related alerting rules
- Submitting a support case