Considerations for monitoring the 1.x TICK stack
One of the primary use cases for InfluxData’s TICK stack is infrastructure monitoring, including using the TICK stack to monitor itself or another TICK stack. These are the two main approaches to Monitoring your TICK stack:
- Internal monitoring - A TICK stack that monitors itself.
- “Watcher of watchers” approach - A TICK stack monitored by another TICK stack.
Internal monitoring
By default, the InfluxData platform is configured to monitor itself.
Telegraf collects metrics from the host on which it’s running for things such as
CPU usage, memory usage, disk usage, etc., and stores them in the telegraf
database in InfluxDB.
InfluxDB also reports performance metrics about itself, such as continuous query statistics,
internal goroutine statistics, write statistics, series cardinality, and others,
and stores them in the _internal
database.
For the recommendation about _internal
databases, see Disable the _internal
database in production clusters below.
Monitoring dashboards are available that visualize the default metrics provided in each of these databases. You can also configure Kapacitor alerts to monitor and alert on each of these metrics.
Pros of internal monitoring
Simple setup
Internal monitoring requires no additional setup or configuration changes. The TICK stack monitors itself out of the box.
Cons of internal monitoring
No hardware separation
When using internal monitoring, if your TICK stack goes offline, your monitor does as well. Any configured alerts will not be sent and you will not be notified of any issues. Because of this, internal monitoring is not recommended for production use cases.
The “watcher of watchers” approach
Recommended for production environments.
A “watcher of watchers” approach for monitoring InfluxDB OSS and InfluxDB cluster nodes offers monitoring of your InfluxDB resources while ensuring that the monitoring statistics are available remotely in case of data loss.
This usually takes the form of an Enterprise cluster being monitored by an OSS TICK stack. It consists of Telegraf agents installed on each node in your primary cluster reporting metrics for their respective hosts to a monitoring TICK stack installed on a separate server or cluster.
For information about setting up an external monitoring TICK stack, see Setup an external monitor.
Monitoring dashboards are available that visualize the default metrics provided by the Telegraf agents. You can also configure Kapacitor alerts to monitor and alert on each of these metrics.
Pros of external monitoring
Hardware separation
With a monitor running separate from your primary TICK stack, issues that occur in the primary stack will not affect the monitor. If your primary TICK stack goes down or has issues, your monitor will be able detect them and alert you.
Cons of external monitoring
Slightly more setup
There is more setup involved with external monitoring, but the benefits far outweigh the extra time required, especially for production use cases.
Recommendations
Disable the _internal
database in production clusters
InfluxData does not recommend using the _internal
database in a production cluster.
It creates unnecessary overhead, particularly for busy clusters, that can overload an already loaded cluster.
Metrics stored in the _internal
database primarily measure workload performance,
which should only be tested in non-production environments.
To disable the _internal
database, set store-enabled
to false
under the [monitor]
section of your influxdb.conf
.
influxdb.conf
# ...
[monitor]
# ...
# Whether to record statistics internally.
store-enabled = false
#...
Support and feedback
Thank you for being part of our community! We welcome and encourage your feedback and bug reports for and this documentation. To find support, the following resources are available:
InfluxDB Cloud customers can contact InfluxData Support.