# Monitoring Specification Monitors are split into three types: Host, Application, and IoT All monitors use a Prometheus exporter. ## Hosts | Name | IP (if static) | OS | Exporter | |:----:|:--------------:|:--:|:--------:| | Router | 192.168.1.1 | Linux 4.14) | [node_exporter](https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter) | | Server | 192.168.1.23 | Linux 5.10) | [node_exporter](https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter) | | Seedbox | 192.168.1.21 | Linux 5.10) | [node_exporter](https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter) | | NAS | 192.168.1.10 | FreeBSD 12.2) | ??? | PiHole | 192.168.1.22 | Linux 5.10) | [node_exporter](https://github.com/prometheus/node_exporter) | ## Applications | Name | Address(es) | Exporter | |:----:|:-------:|:--------:| | Minecraft | e6.jafner.net, vanilla.jafner.net | [mc-monitor](https://github.com/itzg/mc-monitor) | GitLab | gitlab.jafner.net | [GitLab Integrated Exporter](https://docs.gitlab.com/ee/administration/monitoring/prometheus/gitlab_metrics.html) | Traefik | traefik.jafner.net | [Prometheus - Traefik.io](https://doc.traefik.io/traefik/observability/metrics/prometheus/) | | Deluge | jafner.seedbox:52000, jafner.seedbox:52100, jafner.seedbox:52200 | [deluge_exporter](https://github.com/tobbez/deluge_exporter) | | Plex | plex.jafner.net | [Tautulli](https://github.com/Tautulli/Tautulli) and [tautulli-exporter](https://github.com/nwalke/tautulli-exporter), or [plex_exporter](https://github.com/arnarg/plex_exporter) | | PeerTube | peertube.jafner.net | [Add a Prometheus Exporter - GitHub Issue](https://github.com/Chocobozzz/PeerTube/issues/3742) | | WordPress | nvgm.jafner.net | [wordpress-exporter](https://github.com/aorfanos/wordpress-exporter) | | SabNZBD | sabnzbd.jafner.net | [sabnzbd_exporter](https://github.com/msroest/sabnzbd_exporter) | | Uptime Kuma | uptime.jafner.tools | [Prometheus Integration - Uptime Kuma Wiki](https://github.com/louislam/uptime-kuma/wiki/Prometheus-Integration) | | PiHole | jafner.pi1 | [pihole-exporter](https://github.com/eko/pihole-exporter) | | ZFS | nas.jafner.net | [zfs_exporter](https://github.com/pdf/zfs_exporter) | ## IoT | Name | Hostname | Assigned IP | Note | |:----:|:--------:|:-----------:|:----:| | tasmota-1 | tasmota-F6441E-1054 | 192.168.1.50 | | tasmota-2 | tasmota-F6D7D3-6099 | 192.168.1.51 | | tasmota-3 | tasmota-F6F062-4194 | 192.168.1.52 | # Adding Loki and Promtail Followed [this guide from Techno Tim](https://docs.technotim.live/posts/grafana-loki/). Non-tracked changes include: 1. `docker plugin install grafana/loki-docker-driver:latest --alias loki --grant-all-permissions` to install the Loki docker plugin. ## Instrumenting: Daemon-Level Logging Edit `/etc/docker/daemon.json` to add the following block: ```json { "log-driver": "loki", "log-opts": { "loki-url": "http://localhost:3100/loki/api/v1/push", "loki-batch-size": "400", "loki-retries": "1", "loki-timeout": "2s" } } ``` NOTE: All logging will fail if the Loki container is inaccessible. This may cause the Docker daemon to lock up. These parameters are applied when a container is created, so all containers must be destroyed to resolve the issue. NOTE: The batch size here is in lines for *all docker logs*. ## Instrumenting: Per-Container Logging Add the following logging parameter to each main-service container within a stack. ```yml services: : logging: driver: loki options: loki-url: http://localhost:3100/loki/api/v1/push loki-batch-size: "50" loki-retries: "1" loki-timeout: "2s" keep-file: "true" ``` NOTE: The batch size here is in lines for *only the selected container*. See [loki log-opts](https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/clients/docker-driver/configuration/#supported-log-opt-options) for list of available configuration options for loki logging driver. See [docker-compose logging](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/compose-file-v3/#logging) for Docker-compose logging reference. ## Instrumenting: Default Docker Logging Per: [Docker docs](https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/configure/) > The default logging driver is `json-file`. The configuration options for the `json-file` logging driver are [here](https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/json-file/). Docker-compose adds a few labels to containers it starts. This feature is not comprehensively documented, but here: [Compose Specification](https://docs.docker.com/compose/compose-file/). And we can see what labels are added by default by simply looking at a deployed application (wg-easy): | Label Key | Value | |:---------:|:-----:| | `com.docker.compose.config-hash` | `f75588baa1056ddc618b1741805d2600b4380e13c5114106de6c8322f79dfd3f` | | `com.docker.compose.container-number` | `1` | | `com.docker.compose.oneoff` | `False` | | `com.docker.compose.project` | `wireguard` | | `com.docker.compose.project.config_files` | `docker-compose.yml` | | `com.docker.compose.project.working_dir` | `/home/joey/homelab/jafner-net/config/wireguard` | | `com.docker.compose.service` | `wg-easy` | | `com.docker.compose.version` | `1.29.2` | These are *labels* on the container, which are distinct from *tags* in the actual json log payload. Log tags are [documented here](https://docs.docker.com/config/containers/logging/log_tags/).