Important: This documentation is about an older version. It's relevant only to the release noted, many of the features and functions have been updated or replaced. Please view the current version.
Prometheus data source
Grafana includes built-in support for Prometheus. This topic explains options, variables, querying, and other options specific to the Prometheus data source. Refer to Add a data source for instructions on how to add a data source to Grafana. Only users with the organization admin role can add data sources.
Prometheus settings
To access Prometheus settings, hover your mouse over the Configuration (gear) icon, then click Data Sources, and then click the Prometheus data source.
Name | Description |
---|---|
Name | The data source name. This is how you refer to the data source in panels and queries. |
Default | Default data source means that it will be pre-selected for new panels. |
Url | The URL of your Prometheus server, e.g. http://prometheus.example.org:9090 . |
Access | Server (default) = URL needs to be accessible from the Grafana backend/server, Browser = URL needs to be accessible from the browser. |
Basic Auth | Enable basic authentication to the Prometheus data source. |
User | User name for basic authentication. |
Password | Password for basic authentication. |
Scrape interval | Set this to the typical scrape and evaluation interval configured in Prometheus. Defaults to 15s. |
Disable metrics lookup | Checking this option will disable the metrics chooser and metric/label support in the query field’s autocomplete. This helps if you have performance issues with bigger Prometheus instances. |
Custom Query Parameters | Add custom parameters to the Prometheus query URL. For example timeout , partial_response , dedup , or max_source_resolution . Multiple parameters should be concatenated together with an ‘&’. |
Prometheus query editor
Below you can find information and options for Prometheus query editor in dashboard and in Explore.
Query editor in dashboards
Open a graph in edit mode by clicking the title > Edit (or by pressing e
key while hovering over panel).
Name | Description |
---|---|
Query expression | Prometheus query expression, check out the Prometheus documentation. |
Legend format | Controls the name of the time series, using name or pattern. For example {{hostname}} is replaced with the label value for the label hostname . |
Min step | An additional lower limit for the step parameter of Prometheus range queries and for the $__interval and $__rate_interval variables. The limit is absolute and not modified by the Resolution setting. |
Resolution | 1/1 sets both the $__interval variable and the step parameter of Prometheus range queries such that each pixel corresponds to one data point. For better performance, lower resolutions can be picked. 1/2 only retrieves a data point for every other pixel, and 1/10 retrieves one data point per 10 pixels. Note that both Min time interval and Min step limit the final value of $__interval and step . |
Metric lookup | Search for metric names in this input field. |
Format as | Switch between Table , Time series , or Heatmap . Table will only work in the Table panel. Heatmap is suitable for displaying metrics of the Histogram type on a Heatmap panel. Under the hood, it converts cumulative histograms to regular ones and sorts series by the bucket bound. |
Instant | Perform an “instant” query, to return only the latest value that Prometheus has scraped for the requested time series. Instant queries return results much faster than normal range queries. Use them to look up label sets. |
Min time interval | This value multiplied by the denominator from the Resolution setting sets a lower limit to both the $__interval variable and the step parameter of Prometheus range queries. Defaults to Scrape interval as set in the data source options. |
Note: Grafana modifies the request dates for queries to align them with the dynamically calculated step. This ensures consistent display of metrics data, but it can result in a small gap of data at the right edge of a graph.
Instant queries in dashboards
The Prometheus data source allows you to run “instant” queries, which query only the latest value. You can visualize the results in a table panel to see all available labels of a timeseries.
Instant query results are made up only of one data point per series but can be shown in the graph panel with the help of series overrides.
To show them in the graph as a latest value point, add a series override and select Points > true
.
To show a horizontal line across the whole graph, add a series override and select Transform > constant
.
Support for constant series overrides is available from Grafana v6.4
Query editor in Explore
Name | Description |
---|---|
Query expression | Prometheus query expression, check out the Prometheus documentation. |
Step | Step parameter of Prometheus range queries. Time units can be used here, for example: 5s, 1m, 3h, 1d, 1y. Default unit if no unit specified is s (seconds). |
Query type | Range , Instant , or Both . When running Range query, the result of the query is displayed in graph and table. Instant query returns only the latest value that Prometheus has scraped for the requested time series and it is displayed in the table. When Both is selected, both instant query and range query is run. Result of range query is displayed in graph and the result of instant query is displayed in the table. |
Templating
Instead of hard-coding things like server, application and sensor name in your metric queries, you can use variables in their place. Variables are shown as dropdown select boxes at the top of the dashboard. These dropdowns make it easy to change the data being displayed in your dashboard.
Check out the Templating documentation for an introduction to the templating feature and the different types of template variables.
Query variable
Variable of the type Query allows you to query Prometheus for a list of metrics, labels or label values. The Prometheus data source plugin
provides the following functions you can use in the Query
input field.
Name | Description |
---|---|
label_\__names() | Returns a list of label names. |
label_\__values(label) | Returns a list of label values for the label in every metric. |
label_\__values(metric, label) | Returns a list of label values for the label in the specified metric. |
metrics(metric) | Returns a list of metrics matching the specified metric regex. |
query_\__result(query) | Returns a list of Prometheus query result for the query . |
For details of what metric names, label names and label values are please refer to the Prometheus documentation.
Using interval and range variables
Support for
$__range
,$__range_s
and$__range_ms
only available from Grafana v5.3
You can use some global built-in variables in query variables; $__interval
, $__interval_ms
, $__range
, $__range_s
and $__range_ms
, see Global built-in variables for more information. These can be convenient to use in conjunction with the query_result
function when you need to filter variable queries since
label_values
function doesn’t support queries.
Make sure to set the variable’s refresh
trigger to be On Time Range Change
to get the correct instances when changing the time range on the dashboard.
Example usage:
Populate a variable with the busiest 5 request instances based on average QPS over the time range shown in the dashboard:
Query: query_result(topk(5, sum(rate(http_requests_total[$__range])) by (instance)))
Regex: /"([^"]+)"/
Populate a variable with the instances having a certain state over the time range shown in the dashboard, using $__range_s
:
Query: query_result(max_over_time(<metric>[${__range_s}s]) != <state>)
Regex:
Using $__rate_interval
variable
Note: Available in Grafana 7.2 and above
The $__rate_interval
variable is meant to be used in the rate function. It is defined as max( $__interval
+ Scrape interval, 4 * Scrape interval), where Scrape interval is the Min step setting (AKA query_interval, a setting per PromQL query), if any is set, and otherwise the Scrape interval as set in the Prometheus data source (but ignoring any Min interval setting in the panel, because the latter is modified by the resolution setting).
Using variables in queries
There are two syntaxes:
$<varname>
Example: rate(http_requests_total{job=~"$job"}[5m])[[varname]]
Example: rate(http_requests_total{job=~"[[job]]"}[5m])
Why two ways? The first syntax is easier to read and write but does not allow you to use a variable in the middle of a word. When the Multi-value or Include all value
options are enabled, Grafana converts the labels from plain text to a regex compatible string. Which means you have to use =~
instead of =
.
Annotations
Annotations allow you to overlay rich event information on top of graphs. You add annotation queries via the Dashboard menu / Annotations view.
Prometheus supports two ways to query annotations.
- A regular metric query
- A Prometheus query for pending and firing alerts (for details see Inspecting alerts during runtime)
The step option is useful to limit the number of events returned from your query.
Get Grafana metrics into Prometheus
Grafana exposes metrics for Prometheus on the /metrics
endpoint. We also bundle a dashboard within Grafana so you can get started viewing your metrics faster. You can import the bundled dashboard by going to the data source edit page and click the dashboard tab. There you can find a dashboard for Grafana and one for Prometheus. Import and start viewing all the metrics!
For detailed instructions, refer to Internal Grafana metrics.
Provision the Prometheus data source
You can configure data sources using config files with Grafana’s provisioning system. Read more about how it works and all the settings you can set for data sources on the provisioning docs page
Here are some provisioning examples for this data source:
apiVersion: 1
datasources:
- name: Prometheus
type: prometheus
access: proxy
url: http://localhost:9090