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.
Migrate from Thanos to Mimir using Thanos sidecar
As an operator, you can migrate a deployment of Thanos to Grafana Mimir by using Thanos sidecar to move metrics over with a stepped workflow.
Overview
An option when migrating is to allow Thanos to query Mimir. This way you retain historical data via your existing Thanos deployment while pointing all of your Prometheus servers (or grafana agents and other metric sources) to Mimir.
The overall setup consists of setting up Thanos Sidecar alongside Mimir and then pointing Thanos Query to the sidecar as if it was just a normal sidecar.
This is not so much of a guide as it is a collection of configurations that have been used with success prior.
Warning: This setup is unsupported, experimental and has not been battle tested. Your mileage may vary, ensure you have tested this for your use case and have made appropriate backups (and tested your procedures for recovery)
Technical details
There are very few obstacles to get this working properly. Thanos Sidecar is designed to work with the Prometheus API which Mimir (almost) implements. There are only 2 endpoints that are not implemented that we need to “spoof” to get Thanos sidecar to believe it is connecting to a Prometheus server: /api/v1/status/buildinfo
and /api/v1/status/config
. We spoof these endpoints using NGINX (more details later).
The only other roadblock is the requirement for requests to Mimir to contain the X-Scope-Org-Id
header to identify the Tenant. We inject this header using another NGINX container sitting in between Thanos Sidecar and Mimir.
In our case, everything was being deployed in Kubernetes. Mimir was deployed using the mimir-distributed
helm chart. Therefore configurations shown will be Kubernetes manifests that will need to be modified for your environment. If you are not using Kubernetes then you will need to set up the appropriate configuration for NGINX to implement the technical setup described above. You may use the configurations below for inspiration but they will not work out of the box.
Deploy Thanos sidecar
We deployed the sidecar using Kubernetes using the below manifest:
Deployment
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: thanos-sidecar
namespace: mimir
labels:
app: thanos-sidecar
spec:
replicas: 1
selector:
matchLabels:
app: thanos-sidecar
template:
metadata:
labels:
app: thanos-sidecar
spec:
volumes:
- name: config
configMap:
name: sidecar-nginx
defaultMode: 420
containers:
- name: nginx
image: nginxinc/nginx-unprivileged:1.19-alpine
ports:
- name: http
containerPort: 8080
protocol: TCP
volumeMounts:
- name: config
mountPath: /etc/nginx
terminationMessagePath: /dev/termination-log
terminationMessagePolicy: File
imagePullPolicy: IfNotPresent
- name: thanos-sidecar
image: quay.io/thanos/thanos:v0.26.0
args:
- sidecar
- "--prometheus.url=http://localhost:8080/prometheus"
- "--grpc-address=:10901"
- "--http-address=:10902"
- "--log.level=info"
- "--log.format=logfmt"
ports:
- name: http
containerPort: 10902
protocol: TCP
- name: grpc
containerPort: 10901
protocol: TCP
restartPolicy: Always
terminationGracePeriodSeconds: 30
dnsPolicy: ClusterFirst
schedulerName: default-scheduler
strategy:
type: RollingUpdate
rollingUpdate:
maxUnavailable: 25%
maxSurge: 25%
revisionHistoryLimit: 10
progressDeadlineSeconds: 600
Service
apiVersion: v1
kind: Service
metadata:
name: thanos-sidecar
namespace: mimir
labels:
app: thanos-sidecar
spec:
ports:
- name: 10901-10901
protocol: TCP
port: 10901
targetPort: 10901
selector:
app: thanos-sidecar
type: ClusterIP
NGINX configuration for Thanos sidecar
Notice that there is an NGINX container within the sidecar deployment definition. This NGINX instance sits between the sidecar and Mimir (ie. sidecar --> nginx --> mimir
) it is responsible for injecting the tenant ID into the requests from the sidecar to Mimir. The configuration that this NGINX instance uses is as follows:
worker_processes 5; ## Default: 1
error_log /dev/stderr;
pid /tmp/nginx.pid;
worker_rlimit_nofile 8192;
events {
worker_connections 4096; ## Default: 1024
}
http {
client_body_temp_path /tmp/client_temp;
proxy_temp_path /tmp/proxy_temp_path;
fastcgi_temp_path /tmp/fastcgi_temp;
uwsgi_temp_path /tmp/uwsgi_temp;
scgi_temp_path /tmp/scgi_temp;
default_type application/octet-stream;
log_format main '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] $status '
'"$request" $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" '
'"$http_user_agent" "$http_x_forwarded_for"';
access_log /dev/stderr main;
sendfile on;
tcp_nopush on;
resolver kube-dns.kube-system.svc.cluster.local;
server {
listen 8080;
# Distributor endpoints
location / {
proxy_set_header X-Scope-OrgID 1;
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-nginx.mimir.svc.cluster.local:80$request_uri;
}
}
}
NGINX configuration for Mimir
Now we modified the Mimir Distributed NGINX configuration to allow the sidecar to fetch the “external labels” and the “version” of our “Prometheus” server. You should be careful with the external labels to make sure that you don’t override any existing labels (in our case we used “source=‘mimir’”). You should also consider existing dashboards and make sure that they will continue to work as expected. Make sure to test your setup first.
In particular, these location blocks were added (full config further down):
location /prometheus/api/v1/status/config {
add_header Content-Type application/json;
return 200 "{\"status\":\"success\",\"data\":{\"yaml\": \"global:\\n external_labels:\\n source: mimir\"}}";
}
location /prometheus/api/v1/status/buildinfo {
add_header Content-Type application/json;
return 200 "{\"status\":\"success\",\"data\":{\"version\":\"2.35.0\",\"revision\":\"6656cd29fe6ac92bab91ecec0fe162ef0f187654\",\"branch\":\"HEAD\",\"buildUser\":\"root@cf6852b14d68\",\"buildDate\":\"20220421-09:53:42\",\"goVersion\":\"go1.18.1\"}}";
}
You need to modify the first one to set your external labels. The second one just allows Thanos to detect the version of Prometheus running.
To modify the external labels alter this string: "{\"status\":\"success\",\"data\":{\"yaml\": \"global:\\n external_labels:\\n source: mimir\"}}"
. You will notice it is escaped JSON. Simply add elements to the data.external_labels
field to add more external labels as required or alter the existing key to modify them.
Full Mimir distributed NGINX configuration
worker_processes 5; ## Default: 1
error_log /dev/stderr;
pid /tmp/nginx.pid;
worker_rlimit_nofile 8192;
events {
worker_connections 4096; ## Default: 1024
}
http {
client_body_temp_path /tmp/client_temp;
proxy_temp_path /tmp/proxy_temp_path;
fastcgi_temp_path /tmp/fastcgi_temp;
uwsgi_temp_path /tmp/uwsgi_temp;
scgi_temp_path /tmp/scgi_temp;
default_type application/octet-stream;
log_format main '$remote_addr - $remote_user [$time_local] $status '
'"$request" $body_bytes_sent "$http_referer" '
'"$http_user_agent" "$http_x_forwarded_for"';
access_log /dev/stderr main;
sendfile on;
tcp_nopush on;
resolver kube-dns.kube-system.svc.cluster.local;
server {
listen 8080;
location = / {
return 200 'OK';
auth_basic off;
}
# Distributor endpoints
location /distributor {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-distributor.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location = /api/v1/push {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-distributor.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
# Alertmanager endpoints
location /alertmanager {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-alertmanager.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location = /multitenant_alertmanager/status {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-alertmanager.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location = /api/v1/alerts {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-alertmanager.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
# Ruler endpoints
location /prometheus/config/v1/rules {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-ruler.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location /prometheus/api/v1/rules {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-ruler.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location /api/v1/rules {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-ruler.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location /prometheus/api/v1/alerts {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-ruler.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location /prometheus/rules {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-ruler.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location = /ruler/ring {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-ruler.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
location /prometheus/api/v1/status/config {
add_header Content-Type application/json;
return 200 "{\"status\":\"success\",\"data\":{\"yaml\": \"global:\\n external_labels:\\n source: mimir\"}}";
}
location /prometheus/api/v1/status/buildinfo {
add_header Content-Type application/json;
return 200 "{\"status\":\"success\",\"data\":{\"version\":\"2.35.0\",\"revision\":\"6656cd29fe6ac92bab91ecec0fe162ef0f187654\",\"branch\":\"HEAD\",\"buildUser\":\"root@cf6852b14d68\",\"buildDate\":\"20220421-09:53:42\",\"goVersion\":\"go1.18.1\"}}";
}
# Rest of /prometheus goes to the query frontend
location /prometheus {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-query-frontend.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
# Buildinfo endpoint can go to any component
location = /api/v1/status/buildinfo {
proxy_pass http://mimir-distributed-query-frontend.mimir.svc.cluster.local:8080$request_uri;
}
}
}