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.
Setup eBPF Profiling on Docker
To set up eBPF profiling with Grafana Alloy on Linux, you need to:
- Verify that your system meets the requirements.
- Create an Alloy configuration file. For more information, refer to the Configuration reference.
- Run Alloy.
- Verify that profiles are received.
Caution
Grafana Alloy is the new name for our distribution of the OTel collector. Grafana Agent has been deprecated and is in Long-Term Support (LTS) through October 31, 2025. Grafana Agent will reach an End-of-Life (EOL) on November 1, 2025. Read more about why we recommend migrating to Grafana Alloy.
Before you begin
Before you begin, you need:
- A Pyroscope server where Alloy can send profiling data.
- Access to Grafana with the Grafana Pyroscope data source provisioned.
- Docker Engine installed.
Note
If you don’t have a Grafana or a Pyroscope server, you can use the [Grafana Cloud][gcloud] free plan to get started.
Verify system requirements
The eBPF profiler requires a Linux kernel version >= 4.9 due to BPF_PROG_TYPE_PERF_EVENT.
BPF_PROG_TYPE_PERF_EVENT
is a type of eBPF program that can be attached to hardware or software events, such as performance monitoring counters or tracepoints, in the Linux kernel.
To print the kernel version of your docker host, run:
docker info | grep Kernel
The kernel version must be 4.9 or later.
Configure Alloy
You can configure Alloy eBPF profiler to profile local containers.
To do so, use the discovery.docker
component to discover local containers and the pyroscope.ebpf
component to profile them
For more information about the Alloy configuration, refer to the Alloy Components reference.
Create a file named alloy.config
with the following content:
discovery.docker "local_containers" {
host = "unix:///var/run/docker.sock"
}
pyroscope.ebpf "instance" {
forward_to = [pyroscope.write.endpoint.receiver]
targets = discovery.docker.local_containers.targets
}
pyroscope.write "endpoint" {
endpoint {
basic_auth {
password = "<PASSWORD>"
username = "<USERNAME>"
}
url = "<URL>"
}
external_labels = {
"env" = "testing",
"instance" = env("HOSTNAME"),
}
}
Replace the <URL>
placeholder with the appropriate server URL.
This could be the Grafana Cloud URL or your own custom Pyroscope server URL.
If you need to send data to Grafana Cloud, you’ll have to configure HTTP Basic authentication.
Replace <User>
with your Grafana Cloud stack user and <Password>
with your Grafana Cloud API key.
For more information, refer to the Configure the Grafana Pyroscope data source documentation.
Note
If you’re using your own Pyroscope server, you can remove thebasic_auth
section altogether.
Start Alloy
To start Alloy with Docker, run:
docker run \
-v $PWD/alloy.config:/etc/alloy/alloy.config \
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock \
--pid=host \
--privileged \
-p 12345:12345 \
grafana/alloy:latest \
run --server.http.listen-addr=0.0.0.0:12345 /etc/alloy/alloy.config
Note
The--pid=host
and--privileged
flags are required to profile local containers with eBPF.
Verify profiles are received
To verify that the profiles are received by the Pyroscope server, go to the Pyroscope UI or Grafana Pyroscope data source. Then select a profile type and a service from the dropdown menu.