Dockerfile for building and running a netdata deamon for your host instance.
Netdata monitors your server with thoughts of performance and memory usage, providing detailed insight into very recent server metrics. It's nice, and now it's also dockerized.
More info about project: https://github.com/firehol/netdata
I'm primarily a full-stack web developer with strong knowledge of Docker, APIs, AWS, PHP, Go, Nginx+LUA, SQL and NoSQL databases, Video Streaming (Wowza Media Server), and handle DevOps/automation for several large scale international clients (High traffic/HA deployments).
If you need someone with this skillset, please contact me at black@scene-si.org.
I'm also the author of the following books:
- API Foundations in Go
- 12 Factor Applications with Docker and Go - work in progress
For more information, I also write a development-themed blog at scene-si.org. I occasionally tweet my more plebean pursuits (sometimes in Slovenian) on @TitPetric.
docker run -d --cap-add SYS_PTRACE \
-v /proc:/host/proc:ro \
-v /sys:/host/sys:ro \
-p 19999:19999 titpetric/netdata
Open a browser on http://server:19999/ and watch how your server is doing.
titpetric/netdata:latest
releases/latest/Dockerfiletitpetric/netdata:1.5
releases/v1.5.0/Dockerfiletitpetric/netdata:1.4
releases/v1.4.0/Dockerfile
The tags include builds of netdata, with the same tag in upstream. If there's some need to add older tags, you may
use the provided /releases
folder as reference, and add new tags as a PR. The latest
tag is in line with the
upstream and is occasionally prone to failure. As far as older tags go - they will inevitably lack some new features
but should provide a more stable version to run.
Developers note: new tags are not added automatically which means there might be some delay between when a new release of netdata is available and when a new tag is available on docker hub - to add a new release yourself, the procedure is as follows:
- fork netdata repo,
- run /update-releases.sh,
- add, commit, push and submit a PR to
titpetric/netdata
When you will submit a PR, I will also add the new version to the docker hub and thank you profusely.
By default netdata listens to 0.0.0.0 (any address). You might want to change this if you're running netdata in --net=host
mode. You can pass the following environment variable:
- NETDATA_IP - the IP that netdata should listen to, e.g.
127.0.0.1
for localhost only.
If you need to pass some custom options to netdata, you can pass the following environment variable:
- NETDATA_ARGS - for example if you don't want to use NETDATA_IP above, you can pass
-e NETDATA_ARGS="-i 127.0.0.1"
for same effect.
Netdata supports forwarding alarms to an email address. You can set up sSMTP by setting the following ENV variables:
- SSMTP_TO - This is the address alarms will be delivered to.
- SSMTP_SERVER - This is your SMTP server. Defaults to smtp.gmail.com.
- SSMTP_PORT - This is the SMTP server port. Defaults to 587.
- SSMTP_USER - This is your username for the SMTP server.
- SSMTP_PASS - This is your password for the SMTP server. Use an app password if using Gmail.
- SSMTP_TLS - Use TLS for the connection. Defaults to YES.
- SSMTP_HOSTNAME - The hostname mail will come from. Defaults to localhost.
For example, using gmail:
-e SSMTP_TO=user@gmail.com -e SSMTP_USER=user -e SSMTP_PASS=password
Alternatively, if you already have s sSMTP config, you can use that config with:
-v /path/to/config:/etc/ssmtp
See the following link for details on setting up sSMTP: SSMTP - ArchWiki
Netdata supports sending alerts to slack via webhooks. You can set that up by setting the following ENV variables:
- SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL - This is your incoming slack webhook
- SLACK_CHANNEL - This is the default channel that alerts will get sent to
For example:
-e SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL=https://hooks.slack.com/services/XXXX -e SLACK_CHANNEL=alerts
Netdata supports sending alerts to Telegram via token and chat ID. You can set that up by setting the following ENV variables:
- TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN - This is your bot token
- TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID - This is the chat ID
For example:
-e TELEGRAM_BOT_TOKEN=22624413:AAGy12TkSMBYVBTe4lQt3BfUYvUs5h7I1jn -e TELEGRAM_CHAT_ID=137165138
For more details about Telegram alerts, see this page - GitHub
Netdata supports sending alerts to Pushbullet via API token. You can set that up by setting the following ENV variables:
- PUSHBULLET_ACCESS_TOKEN - This is your API token
- PUSHBULLET_DEFAULT_EMAIL - This is the default email that alerts will get sent to if there is not a Pushbullet account attached to it
For example:
-e PUSHBULLET_ACCESS_TOKEN=o.l8VuizWhXgbERf2Q78ghtzb1LDCYvbSD -e PUSHBULLET_DEFAULT_EMAIL=your.email@gmail.com
More details about Pushbullet alerts are provided here - GitHub
On a client netdata set this destination to be the HOST[:PORT] of the
central netdata, and give an API_KEY
that is secret and only known internally
to the netdata clients, and netdata central. See this page - GitHub
- NETDATA_STREAM_DESTINATION -
HOST[:PORT]
to stream to - NETDATA_STREAM_API_KEY -
API_KEY
to send to central net data
-e NETDATA_STREAM_DESTINATION=netdata.service:19999 -e NETDATA_STREAM_API_KEY=1h213ch12h3rc1289e
On the central netdata set 1 or more NETADATA_API_KEY_ENABLE
env variables that matches the API_KEY
that you used on the client above, this will enable the netdata client node to communicate with the netdata central
- NETADATA_API_KEY_ENABLE_{API_KEY}=1
-e NETDATA_API_KEY_ENABLE_1h213ch12h3rc1289e=1
Netdata supports fetching container data from docker.sock
. You can forward it to the netdata container with:
-v /var/run/docker.sock:/var/run/docker.sock
This will allow netdata to resolve container names.
Note: forwarding docker.sock exposes the administrative docker API. If due to some security issue access has been obtained to the container, it will expose full docker API, allowing to stop, create or delete containers, as well as download new images in the host.
TL;DR If you care about security, consider forwarding a secure docker socket with docker-proxy-acl
On debian jessie only 'cpu' and 'disk' metrics show up under individual docker containers. To get the memory metric, you will have to add cgroup_enable=memory swapaccount=1
to /etc/default/grub
, appending the GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
variable:
$ cat /etc/default/grub | grep GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT
GRUB_CMDLINE_LINUX_DEFAULT="quiet cgroup_enable=memory swapaccount=1"
After rebooting your linux instance, the memory accounting subsystem of the kernel will be enabled. Netdata will pick up additional metrics for the containers when it starts.
It's possible to pass a NETDATA_PORT environment variable with -e, to start up netdata on a different port.
docker run -e NETDATA_PORT=80 [...]
Docker needs to run with the SYS_PTRACE capability. Without it, the mapped host/proc filesystem is not fully readable to the netdata deamon, more specifically the "apps" plugin:
16-01-12 07:58:16: ERROR: apps.plugin: Cannot process /host/proc/1/io (errno 13, Permission denied)
See the following link for more details: /proc/1/environ is unavailable in a container that is not priviledged
In addition to the above requirements and limitations, monitoring the complete network interface list of the host is not possible from within the Docker container. If you're running netdata and want to graph all the interfaces available on the host, you will have to use --net=host
mode.
See the following link for more details: network interfaces missing when mounting proc inside a container
I provided a script called fakenet.sh
which provides a copy of the /proc/net
filesystem. You should start this script before you start the netdata container. You can do it like this:
wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/titpetric/netdata/master/fakenet.sh
chmod a+x fakenet.sh
nohup ./fakenet.sh >/dev/null 2>&1 &
Using the above command, the fakenet script will start in the background and will keep running there. You can use other tools like screen
or tmux
to provide similar capability.
The script fills out the /dev/shm/fakenet
location, which you must mount into the container. You must mount it into /fakenet/proc/net
exactly with the option like this:
-v /dev/shm/fakenet:/fakenet/proc/net
The script refreshes network information about every 250ms (four times per second). The interval may be increased to give better accuracy of netdata, but CPU usage will also increase. Because of this, the data is not very accurate and some spikes and valleys will occur because of a shifting window between when the reading was taken (fakeproc) and between when the reading was read by netdata. This means the margin for error is whatever data can be collected in ~250ms.
While the solution might not fit everybody, it's security-positive because the netdata container can only inspect the fake proc/net location, and can't actually access any of the networks because it runs on a private LAN / custom network which is managed and firewalled by docker. You may even open access via application, like a nginx reverse proxy where you can add authentication etc.
Pro/con list:
-
- network isolation stays in tact
-
- all network device metrics are available
-
- one more service to provide fakenet
-
- accuracy vs. cpu use is a trade-off
Netdata provides monitoring via a plugin architecture. This plugin supports many projects that don't provide data over the /proc
filesystem. When you're running netdata in the container, you will have difficulty providing many of these paths to the netdata container.
What you do get (even with the docker version) is:
- Host CPU statististics
- Host Network I/O, QoS
- Host Disk I/O
- Applications monitoring
- Container surface metrics (cpu/disk per name)
You will not get detailed application metrics (mysql, ups, etc.) from other containers or from the host if running netdata in a container. It may be possible to get some of those metrics, but it might not be easy, and most likely not worth it. For most detailed metrics, netdata needs to share the same environment as the application server it monitors. This means it would need to run either in the same container (not even remotely practical), or in the same virtual machine (no containers).
Note: if you have some custom hardware like a UPS which is monitored via USB and netdata supports it, you will most likely need to add new software to the netdata docker image to support it. The correct way to do it is to create your own Dockerfile, start with "FROM titpetric/netdata" and then add all your installation commands to build your own image which will support your hardware setup. Most likely if it's not a very common setup (i.e. available on most machines), the software will not be added to
titpetric/netdata
- that being said, your use case might be useful for others so feel free to submit issues with your extensions or feature requests in terms of new software. I'll gladly add your project/extension to the README here.