mallardduck / PushProx

Proxy to allow Prometheus to scrape through NAT etc.

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PushProx

PushProx is a client and proxy that allows transversing of NAT and other similar network topologies by Prometheus, while still following the pull model.

While this is reasonably robust in practice, this is a work in progress.

Rancher Fork

This fork of prometheus-community/PushProx introduces a set of changes that enable the PushProx client and proxy to be used as part of the rancher-pushprox Helm chart, which is primarily used to deploy Prometheus exporters for Rancher Monitoring V2.

All notable changes from the upstream PushProx repository are recorded in CHANGELOG.md.

Running

First build the proxy and client:

git clone https://github.com/rancher/pushprox.git
cd pushprox
make build

Run the proxy somewhere both Prometheus and the clients can get to:

./pushprox-proxy

On every target machine run the client, pointing it at the proxy:

./pushprox-client --proxy-url=http://proxy:8080/

In Prometheus, use the proxy as a proxy_url:

scrape_configs:
- job_name: node
  proxy_url: http://proxy:8080/
  static_configs:
    - targets: ['client:9100']  # Presuming the FQDN of the client is "client".

If the target must be scraped over SSL/TLS, add:

  params:
    _scheme: [https]

rather than the usual scheme: https. Only the default scheme: http works with the proxy, so this workaround is required.

Service Discovery

The /clients endpoint will return a list of all registered clients in the format used by file_sd_configs. You could use wget in a cronjob to put it somewhere file_sd_configs can read and then then relabel as needed.

How It Works

Sequence diagram

Clients perform scrapes in a network environment that's not directly accessible by Prometheus. The Proxy is accessible by both the Clients and Prometheus. Each client is identified by its fqdn.

For example, the following sequence is performed when Prometheus scrapes target fqdn-x via PushProx. First, a Client polls the Proxy for scrape requests, and includes its fqdn in the poll (1). The Proxy does not respond yet. Next, Prometheus tries to scrape the target with hostname fqdn-x via the Proxy (2). Using the fqdn received in (1), the Proxy now routes the scrape to the correct Client: the scrape request is in the response body of the poll (3). This scrape request is executed by the client (4), the response containing metrics (5) is posted to the Proxy (6). On its turn, the Proxy returns this to Prometheus (7) as a reponse to the initial scrape of (2).

PushProx passes all HTTP headers transparently, features like compression and accept encoding are up to the scraping Prometheus server.

Security

There is no authentication or authorization included, a reverse proxy can be put in front though to add these.

Running the client allows those with access to the proxy or the client to access all network services on the machine hosting the client.

License

Copyright (c) 2019 Rancher Labs, Inc.

Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at

http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0

Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

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Proxy to allow Prometheus to scrape through NAT etc.

License:Apache License 2.0


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