Fix some edge cases when OOO is enabled
Signed-off-by: Vanshikav123 <vanshikav928@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Vanshika <102902652+Vanshikav123@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Jesus Vazquez <jesusvzpg@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Jesus Vazquez <jesusvzpg@gmail.com>
For: #14355
This commit updates Prometheus to adopt stdlib's log/slog package in
favor of go-kit/log. As part of converting to use slog, several other
related changes are required to get prometheus working, including:
- removed unused logging util func `RateLimit()`
- forward ported the util/logging/Deduper logging by implementing a small custom slog.Handler that does the deduping before chaining log calls to the underlying real slog.Logger
- move some of the json file logging functionality to use prom/common package functionality
- refactored some of the new json file logging for scraping
- changes to promql.QueryLogger interface to swap out logging methods for relevant slog sugar wrappers
- updated lots of tests that used/replicated custom logging functionality, attempting to keep the logical goal of the tests consistent after the transition
- added a healthy amount of `if logger == nil { $makeLogger }` type conditional checks amongst various functions where none were provided -- old code that used the go-kit/log.Logger interface had several places where there were nil references when trying to use functions like `With()` to add keyvals on the new *slog.Logger type
Signed-off-by: TJ Hoplock <t.hoplock@gmail.com>
The error messages we see in the embedded ruler in Mimir right now are contain `alert="unsupported value type"` and `data="unsupported value type"`
```
ts=2024-10-04T09:59:56.900015691Z caller=alerting.go:384 level=warn component=ruler insight=true user=XXX alert="unsupported value type" msg="Expanding alert template failed" err="error executing template __alert_service_mesh_down_alert: template: __alert_service_mesh_down_alert:1:139: executing \"__alert_service_mesh_down_alert\" at <.registry_name>: can't evaluate field registry_name in type struct { Labels map[string]string; ExternalLabels map[string]string; ExternalURL string; Value interface {} }" data="unsupported value type"
```
Signed-off-by: Dimitar Dimitrov <dimitar.dimitrov@grafana.com>
* Rules: Refactor concurrency controller interface
Even though the main purpose of this refactor is to modify the interface of the concurrency controller to accept a Context. I did two drive-by modifications that I think are sensible:
1. I have moved the check for dependencies on rules to the controller itself - this aligns with how the controller should behave as it is a deciding factor on wether we should run concurrently or not.
2. I cleaned up some unused methods from the days of the old interface before #13527 changed it.
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Reduce the flakiness of TestAsyncRuleEvaluation
This tests sleeps for 15 millisecond per rule group, and then comprares
the entire execution time to be smaller than a multiple of that delay.
The ruleCount is 6, so it assumes that the test will come to the
assertions in less than 90ms.
Meanwhile, the Github's Windows runner:
- ...Huh, oh? What? How much time? milliwhat? Sorry I don't speak that.
TL;DR, this increases the delay to 250 millisecond. This won't prevent
the test from being flaky, but will reduce the flakiness by several
orders of magnitude and hopefully won't be an issue anymore.
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zaytsev <mail@olegzaytsev.com>
* Make tests parallel
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zaytsev <mail@olegzaytsev.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Oleg Zaytsev <mail@olegzaytsev.com>
* [PATCH] Allow having evaluation delay for rule groups
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Vernekar <ganeshvern@gmail.com>
* [PATCH] Fix lint
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Vernekar <ganeshvern@gmail.com>
* [PATCH] Move the option to ManagerOptions
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Vernekar <ganeshvern@gmail.com>
* [PATCH] Include evaluation_delay in the group config
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Vernekar <ganeshvern@gmail.com>
* Fix comments
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Add a server configuration option.
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Appease the linter #1
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Add the new server flag documentation
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Improve documentation of the new flag and configuration
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Use named parameters for clarity on the `Rule` interface
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Add `initial` to the flag help
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Change the CHANGELOG area from `ruler` to `rules`
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Rename evaluation_delay to `rule_query_offset`/`query_offset` and make it a global configuration option.
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
E Your branch is up to date with 'origin/gotjosh/evaluation-delay'.
* more docs
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Improve wording on CHANGELOG
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Add `RuleQueryOffset` to the default config in tests in case it changes
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Update docs/configuration/recording_rules.md
Co-authored-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Rename `RuleQueryOffset` to `QueryOffset` when in the group context.
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
* Improve docstring and documentation on the `rule_query_offset`
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
---------
Signed-off-by: Ganesh Vernekar <ganeshvern@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Ganesh Vernekar <ganeshvern@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Julius Volz <julius.volz@gmail.com>
On Windows, Go will sleep 15ms if you ask for less. TestAsyncRuleEvaluation
compares actual delay to the nominal time, so using 15ms should work
better on Windows, and be hardly noticeable elsewhere.
Signed-off-by: Bryan Boreham <bjboreham@gmail.com>
* BUGFIX: Mark the rule's restoration process as completed always
In https://github.com/prometheus/prometheus/pull/13980 I introduced a change to reduce the number of queries executed when we restore alert statuses.
With this, the querying semantics changed as we now need to go through all series before we enter the alert restoration loop and I missed the fact that exiting early when there are no rules to restore would lead to an incomplete restoration.
An alert being restored is used as a proxy for "we're now ready to write `ALERTS/ALERTS_FOR_SERIES` metrics" so as a result we weren't writing the series if we didn't restore anything the first time around.
---------
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
Prometheus restores alert state between restarts and updates. For each rule, it looks at the alerts that are meant to be active and then queries the `ALERTS_FOR_STATE` series for _each_ alert within the rules.
If the alert rule has 120 instances (or series) it'll execute the same query with slightly different labels.
This PR changes the approach so that we only query once per alert rule and then match the corresponding alert that we're about to restore against the series-set. While the approach might use a bit more memory at start-up (if even?) the restore proccess is only ran once per restart so I'd consider this a big win.
This builds on top of #13974
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
When a rule group changes or prometheus is restarted we need to ensure we restore the active alerts that were firing for a corresponding rule, for that Prometheus uses the `ALERTS_FOR_STATE` series to query the previous state and restore it. If a given rule has high cardinality (think 100s of 1000s for series) this proccess can take a bit of time - this is the first of a series of PRs to improve this problem and I'd like to start with exposing the time it takes to restore a rule group as a gauge.
Signed-off-by: gotjosh <josue.abreu@gmail.com>
Rule warnings are logged with numDropped=N while every other component uses num_dropped=N:
```
notifier/notifier.go: level.Warn(n.logger).Log("msg", "Alert batch larger than queue capacity, dropping alerts", "num_dropped", d)
notifier/notifier.go: level.Warn(n.logger).Log("msg", "Alert notification queue full, dropping alerts", "num_dropped", d)
storage/remote/write_handler.go: _ = level.Warn(h.logger).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting out-of-order exemplars", "num_dropped", outOfOrderExemplarErrs)
rules/group.go: level.Warn(logger).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting out-of-order result from rule evaluation", "num_dropped", numOutOfOrder)
rules/group.go: level.Warn(logger).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting too old result from rule evaluation", "num_dropped", numTooOld)
rules/group.go: level.Warn(logger).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting results from rule evaluation with different value but same timestamp", "num_dropped", numDuplicates)
scrape/scrape.go: level.Warn(sl.l).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting out-of-order samples", "num_dropped", appErrs.numOutOfOrder)
scrape/scrape.go: level.Warn(sl.l).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting samples with different value but same timestamp", "num_dropped", appErrs.numDuplicates)
scrape/scrape.go: level.Warn(sl.l).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting samples that are too old or are too far into the future", "num_dropped", appErrs.numOutOfBounds)
scrape/scrape.go: level.Warn(sl.l).Log("msg", "Error on ingesting out-of-order exemplars", "num_dropped", appErrs.numExemplarOutOfOrder)
```
Rename numDropped to num_dropped for consistency.
Signed-off-by: Łukasz Mierzwa <l.mierzwa@gmail.com>
* add custom buckets to native histogram model
* simple copy for custom bounds
* return errors for unsupported add/sub operations
* add test cases for string and update appendhistogram in scrape to account for new schema
* check fields which are supposed to be unused but may affect results in equals
* allow appending custom buckets histograms regardless of max schema
Signed-off-by: Jeanette Tan <jeanette.tan@grafana.com>
Updated & added tests
Review feedback nits
Return empty map if not indeterminate
Use highWatermark to track inflight requests counter
Appease the linter
Clarify feature flag
Signed-off-by: Danny Kopping <danny.kopping@grafana.com>
Optimize histogram iterators
Histogram iterators allocate new objects in the AtHistogram and
AtFloatHistogram methods, which makes calculating rates over long
ranges expensive.
In #13215 we allowed an existing object to be reused
when converting an integer histogram to a float histogram. This commit follows
the same idea and allows injecting an existing object in the AtHistogram and
AtFloatHistogram methods. When the injected value is nil, iterators allocate
new histograms, otherwise they populate and return the injected object.
The commit also adds a CopyTo method to Histogram and FloatHistogram which
is used in the BufferedIterator to overwrite items in the ring instead of making
new copies.
Note that a specialized HPoint pool is needed for all of this to work
(`matrixSelectorHPool`).
---------
Signed-off-by: Filip Petkovski <filip.petkovsky@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: George Krajcsovits <krajorama@users.noreply.github.com>
The 'ToFloat' method on integer histograms currently allocates new memory
each time it is called.
This commit adds an optional *FloatHistogram parameter that can be used
to reuse span and bucket slices. It is up to the caller to make sure the
input float histogram is not used anymore after the call.
Signed-off-by: Filip Petkovski <filip.petkovsky@gmail.com>
Wiser coders than myself have come to the conclusion that a `switch`
statement is almost always superior to a statement that includes any
`else if`.
The exceptions that I have found in our codebase are just these two:
* The `if else` is followed by an additional statement before the next
condition (separated by a `;`).
* The whole thing is within a `for` loop and `break` statements are
used. In this case, using `switch` would require tagging the `for`
loop, which probably tips the balance.
Why are `switch` statements more readable?
For one, fewer curly braces. But more importantly, the conditions all
have the same alignment, so the whole thing follows the natural flow
of going down a list of conditions. With `else if`, in contrast, all
conditions but the first are "hidden" behind `} else if `, harder to
spot and (for no good reason) presented differently from the first
condition.
I'm sure the aforemention wise coders can list even more reasons.
In any case, I like it so much that I have found myself recommending
it in code reviews. I would like to make it a habit in our code base,
without making it a hard requirement that we would test on the CI. But
for that, there has to be a role model, so this commit eliminates all
`if else` occurrences, unless it is autogenerated code or fits one of
the exceptions above.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
We haven't updated golint-ci in our CI yet, but this commit prepares
for that.
There are a lot of new warnings, and it is mostly because the "revive"
linter got updated. I agree with most of the new warnings, mostly
around not naming unused function parameters (although it is justified
in some cases for documentation purposes – while things like mocks are
a good example where not naming the parameter is clearer).
I'm pretty upset about the "empty block" warning to include `for`
loops. It's such a common pattern to do something in the head of the
`for` loop and then have an empty block. There is still an open issue
about this: https://github.com/mgechev/revive/issues/810 I have
disabled "revive" altogether in files where empty blocks are used
excessively, and I have made the effort to add individual
`// nolint:revive` where empty blocks are used just once or twice.
It's borderline noisy, though, but let's go with it for now.
I should mention that none of the "empty block" warnings for `for`
loop bodies were legitimate.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>
In other words: Instead of having a “polymorphous” `Point` that can
either contain a float value or a histogram value, use an `FPoint` for
floats and an `HPoint` for histograms.
This seemingly small change has a _lot_ of repercussions throughout
the codebase.
The idea here is to avoid the increase in size of `Point` arrays that
happened after native histograms had been added.
The higher-level data structures (`Sample`, `Series`, etc.) are still
“polymorphous”. The same idea could be applied to them, but at each
step the trade-offs needed to be evaluated.
The idea with this change is to do the minimum necessary to get back
to pre-histogram performance for functions that do not touch
histograms. Here are comparisons for the `changes` function. The test
data doesn't include histograms yet. Ideally, there would be no change
in the benchmark result at all.
First runtime v2.39 compared to directly prior to this commit:
```
name old time/op new time/op delta
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1-16 391µs ± 2% 542µs ± 1% +38.58% (p=0.000 n=9+8)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=10-16 452µs ± 2% 617µs ± 2% +36.48% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=100-16 1.12ms ± 1% 1.36ms ± 2% +21.58% (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1000-16 7.83ms ± 1% 8.94ms ± 1% +14.21% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1-16 2.98ms ± 0% 3.30ms ± 1% +10.67% (p=0.000 n=9+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=10-16 3.66ms ± 1% 4.10ms ± 1% +11.82% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=100-16 10.5ms ± 0% 11.8ms ± 1% +12.50% (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1000-16 77.6ms ± 1% 87.4ms ± 1% +12.63% (p=0.000 n=9+9)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1-16 30.4ms ± 2% 32.8ms ± 1% +8.01% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=10-16 37.1ms ± 2% 40.6ms ± 2% +9.64% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=100-16 105ms ± 1% 117ms ± 1% +11.69% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1000-16 783ms ± 3% 876ms ± 1% +11.83% (p=0.000 n=9+10)
```
And then runtime v2.39 compared to after this commit:
```
name old time/op new time/op delta
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1-16 391µs ± 2% 547µs ± 1% +39.84% (p=0.000 n=9+8)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=10-16 452µs ± 2% 616µs ± 2% +36.15% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=100-16 1.12ms ± 1% 1.26ms ± 1% +12.20% (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_one[1d]),steps=1000-16 7.83ms ± 1% 7.95ms ± 1% +1.59% (p=0.000 n=10+8)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1-16 2.98ms ± 0% 3.38ms ± 2% +13.49% (p=0.000 n=9+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=10-16 3.66ms ± 1% 4.02ms ± 1% +9.80% (p=0.000 n=10+9)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=100-16 10.5ms ± 0% 10.8ms ± 1% +3.08% (p=0.000 n=8+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_ten[1d]),steps=1000-16 77.6ms ± 1% 78.1ms ± 1% +0.58% (p=0.035 n=9+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1-16 30.4ms ± 2% 33.5ms ± 4% +10.18% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=10-16 37.1ms ± 2% 40.0ms ± 1% +7.98% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=100-16 105ms ± 1% 107ms ± 1% +1.92% (p=0.000 n=10+10)
RangeQuery/expr=changes(a_hundred[1d]),steps=1000-16 783ms ± 3% 775ms ± 1% -1.02% (p=0.019 n=9+9)
```
In summary, the runtime doesn't really improve with this change for
queries with just a few steps. For queries with many steps, this
commit essentially reinstates the old performance. This is good
because the many-step queries are the one that matter most (longest
absolute runtime).
In terms of allocations, though, this commit doesn't make a dent at
all (numbers not shown). The reason is that most of the allocations
happen in the sampleRingIterator (in the storage package), which has
to be addressed in a separate commit.
Signed-off-by: beorn7 <beorn@grafana.com>