Reader small image

You're reading from  Hands-On Infrastructure Monitoring with Prometheus

Product typeBook
Published inMay 2019
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781789612349
Edition1st Edition
Right arrow
Authors (2):
Joel Bastos
Joel Bastos
author image
Joel Bastos

Joel Bastos is an open source supporter and contributor, with a background in infrastructure security and automation. He is always striving for the standardization of processes, code maintainability, and code reusability. He has defined, led, and implemented critical, highly available, and fault-tolerant enterprise and web-scale infrastructures in several organizations, with Prometheus as the cornerstone. He has worked at two unicorn companies in Portugal and at one of the largest transaction-oriented gaming companies in the world. Previously, he has supported several governmental entities with projects such as the Public Key Infrastructure for the Portuguese citizen card. You can find his blogs at kintoandar and on Twitter with the handle @kintoandar.
Read more about Joel Bastos

Pedro Araújo
Pedro Araújo
author image
Pedro Araújo

Pedro Arajo is a site reliability and automation engineer and has defined and implemented several standards for monitoring at scale. His contributions have been fundamental in connecting development teams to infrastructure. He is highly knowledgeable about infrastructure, but his passion is in the automation and management of large-scale, highly-transactional systems. Pedro has contributed to several open source projects, such as Riemann, OpenTSDB, Sensu, Prometheus, and Thanos. You can find him on Twitter with the handle @phcrva.
Read more about Pedro Araújo

View More author details
Right arrow

Summary

In this chapter, we were introduced to some of the most important configuration concepts for setting up a Prometheus server. This knowledge is fundamental for tailoring Prometheus for your specific scenario. From startup flags to the configuration file, we also spun up an instance to experiment and validate the knowledge we obtained.

As more and more workloads are transitioning to containers, and specifically to Kubernetes, we dived into how to set up and manage Prometheus on such an environment. We began experimenting with static configurations as a stepping stone to understand a more robust approach, the Prometheus Operator.

In the next chapter, we'll go into the most common exporters and build upon what we've learned so that we can successfully collect data from various different sources on Prometheus.

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Hands-On Infrastructure Monitoring with Prometheus
Published in: May 2019Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781789612349

Authors (2)

author image
Joel Bastos

Joel Bastos is an open source supporter and contributor, with a background in infrastructure security and automation. He is always striving for the standardization of processes, code maintainability, and code reusability. He has defined, led, and implemented critical, highly available, and fault-tolerant enterprise and web-scale infrastructures in several organizations, with Prometheus as the cornerstone. He has worked at two unicorn companies in Portugal and at one of the largest transaction-oriented gaming companies in the world. Previously, he has supported several governmental entities with projects such as the Public Key Infrastructure for the Portuguese citizen card. You can find his blogs at kintoandar and on Twitter with the handle @kintoandar.
Read more about Joel Bastos

author image
Pedro Araújo

Pedro Arajo is a site reliability and automation engineer and has defined and implemented several standards for monitoring at scale. His contributions have been fundamental in connecting development teams to infrastructure. He is highly knowledgeable about infrastructure, but his passion is in the automation and management of large-scale, highly-transactional systems. Pedro has contributed to several open source projects, such as Riemann, OpenTSDB, Sensu, Prometheus, and Thanos. You can find him on Twitter with the handle @phcrva.
Read more about Pedro Araújo