Search icon
Arrow left icon
All Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Newsletters
Free Learning
Arrow right icon
Mastering Prometheus

You're reading from  Mastering Prometheus

Product type Book
Published in Apr 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805125662
Pages 310 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
Author (1):
William Hegedus William Hegedus
Profile icon William Hegedus

Table of Contents (21) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1: Fundamentals of Prometheus
2. Chapter 1: Observability, Monitoring, and Prometheus 3. Chapter 2: Deploying Prometheus 4. Chapter 3: The Prometheus Data Model and PromQL 5. Chapter 4: Using Service Discovery 6. Chapter 5: Effective Alerting with Prometheus 7. Part 2: Scaling Prometheus
8. Chapter 6: Advancing Prometheus: Sharding, Federation, and High Availability 9. Chapter 7: Optimizing and Debugging Prometheus 10. Chapter 8: Enabling Systems Monitoring with the Node Exporter 11. Part 3: Extending Prometheus
12. Chapter 9: Utilizing Remote Storage Systems with Prometheus 13. Chapter 10: Extending Prometheus Globally with Thanos 14. Chapter 11: Jsonnet and Monitoring Mixins 15. Chapter 12: Utilizing Continuous Integration (CI) Pipelines with Prometheus 16. Chapter 13: Defining and Alerting on SLOs 17. Chapter 14: Integrating Prometheus with OpenTelemetry 18. Chapter 15: Beyond Prometheus 19. Index 20. Other Books You May Enjoy

Scrape jitter

Scrape jitter is the most common cause of oversized TSDB blocks that I have observed. Recall from Chapter 3 how – from the third scrape onwards – timestamp values are stored in the TSDB as they only store the delta of the delta of the sample timestamp. So long as this delta of the delta is 0, the TSDB’s compaction process can save a lot of space by effectively dropping the timestamp value from stored samples that all occur at a consistent delta. With millions of samples, this can add up to gigabytes of storage space in every TSDB block. However, when the delta of the delta is not consistent, this is referred to as scrape jitter.

Scrape jitter is a way to say that scrapes do not occur at consistent intervals. In Prometheus, this often means that they are off by just a few milliseconds. By default, Prometheus will automatically adjust timestamps that are within a 2ms tolerance.

Configuring timestamp adjustments

Whether or not timestamps are...

lock icon The rest of the chapter is locked
Register for a free Packt account to unlock a world of extra content!
A free Packt account unlocks extra newsletters, articles, discounted offers, and much more. Start advancing your knowledge today.
Unlock this book and the full library FREE for 7 days
Get unlimited access to 7000+ expert-authored eBooks and videos courses covering every tech area you can think of
Renews at $15.99/month. Cancel anytime}