Intel PowerStat and Google Cloud Monitoring Integration
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Input and output integration overview
<p>Monitor power statistics on Intel-based platforms and is compatible with Linux-based operating systems. It helps in understanding and managing power efficiency and CPU performance.</p>
<p>The Stackdriver plugin allows users to send metrics directly to a specified project in Google Cloud Monitoring, facilitating robust monitoring capabilities across their cloud resources.</p>
Integration details
Intel PowerStat
<p>The Intel PowerStat plugin is designed to monitor power statistics specifically on Intel-based platforms running a Linux operating system. It offers visibility into critical metrics such as CPU temperature, utilization, and power consumption, making it essential for power saving initiatives and workload migration strategies. By leveraging telemetry frameworks, this plugin enables users to gain insights into platform-level metrics that help with monitoring and analytics systems in the context of Management and Orchestration (MANO). It facilitates the ability to make informed decisions and perform corrective actions based on the state of the platform, ultimately contributing to better system efficiency and reliability.</p>
Google Cloud Monitoring
<p>This plugin writes metrics to a project in Google Cloud Monitoring, which used to be known as Stackdriver. Authentication is a prerequisite and can be achieved via service accounts or user credentials. The plugin is designed to group metrics by a <code>namespace</code> variable and metric key, facilitating organized data management. However, users are encouraged to use the <code>official</code> naming format for enhanced query efficiency. The plugin supports additional configurations for managing metric representation and allows tags to be treated as resource labels. Notably, it imposes certain restrictions on the data it can accept, such as not allowing string values or points that are out of chronological order.</p>
Configuration
Intel PowerStat
Google Cloud Monitoring
Input and output integration examples
Intel PowerStat
<ol> <li> <p><strong>Optimizing Data Center Energy Usage</strong>: Monitor power consumption metrics across all CPUs in a data center. By capturing real-time data, administrators can identify which servers consume the most power and implement shutdowns or load balancing strategies during low demand periods, effectively reducing operational costs.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Dynamic Workload Migration Based on Power Efficiency</strong>: Integrate this plugin with a cloud orchestration tool to enable dynamic migration of workloads based on power usage metrics. If a particular server is recorded as consuming excessive power without corresponding output, the orchestrator can seamlessly migrate workloads to more efficient nodes, ensuring optimal resource utilization and lower energy expenses.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Monitoring and Alerting Mechanism for Overheating CPUs</strong>: Implement an alerting system using the CPU temperature metrics captured by Intel PowerStat. Setting thresholds for temperature can alert system administrators when a CPU is prone to overheating, allowing proactive measures to be taken before hardware damage occurs, ultimately extending the life of the components.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Performance Benchmarking for CPU-intensive Applications</strong>: Use the metrics provided to benchmark the performance of CPU-intensive applications. By analyzing the <code>cpu_frequency</code>, <code>cpu_temperature</code>, and power metrics under load, developers can optimize application performance and make informed decisions regarding scaling and resource allocation.</p> </li> </ol>
Google Cloud Monitoring
<ol> <li> <p><strong>Multi-Project Metric Aggregation</strong>: Use this plugin to send aggregated metrics from various applications across different projects into a single Google Cloud Monitoring project. This use case helps centralize metrics for teams managing multiple applications, providing a unified view for performance monitoring and enhancing decision-making. By configuring different quota projects for billing, organizations can ensure proper cost management while benefiting from a consolidated monitoring strategy.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Anomaly Detection Setup</strong>: Integrate the plugin with a machine learning-based analytics tool that identifies anomalies in the collected metrics. Using the historical data provided by the plugin, the tool can learn normal baseline behavior and promptly alert the operations team when unusual patterns arise, enabling proactive troubleshooting and minimizing service disruptions.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Dynamic Resource Labeling</strong>: Implement dynamic tagging by utilizing the tags_as_resource_label option to adaptively attach resource labels based on runtime conditions. This setup allows metrics to provide context-sensitive information, such as varying environmental parameters or operational states, enhancing the granularity of monitoring and reporting without changing the fundamental metric structure.</p> </li> <li> <p><strong>Custom Metric Visualization Dashboards</strong>: Leverage the data collected by the Google Cloud Monitoring output plugin to feed a custom metrics visualization dashboard using a third-party framework. By visualizing metrics in real-time, teams can achieve better situational awareness, notably by correlating different metrics, improving operational decision-making, and streamlining performance management workflows.</p> </li> </ol>
Feedback
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Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale
Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.
See Ways to Get Started
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