Telegraf's configuration file is written using TOML and is composed of three sections: global tags, agent settings, and plugins.
View the default telegraf.conf config file with all available plugins.
A default config file can be generated by telegraf:
telegraf config > telegraf.conf
To generate a file with specific inputs and outputs, you can use the --input-filter and --output-filter flags:
telegraf --input-filter cpu:mem:net:swap --output-filter influxdb:kafka config
The location of the configuration file can be set via the --config
command
line flag.
When the --config-directory
command line flag is used files ending with
.conf
in the specified directory will also be included in the Telegraf
configuration.
On most systems, the default locations are /etc/telegraf/telegraf.conf
for
the main configuration file and /etc/telegraf/telegraf.d
for the directory of
configuration files.
Environment variables can be used anywhere in the config file, simply surround
them with ${}
. Replacement occurs before file parsing. For strings
the variable must be within quotes, e.g., "${STR_VAR}"
, for numbers and booleans
they should be unquoted, e.g., ${INT_VAR}
, ${BOOL_VAR}
.
When using the .deb
or .rpm
packages, you can define environment variables
in the /etc/default/telegraf
file.
Example:
/etc/default/telegraf
:
USER="alice"
INFLUX_URL="http://localhost:8086"
INFLUX_SKIP_DATABASE_CREATION="true"
INFLUX_PASSWORD="monkey123"
/etc/telegraf.conf
:
[global_tags]
user = "${USER}"
[[inputs.mem]]
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = ["${INFLUX_URL}"]
skip_database_creation = ${INFLUX_SKIP_DATABASE_CREATION}
password = "${INFLUX_PASSWORD}"
The above files will produce the following effective configuration file to be parsed:
[global_tags]
user = "alice"
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = "http://localhost:8086"
skip_database_creation = true
password = "monkey123"
Intervals are durations of time and can be specified for supporting settings by
combining an integer value and time unit as a string value. Valid time units are
ns
, us
(or µs
), ms
, s
, m
, h
.
[agent]
interval = "10s"
Global tags can be specified in the [global_tags]
table in key="value"
format. All metrics that are gathered will be tagged with the tags specified.
[global_tags]
dc = "us-east-1"
The agent table configures Telegraf and the defaults used across all plugins.
-
interval: Default data collection interval for all inputs.
-
round_interval: Rounds collection interval to interval ie, if interval="10s" then always collect on :00, :10, :20, etc.
-
metric_batch_size: Telegraf will send metrics to outputs in batches of at most metric_batch_size metrics. This controls the size of writes that Telegraf sends to output plugins.
-
metric_buffer_limit: Maximum number of unwritten metrics per output. Increasing this value allows for longer periods of output downtime without dropping metrics at the cost of higher maximum memory usage.
-
collection_jitter: Collection jitter is used to jitter the collection by a random interval. Each plugin will sleep for a random time within jitter before collecting. This can be used to avoid many plugins querying things like sysfs at the same time, which can have a measurable effect on the system.
-
flush_interval: Default flushing interval for all outputs. Maximum flush_interval will be flush_interval + flush_jitter.
-
flush_jitter: Default flush jitter for all outputs. This jitters the flush interval by a random amount. This is primarily to avoid large write spikes for users running a large number of telegraf instances. ie, a jitter of 5s and interval 10s means flushes will happen every 10-15s.
-
precision: Collected metrics are rounded to the precision specified as an interval.
Precision will NOT be used for service inputs. It is up to each individual service input to set the timestamp at the appropriate precision.
-
debug: Log at debug level.
-
quiet: Log only error level messages.
-
logtarget: Log target controls the destination for logs and can be one of "file", "stderr" or, on Windows, "eventlog". When set to "file", the output file is determined by the "logfile" setting.
-
logfile: Name of the file to be logged to when using the "file" logtarget. If set to the empty string then logs are written to stderr.
-
logfile_rotation_interval: The logfile will be rotated after the time interval specified. When set to 0 no time based rotation is performed.
-
logfile_rotation_max_size: The logfile will be rotated when it becomes larger than the specified size. When set to 0 no size based rotation is performed.
-
logfile_rotation_max_archives: Maximum number of rotated archives to keep, any older logs are deleted. If set to -1, no archives are removed.
-
hostname: Override default hostname, if empty use os.Hostname()
-
omit_hostname: If set to true, do no set the "host" tag in the telegraf agent.
Telegraf plugins are divided into 4 types: inputs, outputs, processors, and aggregators.
Unlike the global_tags
and agent
tables, any plugin can be defined
multiple times and each instance will run independantly. This allows you to
have plugins defined with differing configurations as needed within a single
Telegraf process.
Each plugin has a unique set of configuration options, reference the sample configuration for details. Additionally, several options are available on any plugin depending on its type.
Input plugins gather and create metrics. They support both polling and event driven operation.
Parameters that can be used with any input plugin:
- alias: Name an instance of a plugin.
- interval: How often to gather this metric. Normal plugins use a single global interval, but if one particular input should be run less or more often, you can configure that here.
- name_override: Override the base name of the measurement. (Default is the name of the input).
- name_prefix: Specifies a prefix to attach to the measurement name.
- name_suffix: Specifies a suffix to attach to the measurement name.
- tags: A map of tags to apply to a specific input's measurements.
The metric filtering parameters can be used to limit what metrics are emitted from the input plugin.
Use the name_suffix parameter to emit measurements with the name cpu_total
:
[[inputs.cpu]]
name_suffix = "_total"
percpu = false
totalcpu = true
Use the name_override parameter to emit measurements with the name foobar
:
[[inputs.cpu]]
name_override = "foobar"
percpu = false
totalcpu = true
Emit measurements with two additional tags: tag1=foo
and tag2=bar
NOTE: With TOML, order matters. Parameters belong to the last defined table header, place
[inputs.cpu.tags]
table at the end of the plugin definition.
[[inputs.cpu]]
percpu = false
totalcpu = true
[inputs.cpu.tags]
tag1 = "foo"
tag2 = "bar"
Utilize name_override
, name_prefix
, or name_suffix
config options to
avoid measurement collisions when defining multiple plugins:
[[inputs.cpu]]
percpu = false
totalcpu = true
[[inputs.cpu]]
percpu = true
totalcpu = false
name_override = "percpu_usage"
fielddrop = ["cpu_time*"]
Output plugins write metrics to a location. Outputs commonly write to databases, network services, and messaging systems.
Parameters that can be used with any output plugin:
- alias: Name an instance of a plugin.
- flush_interval: The maximum time between flushes. Use this setting to
override the agent
flush_interval
on a per plugin basis. - flush_jitter: The amount of time to jitter the flush interval. Use this
setting to override the agent
flush_jitter
on a per plugin basis. - metric_batch_size: The maximum number of metrics to send at once. Use
this setting to override the agent
metric_batch_size
on a per plugin basis. - metric_buffer_limit: The maximum number of unsent metrics to buffer.
Use this setting to override the agent
metric_buffer_limit
on a per plugin basis.
The metric filtering parameters can be used to limit what metrics are emitted from the output plugin.
Override flush parameters for a single output:
[agent]
flush_interval = "10s"
flush_jitter = "5s"
metric_batch_size = 1000
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = [ "http://example.org:8086" ]
database = "telegraf"
[[outputs.file]]
files = [ "stdout" ]
flush_interval = "1s"
flush_jitter = "1s"
metric_batch_size = 10
Processor plugins perform processing tasks on metrics and are commonly used to rename or apply transformations to metrics. Processors are applied after the input plugins and before any aggregator plugins.
Parameters that can be used with any processor plugin:
- alias: Name an instance of a plugin.
- order: The order in which the processor(s) are executed. If this is not specified then processor execution order will be random.
The metric filtering parameters can be used to limit what metrics are handled by the processor. Excluded metrics are passed downstream to the next processor.
If the order processors are applied matters you must set order on all involved processors:
[[processors.rename]]
order = 1
[[processors.rename.replace]]
tag = "path"
dest = "resource"
[[processors.strings]]
order = 2
[[processors.strings.trim_prefix]]
tag = "resource"
prefix = "/api/"
Aggregator plugins produce new metrics after examining metrics over a time period, as the name suggests they are commonly used to produce new aggregates such as mean/max/min metrics. Aggregators operate on metrics after any processors have been applied.
Parameters that can be used with any aggregator plugin:
- alias: Name an instance of a plugin.
- period: The period on which to flush & clear each aggregator. All metrics that are sent with timestamps outside of this period will be ignored by the aggregator.
- delay: The delay before each aggregator is flushed. This is to control how long for aggregators to wait before receiving metrics from input plugins, in the case that aggregators are flushing and inputs are gathering on the same interval.
- grace: The duration when the metrics will still be aggregated by the plugin, even though they're outside of the aggregation period. This is needed in a situation when the agent is expected to receive late metrics and it's acceptable to roll them up into next aggregation period.
- drop_original: If true, the original metric will be dropped by the aggregator and will not get sent to the output plugins.
- name_override: Override the base name of the measurement. (Default is the name of the input).
- name_prefix: Specifies a prefix to attach to the measurement name.
- name_suffix: Specifies a suffix to attach to the measurement name.
- tags: A map of tags to apply to a specific input's measurements.
The metric filtering parameters can be used to limit what metrics are handled by the aggregator. Excluded metrics are passed downstream to the next aggregator.
Collect and emit the min/max of the system load1 metric every 30s, dropping the originals.
[[inputs.system]]
fieldpass = ["load1"] # collects system load1 metric.
[[aggregators.minmax]]
period = "30s" # send & clear the aggregate every 30s.
drop_original = true # drop the original metrics.
[[outputs.file]]
files = ["stdout"]
Collect and emit the min/max of the swap metrics every 30s, dropping the
originals. The aggregator will not be applied to the system load metrics due
to the namepass
parameter.
[[inputs.swap]]
[[inputs.system]]
fieldpass = ["load1"] # collects system load1 metric.
[[aggregators.minmax]]
period = "30s" # send & clear the aggregate every 30s.
drop_original = true # drop the original metrics.
namepass = ["swap"] # only "pass" swap metrics through the aggregator.
[[outputs.file]]
files = ["stdout"]
Metric filtering can be configured per plugin on any input, output, processor, and aggregator plugin. Filters fall under two categories: Selectors and Modifiers.
Selector filters include or exclude entire metrics. When a metric is excluded from a Input or an Output plugin, the metric is dropped. If a metric is excluded from a Processor or Aggregator plugin, it is skips the plugin and is sent onwards to the next stage of processing.
-
namepass: An array of glob pattern strings. Only metrics whose measurement name matches a pattern in this list are emitted.
-
namedrop: The inverse of
namepass
. If a match is found the metric is discarded. This is tested on metrics after they have passed thenamepass
test. -
tagpass: A table mapping tag keys to arrays of glob pattern strings. Only metrics that contain a tag key in the table and a tag value matching one of its patterns is emitted.
-
tagdrop: The inverse of
tagpass
. If a match is found the metric is discarded. This is tested on metrics after they have passed thetagpass
test.
Modifier filters remove tags and fields from a metric. If all fields are removed the metric is removed.
-
fieldpass: An array of glob pattern strings. Only fields whose field key matches a pattern in this list are emitted.
-
fielddrop: The inverse of
fieldpass
. Fields with a field key matching one of the patterns will be discarded from the metric. This is tested on metrics after they have passed thefieldpass
test. -
taginclude: An array of glob pattern strings. Only tags with a tag key matching one of the patterns are emitted. In contrast to
tagpass
, which will pass an entire metric based on its tag,taginclude
removes all non matching tags from the metric. Any tag can be filtered including global tags and the agenthost
tag. -
tagexclude: The inverse of
taginclude
. Tags with a tag key matching one of the patterns will be discarded from the metric. Any tag can be filtered including global tags and the agenthost
tag.
Using tagpass and tagdrop:
[[inputs.cpu]]
percpu = true
totalcpu = false
fielddrop = ["cpu_time"]
# Don't collect CPU data for cpu6 & cpu7
[inputs.cpu.tagdrop]
cpu = [ "cpu6", "cpu7" ]
[[inputs.disk]]
[inputs.disk.tagpass]
# tagpass conditions are OR, not AND.
# If the (filesystem is ext4 or xfs) OR (the path is /opt or /home)
# then the metric passes
fstype = [ "ext4", "xfs" ]
# Globs can also be used on the tag values
path = [ "/opt", "/home*" ]
[[inputs.win_perf_counters]]
[[inputs.win_perf_counters.object]]
ObjectName = "Network Interface"
Instances = ["*"]
Counters = [
"Bytes Received/sec",
"Bytes Sent/sec"
]
Measurement = "win_net"
# Don't send metrics where the Windows interface name (instance) begins with isatap or Local
[inputs.win_perf_counters.tagdrop]
instance = ["isatap*", "Local*"]
Using fieldpass and fielddrop:
# Drop all metrics for guest & steal CPU usage
[[inputs.cpu]]
percpu = false
totalcpu = true
fielddrop = ["usage_guest", "usage_steal"]
# Only store inode related metrics for disks
[[inputs.disk]]
fieldpass = ["inodes*"]
Using namepass and namedrop:
# Drop all metrics about containers for kubelet
[[inputs.prometheus]]
urls = ["http://kube-node-1:4194/metrics"]
namedrop = ["container_*"]
# Only store rest client related metrics for kubelet
[[inputs.prometheus]]
urls = ["http://kube-node-1:4194/metrics"]
namepass = ["rest_client_*"]
Using taginclude and tagexclude:
# Only include the "cpu" tag in the measurements for the cpu plugin.
[[inputs.cpu]]
percpu = true
totalcpu = true
taginclude = ["cpu"]
# Exclude the "fstype" tag from the measurements for the disk plugin.
[[inputs.disk]]
tagexclude = ["fstype"]
Metrics can be routed to different outputs using the metric name and tags:
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = [ "http://localhost:8086" ]
database = "telegraf"
# Drop all measurements that start with "aerospike"
namedrop = ["aerospike*"]
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = [ "http://localhost:8086" ]
database = "telegraf-aerospike-data"
# Only accept aerospike data:
namepass = ["aerospike*"]
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = [ "http://localhost:8086" ]
database = "telegraf-cpu0-data"
# Only store measurements where the tag "cpu" matches the value "cpu0"
[outputs.influxdb.tagpass]
cpu = ["cpu0"]
Routing metrics to different outputs based on the input. Metrics are tagged
with influxdb_database
in the input, which is then used to select the
output. The tag is removed in the outputs before writing.
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = ["http://influxdb.example.com"]
database = "db_default"
[outputs.influxdb.tagdrop]
influxdb_database = ["*"]
[[outputs.influxdb]]
urls = ["http://influxdb.example.com"]
database = "db_other"
tagexclude = ["influxdb_database"]
[outputs.influxdb.tagpass]
influxdb_database = ["other"]
[[inputs.disk]]
[inputs.disk.tags]
influxdb_database = "other"
Reference the detailed TLS documentation.