zrok/docs/guides/metrics-and-limits/configuring-metrics.md

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# Configuring Metrics
A fully configured, production-scale `zrok` service instance looks like this:
![zrok Metrics Architecture](images/metrics-architecture.png)
`zrok` metrics builds on top of the `fabric.usage` event type from OpenZiti. The OpenZiti controller has a number of way to emit events. The `zrok` controller has several ways to consume `fabric.usage` events. Smaller installations could be configured in these ways:
![zrok simplified metrics architecture](images/metrics-architecture-simple.png)
Environments that horizontally scale the `zrok` control plane with multiple controllers should use an AMQP-based queue to "fan out" the metrics workload across the entire control plane. Simpler installations that use a single `zrok` controller can collect `fabric.usage` events from the OpenZiti controller by "tailing" the events log file, or collecting them from the OpenZiti controller's websocket implementation.
## Configuring the OpenZiti Controller
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> This requires a version of OpenZiti with a `fabric` dependency of `v0.22.52` or newer.
Emitting `fabric.usage` events to a file is currently the most reliable mechanism to capture usage events into `zrok`. We're going to configure the OpenZiti controller to append `fabric.usage` events to a file, by adding this stanza to the OpenZiti controller configuration:
```yaml
events:
jsonLogger:
subscriptions:
- type: fabric.usage
version: 3
handler:
type: file
format: json
path: /tmp/fabric-usage.json
```
You'll want to adjust the `events/jsonLogger/handler/path` to wherever you would like to send these events for ingestion into `zrok`. There are additional OpenZiti options that control file rotation. Be sure to consult the OpenZiti docs to tune these settings to be appropriate for your environment.
By default the OpenZiti events infrastructure reports and batches events in 1 minute buckets. 1 minute is too large of an interval to provide a snappy `zrok` metrics experience. So, let's increase the frequency to every 5 seconds. Add this to the `network` stanza of your OpenZiti controller:
```yaml
network:
intervalAgeThreshold: 5s
metricsReportInterval: 5s
```
And you'll want to add this stanza to the router configuration for every router on your OpenZiti network:
```yaml
metrics:
reportInterval: 5s
intervalAgeThreshold: 5s
```
Be sure to restart all of the components of your OpenZiti network after making these configuration changes.
## Configuring the zrok Metrics Bridge
`zrok` currently uses a "metrics bridge" component (running as a separate process) to consume the `fabric.usage` events from the OpenZiti controller, and publish them onto an AMQP queue. Add a stanza like the following to your `zrok` controller configuration:
```yaml
bridge:
source:
type: fileSource
path: /tmp/fabric-usage.json
sink:
type: amqpSink
url: amqp://guest:guest@localhost:5672
queue_name: events
```
This configuration consumes the `fabric.usage` events from the file we previously specified in our OpenZiti controller configuration, and publishes them onto an AMQP queue.
### RabbitMQ
For this example, we're going to use RabbitMQ as our AMQP implementation. The stock, default RabbitMQ configuration, launched as a `docker` container will work just fine:
```
$ docker run -it --rm --name rabbitmq -p 5672:5672 -p 15672:15672 rabbitmq:3.11-management
```
Once RabbitMQ is running, you can start the `zrok` metrics bridge by pointing it at your `zrok` controller configuration, like this:
```
$ zrok ctrl metrics bridge <path/to/zrok-controller.yaml>
```
## Configuring zrok Metrics
Configure the `metrics` section of your `zrok` controller. Here is an example:
```yaml
metrics:
agent:
source:
type: amqpSource
url: amqp://guest:guest@localhost:5672
queue_name: events
influx:
url: "http://127.0.0.1:8086"
bucket: zrok
org: zrok
token: "<secret token>"
```
This configures the `zrok` controller to consume usage events from the AMQP queue, and configures the InfluxDB metrics store.
## Testing Metrics
With all of the components configured and running, either use `zrok test loop` or manually create share(s) to generate traffic on the `zrok` instance. If everything is working correctly, you should see log messages from the controller like the following, which indicate that that the controller is processing OpenZiti usage events, and generating `zrok` metrics:
```
[5339.658] INFO zrok/controller/metrics.(*influxWriter).Handle: share: 736z80mr4syu, circuit: Ad1V-6y48 backend {rx: 4.5 kB, tx: 4.6 kB} frontend {rx: 4.6 kB, tx: 4.5 kB}
[5349.652] INFO zrok/controller/metrics.(*influxWriter).Handle: share: 736z80mr4syu, circuit: Ad1V-6y48 backend {rx: 2.5 kB, tx: 2.6 kB} frontend {rx: 2.6 kB, tx: 2.5 kB}
[5354.657] INFO zrok/controller/metrics.(*influxWriter).Handle: share: 5a4u7lqxb7pa, circuit: iG1--6H4S backend {rx: 13.2 kB, tx: 13.3 kB} frontend {rx: 13.3 kB, tx: 13.2 kB}
```
The `zrok` web console should also be showing activity for your share(s) like the following:
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![zrok web console activity](images/zrok-console-activity.png)
With metrics configured, you might be interested in [configuring limits](configuring-limits.md).