discovery.http
discovery.http provides a flexible way to define targets by querying an external http endpoint.
It fetches targets from an HTTP endpoint containing a list of zero or more target definitions.
The target must reply with an HTTP 200 response.
The HTTP header Content-Type must be application/json, and the body must be valid JSON.
Example response body:
[
{
"targets": [ "<HOST>", ... ],
"labels": {
"<labelname>": "<LABELVALUE>", ...
}
},
...
]It’s possible to use additional fields in the JSON to pass parameters to prometheus.scrape such as the metricsPath and scrape_interval.
The following example provides a target with a custom metricsPath, scrape interval, and timeout value:
[
{
"labels" : {
"__metrics_path__" : "/api/prometheus",
"__scheme__" : "https",
"__scrape_interval__" : "60s",
"__scrape_timeout__" : "10s",
"service" : "custom-api-service"
},
"targets" : [
"custom-api:443"
]
},
]It’s also possible to append query parameters to the metrics path with the __param_<name> syntax.
The following example calls the metrics path /health?target_data=prometheus:
[
{
"labels" : {
"__metrics_path__" : "/health",
"__scheme__" : "https",
"__scrape_interval__" : "60s",
"__scrape_timeout__" : "10s",
"__param_target_data": "prometheus",
"service" : "custom-api-service"
},
"targets" : [
"custom-api:443"
]
},
]For more information on the potential labels you can use, refer to the prometheus.scrape technical details section, or the Prometheus Configuration documentation.
Usage
discovery.http "<LABEL>" {
url = "<URL>"
}Arguments
You can use the following arguments with discovery.http:
At most, one of the following can be provided:
authorizationblockbasic_authblockbearer_token_fileargumentbearer_tokenargumentoauth2block
no_proxy can contain IPs, CIDR notations, and domain names. IP and domain names can contain port numbers.
proxy_url must be configured if no_proxy is configured.
proxy_from_environment uses the environment variables HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY (or the lowercase versions thereof).
Requests use the proxy from the environment variable matching their scheme, unless excluded by NO_PROXY.
proxy_url and no_proxy must not be configured if proxy_from_environment is configured.
proxy_connect_header should only be configured if proxy_url or proxy_from_environment are configured.
Blocks
You can use the following blocks with discovery.http:
The > symbol indicates deeper levels of nesting.
For example, oauth2 > tls_config refers to a tls_config block defined inside an oauth2 block.
authorization
The authorization block configures generic authorization to the endpoint.
credential and credentials_file are mutually exclusive, and only one can be provided inside an authorization block.
Warning
Using
credentials_filecauses the file to be read on every outgoing request. Use thelocal.filecomponent with thecredentialsattribute instead to avoid unnecessary reads.
basic_auth
The basic_auth block configures basic authentication to the endpoint.
password and password_file are mutually exclusive, and only one can be provided inside a basic_auth block.
Warning
Using
password_filecauses the file to be read on every outgoing request. Use thelocal.filecomponent with thepasswordattribute instead to avoid unnecessary reads.
oauth2
The oauth block configures OAuth 2.0 authentication to the endpoint.
client_secret and client_secret_file are mutually exclusive, and only one can be provided inside an oauth2 block.
Warning
Using
client_secret_filecauses the file to be read on every outgoing request. Use thelocal.filecomponent with theclient_secretattribute instead to avoid unnecessary reads.
The oauth2 block may also contain a separate tls_config sub-block.
no_proxy can contain IPs, CIDR notations, and domain names. IP and domain names can contain port numbers.
proxy_url must be configured if no_proxy is configured.
proxy_from_environment uses the environment variables HTTP_PROXY, HTTPS_PROXY, and NO_PROXY (or the lowercase versions thereof).
Requests use the proxy from the environment variable matching their scheme, unless excluded by NO_PROXY.
proxy_url and no_proxy must not be configured if proxy_from_environment is configured.
proxy_connect_header should only be configured if proxy_url or proxy_from_environment are configured.
tls_config
The tls_config block configures TLS settings for connecting to the endpoint.
The following pairs of arguments are mutually exclusive and can’t both be set simultaneously:
ca_pemandca_filecert_pemandcert_filekey_pemandkey_file
When configuring client authentication, both the client certificate (using cert_pem or cert_file) and the client key (using key_pem or key_file) must be provided.
When min_version isn’t provided, the minimum acceptable TLS version is inherited from Go’s default minimum version, TLS 1.2.
If min_version is provided, it must be set to one of the following strings:
"TLS10"(TLS 1.0)"TLS11"(TLS 1.1)"TLS12"(TLS 1.2)"TLS13"(TLS 1.3)
Exported fields
The following fields are exported and can be referenced by other components:
Each target includes the following labels:
__meta_url: URL the target was obtained from.
Component health
discovery.http is only reported as unhealthy when given an invalid configuration.
In those cases, exported fields retain their last healthy values.
Debug information
discovery.http doesn’t expose any component-specific debug information.
Debug metrics
prometheus_sd_http_failures_total(counter): Total number of refresh failures.
Examples
This example queries a URL every 15 seconds and exposes the targets that it finds:
discovery.http "dynamic_targets" {
url = "https://example.com/scrape_targets"
refresh_interval = "15s"
}Compatible components
discovery.http has exports that can be consumed by the following components:
- Components that consume Targets
Note
Connecting some components may not be sensible or components may require further configuration to make the connection work correctly. Refer to the linked documentation for more details.