Customizing Istio Metrics
This task shows you how to customize the metrics that Istio generates.
Istio generates telemetry that various dashboards consume to help you visualize your mesh. For example, dashboards that support Istio include:
By default, Istio defines and generates a set of standard metrics (e.g.
requests_total
), but you can also customize them and create new metrics
using the Telemetry API.
Before you begin
Install Istio in your cluster and deploy an application. Alternatively, you can set up custom statistics as part of the Istio installation.
The Bookinfo sample application is used as the example application throughout this task. For installation instructions, see deploying the Bookinfo application.
Enable custom metrics
To customize telemetry metrics, for example, to add request_host
and destination_port
dimensions to the requests_total
metric emitted by both
gateways and sidecars in the inbound and outbound direction, use the following:
$ cat <<EOF > ./custom_metrics.yaml
apiVersion: telemetry.istio.io/v1alpha1
kind: Telemetry
metadata:
name: namespace-metrics
spec:
metrics:
- providers:
- name: prometheus
overrides:
- match:
metric: REQUEST_COUNT
tagOverrides:
destination_port:
value: "string(destination.port)"
request_host:
value: "request.host"
EOF
$ kubectl apply -f custom_metrics.yaml
Verify the results
Send traffic to the mesh. For the Bookinfo sample, visit http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage
in your web
browser or issue the following command:
$ curl "http://$GATEWAY_URL/productpage"
Use the following command to verify that Istio generates the data for your new or modified dimensions:
$ kubectl exec "$(kubectl get pod -l app=productpage -o jsonpath='{.items[0].metadata.name}')" -c istio-proxy -- curl -sS 'localhost:15000/stats/prometheus' | grep istio_requests_total
For example, in the output, locate the metric istio_requests_total
and
verify it contains your new dimension.
Use expressions for values
The values in the metric configuration are common expressions, which means you
must double-quote strings in JSON, e.g. “‘string value’”. Unlike Mixer
expression language, there is no support for the pipe (|
) operator, but you
can emulate it with the has
or in
operator, for example:
has(request.host) ? request.host : "unknown"
For more information, see Common Expression Language.
Istio exposes all standard Envoy attributes.
Peer metadata is available as attributes upstream_peer
for outbound and downstream_peer
for inbound with the following fields:
Field | Type | Value |
---|---|---|
name | string | Name of the pod. |
namespace | string | Namespace that the pod runs in. |
labels | map | Workload labels. |
owner | string | Workload owner. |
workload_name | string | Workload name. |
platform_metadata | map | Platform metadata with prefixed keys. |
istio_version | string | Version identifier for the proxy. |
mesh_id | string | Unique identifier for the mesh. |
app_containers | list<string> | List of short names for application containers. |
cluster_id | string | Identifier for the cluster to which this workload belongs. |
For example, the expression for the peer app
label to be used in an outbound configuration is
upstream_peer.labels['app'].value
.
Cleanup
To delete the Bookinfo
sample application and its configuration, see
Bookinfo
cleanup.