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vmalert

vmalert executes a list of the given alerting or recording rules against configured -datasource.url compatible with Prometheus HTTP API. For sending alerting notifications vmalert relies on Alertmanager configured via -notifier.url flag. Recording rules results are persisted via remote write protocol and require -remoteWrite.url to be configured. Vmalert is heavily inspired by Prometheus implementation and aims to be compatible with its syntax.

Features

Limitations

  • vmalert execute queries against remote datasource which has reliability risks because of the network. It is recommended to configure alerts thresholds and rules expressions with the understanding that network requests may fail;
  • by default, rules execution is sequential within one group, but persistence of execution results to remote storage is asynchronous. Hence, user shouldn't rely on chaining of recording rules when result of previous recording rule is reused in the next one;

QuickStart

To build vmalert from sources:

git clone https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics
cd VictoriaMetrics
make vmalert

The build binary will be placed in VictoriaMetrics/bin folder.

To start using vmalert you will need the following things:

  • list of rules - PromQL/MetricsQL expressions to execute;
  • datasource address - reachable endpoint with Prometheus HTTP API support for running queries against;
  • notifier address [optional] - reachable Alert Manager instance for processing, aggregating alerts, and sending notifications. Please note, notifier address also supports Consul and DNS Service Discovery via config file.
  • remote write address [optional] - remote write compatible storage to persist rules and alerts state info. To persist results to multiple destinations use vmagent configured with multiple remote writes as a proxy;
  • remote read address [optional] - MetricsQL compatible datasource to restore alerts state from.

Then configure vmalert accordingly:

./bin/vmalert -rule=alert.rules \            # Path to the file with rules configuration. Supports wildcard
    -datasource.url=http://localhost:8428 \  # Prometheus HTTP API compatible datasource
    -notifier.url=http://localhost:9093 \    # AlertManager URL (required if alerting rules are used)
    -notifier.url=http://127.0.0.1:9093 \    # AlertManager replica URL
    -remoteWrite.url=http://localhost:8428 \ # Remote write compatible storage to persist rules and alerts state info (required if recording rules are used)
    -remoteRead.url=http://localhost:8428 \  # Prometheus HTTP API compatible datasource to restore alerts state from
    -external.label=cluster=east-1 \         # External label to be applied for each rule
    -external.label=replica=a                # Multiple external labels may be set

Note there's a separate -remoteWrite.url command-line flag to allow writing results of alerting/recording rules into a different storage than the initial data that's queried. This allows using vmalert to aggregate data from a short-term, high-frequency, high-cardinality storage into a long-term storage with decreased cardinality and a bigger interval between samples. See also stream aggregation.

See the full list of configuration flags in configuration section.

If you run multiple vmalert services for the same datastore or AlertManager - do not forget to specify different -external.label command-line flags in order to define which vmalert generated rules or alerts.

Configuration for recording and alerting rules is very similar to Prometheus rules and configured using YAML. Configuration examples may be found in testdata folder. Every rule belongs to a group and every configuration file may contain arbitrary number of groups:

groups:
  [ - <rule_group> ]

Groups

Each group has the following attributes:

# The name of the group. Must be unique within a file.
name: <string>

# How often rules in the group are evaluated.
[ interval: <duration> | default = -evaluationInterval flag ]

# Limit the number of alerts an alerting rule and series a recording
# rule can produce. 0 is no limit.
[ limit: <int> | default = 0 ]

# How many rules execute at once within a group. Increasing concurrency may speed
# up round execution speed.
[ concurrency: <integer> | default = 1 ]

# Optional type for expressions inside the rules. Supported values: "graphite" and "prometheus".
# By default "prometheus" type is used.
[ type: <string> ]

# Optional list of HTTP URL parameters
# applied for all rules requests within a group
# For example:
#  params:
#    nocache: ["1"]                # disable caching for vmselect
#    denyPartialResponse: ["true"] # fail if one or more vmstorage nodes returned an error
#    extra_label: ["env=dev"]      # apply additional label filter "env=dev" for all requests
# see more details at https://docs.victoriametrics.com#prometheus-querying-api-enhancements
params:
  [ <string>: [<string>, ...]]

# Optional list of HTTP headers in form `header-name: value`
# applied for all rules requests within a group
# For example:
#  headers:
#    - "CustomHeader: foo"
#    - "CustomHeader2: bar"
# Headers set via this param have priority over headers set via `-datasource.headers` flag.
headers:
  [ <string>, ...]

# Optional list of labels added to every rule within a group.
# It has priority over the external labels.
# Labels are commonly used for adding environment
# or tenant-specific tag.
labels:
  [ <labelname>: <labelvalue> ... ]

rules:
  [ - <rule> ... ]

Rules

Every rule contains expr field for PromQL or MetricsQL expression. vmalert will execute the configured expression and then act according to the Rule type.

There are two types of Rules:

  • alerting - Alerting rules allow defining alert conditions via expr field and to send notifications to Alertmanager if execution result is not empty.
  • recording - Recording rules allow defining expr which result will be then backfilled to configured -remoteWrite.url. Recording rules are used to precompute frequently needed or computationally expensive expressions and save their result as a new set of time series.

vmalert forbids defining duplicates - rules with the same combination of name, expression, and labels within one group.

Alerting rules

The syntax for alerting rule is the following:

# The name of the alert. Must be a valid metric name.
alert: <string>

# The expression to evaluate. The expression language depends on the type value.
# By default, PromQL/MetricsQL expression is used. If group.type="graphite", then the expression
# must contain valid Graphite expression.
expr: <string>

# Alerts are considered firing once they have been returned for this long.
# Alerts which have not yet been fired for long enough are considered pending.
# If param is omitted or set to 0 then alerts will be immediately considered
# as firing once they return.
[ for: <duration> | default = 0s ]

# Whether to print debug information into logs.
# Information includes alerts state changes and requests sent to the datasource.
# Please note, that if rule's query params contain sensitive
# information - it will be printed to logs.
# Is applicable to alerting rules only.
[ debug: <bool> | default = false ]

# Defines the number of rule's updates entries stored in memory
# and available for view on rule's Details page.
# Overrides `rule.updateEntriesLimit` value for this specific rule.
[ update_entries_limit: <integer> | default 0 ]

# Labels to add or overwrite for each alert.
labels:
  [ <labelname>: <tmpl_string> ]

# Annotations to add to each alert.
annotations:
  [ <labelname>: <tmpl_string> ]

Templating

It is allowed to use Go templating in annotations to format data, iterate over or execute expressions. The following variables are available in templating:

Variable Description Example
$value or .Value The current alert's value. Avoid using value in labels, it may cause unexpected issues. {% raw %}Number of connections is {{ $value }}{% endraw %}
$activeAt or .ActiveAt The moment of time when alert became active (pending or firing). {% raw %}http://vm-grafana.com/panelId=xx?from={{($activeAt.Add (parseDurationTime "1h")).Unix}}&to={{($activeAt.Add (parseDurationTime "-1h")).Unix}}{% endraw %}
$labels or .Labels The list of labels of the current alert. Use as ".Labels.<label_name>". {% raw %}Too high number of connections for {{ .Labels.instance }}{% endraw %}
$alertID or .AlertID The current alert's ID generated by vmalert. {% raw %}Link: vmalert/alert?group_id={{.GroupID}}&alert_id={{.AlertID}}{% endraw %}
$groupID or .GroupID The current alert's group ID generated by vmalert. {% raw %}Link: vmalert/alert?group_id={{.GroupID}}&alert_id={{.AlertID}}{% endraw %}
$expr or .Expr Alert's expression. Can be used for generating links to Grafana or other systems. {% raw %}/api/v1/query?query={{ $expr|queryEscape }}{% endraw %}
$for or .For Alert's configured for param. {% raw %}Number of connections is too high for more than {{ .For }}{% endraw %}
$externalLabels or .ExternalLabels List of labels configured via -external.label command-line flag. {% raw %}Issues with {{ $labels.instance }} (datacenter-{{ $externalLabels.dc }}){% endraw %}
$externalURL or .ExternalURL URL configured via -external.url command-line flag. Used for cases when vmalert is hidden behind proxy. {% raw %}Visit {{ $externalURL }} for more details{% endraw %}

Additionally, vmalert provides some extra templating functions listed here and reusable templates.

Template functions

vmalert provides the following template functions, which can be used during templating:

  • args arg0 ... argN - converts the input args into a map with arg0, ..., argN keys.
  • externalURL - returns the value of -external.url command-line flag.
  • first - returns the first result from the input query results returned by query function.
  • htmlEscape - escapes special chars in input string, so it can be safely embedded as a plaintext into HTML.
  • humanize - converts the input number into human-readable format by adding metric prefixes. For example, 100000 is converted into 100K.
  • humanize1024 - converts the input number into human-readable format with 1024 base. For example, 1024 is converted into 1ki`.
  • humanizeDuration - converts the input number in seconds into human-readable duration.
  • humanizePercentage - converts the input number to percentage. For example, 0.123 is converted into 12.3%.
  • humanizeTimestamp - converts the input unix timestamp into human-readable time.
  • jsonEscape - JSON-encodes the input string.
  • label name - returns the value of the label with the given name from the input query result.
  • match regex - matches the input string against the provided regex.
  • parseDuration - parses the input string into duration in seconds. For example, 1h is parsed into 3600.
  • parseDurationTime - parses the input string into time.Duration.
  • pathEscape - escapes the input string, so it can be safely put inside path part of URL.
  • pathPrefix - returns the path part of the -external.url command-line flag.
  • query - executes the MetricsQL query against -datasource.url and returns the query result. For example, {% raw %}{{ query "sort_desc(process_resident_memory_bytes)" | first | value }}{% endraw %} executes the sort_desc(process_resident_memory_bytes) query at -datasource.url and returns the first result.
  • queryEscape - escapes the input string, so it can be safely put inside query arg part of URL.
  • quotesEscape - escapes the input string, so it can be safely embedded into JSON string.
  • reReplaceAll regex repl - replaces all the occurences of the regex in input string with the repl.
  • safeHtml - marks the input string as safe to use in HTML context without the need to html-escape it.
  • sortByLabel name - sorts the input query results by the label with the given name.
  • stripDomain - leaves the first part of the domain. For example, foo.bar.baz is converted to foo. The port part is left in the output string. E.g. foo.bar:1234 is converted into foo:1234.
  • stripPort - strips port part from host:port input string.
  • strvalue - returns the metric name from the input query result.
  • title - converts the first letters of every input word to uppercase.
  • toLower - converts all the chars in the input string to lowercase.
  • toTime - converts the input unix timestamp to time.Time.
  • toUpper - converts all the chars in the input string to uppercase.
  • value - returns the numeric value from the input query result.

Reusable templates

Like in Alertmanager you can define reusable templates to share same templates across annotations. Just define the templates in a file and set the path via -rule.templates flag.

For example, template grafana.filter can be defined as following:

{% raw %}

{{ define "grafana.filter" -}}
  {{- $labels := .arg0 -}}
  {{- range $name, $label := . -}}
    {{- if (ne $name "arg0") -}}
      {{- ( or (index $labels $label) "All" ) | printf "&var-%s=%s" $label -}}
    {{- end -}}
  {{- end -}}
{{- end -}}

{% endraw %}

And then used in annotations:

{% raw %}

groups:
  - name: AlertGroupName
    rules:
      - alert: AlertName
        expr: any_metric > 100
        for: 30s
        labels:
          alertname: 'Any metric is too high'
          severity: 'warning'
        annotations:
          dashboard: '{{ $externalURL }}/d/dashboard?orgId=1{{ template "grafana.filter" (args .CommonLabels "account_id" "any_label") }}'

{% endraw %}

The -rule.templates flag supports wildcards so multiple files with templates can be loaded. The content of -rule.templates can be also hot reloaded.

Recording rules

The syntax for recording rules is following:

# The name of the time series to output to. Must be a valid metric name.
record: <string>

# The expression to evaluate. The expression language depends on the type value.
# By default, MetricsQL expression is used. If group.type="graphite", then the expression
# must contain valid Graphite expression.
expr: <string>

# Labels to add or overwrite before storing the result.
labels:
  [ <labelname>: <labelvalue> ]


# Defines the number of rule's updates entries stored in memory
# and available for view on rule's Details page.
# Overrides `rule.updateEntriesLimit` value for this specific rule.
[ update_entries_limit: <integer> | default 0 ]

For recording rules to work -remoteWrite.url must be specified.

Alerts state on restarts

vmalert has no local storage, so alerts state is stored in the process memory. Hence, after restart of vmalert the process alerts state will be lost. To avoid this situation, vmalert should be configured via the following flags:

  • -remoteWrite.url - URL to VictoriaMetrics (Single) or vminsert (Cluster). vmalert will persist alerts state into the configured address in the form of time series named ALERTS and ALERTS_FOR_STATE via remote-write protocol. These are regular time series and maybe queried from VM just as any other time series. The state is stored to the configured address on every rule evaluation.
  • -remoteRead.url - URL to VictoriaMetrics (Single) or vmselect (Cluster). vmalert will try to restore alerts state from configured address by querying time series with name ALERTS_FOR_STATE.

Both flags are required for proper state restoration. Restore process may fail if time series are missing in configured -remoteRead.url, weren't updated in the last 1h (controlled by -remoteRead.lookback) or received state doesn't match current vmalert rules configuration.

Multitenancy

There are the following approaches exist for alerting and recording rules across multiple tenants:

  • To run a separate vmalert instance per each tenant. The corresponding tenant must be specified in -datasource.url command-line flag according to these docs. For example, /path/to/vmalert -datasource.url=http://vmselect:8481/select/123/prometheus would run alerts against AccountID=123. For recording rules the -remoteWrite.url command-line flag must contain the url for the specific tenant as well. For example, -remoteWrite.url=http://vminsert:8480/insert/123/prometheus would write recording rules to AccountID=123.

  • To specify tenant parameter per each alerting and recording group if enterprise version of vmalert is used with -clusterMode command-line flag. For example:

groups:
- name: rules_for_tenant_123
  tenant: "123"
  rules:
    # Rules for accountID=123

- name: rules_for_tenant_456:789
  tenant: "456:789"
  rules:
    # Rules for accountID=456, projectID=789

The results of alerting and recording rules contain vm_account_id and vm_project_id labels if -clusterMode is enabled. These labels can be used during templating, and help to identify to which account or project the triggered alert or produced recording belongs.

If -clusterMode is enabled, then -datasource.url, -remoteRead.url and -remoteWrite.url must contain only the hostname without tenant id. For example: -datasource.url=http://vmselect:8481. vmalert automatically adds the specified tenant to urls per each recording rule in this case.

If -clusterMode is enabled and the tenant in a particular group is missing, then the tenant value is obtained from -defaultTenant.prometheus or -defaultTenant.graphite depending on the type of the group.

The enterprise version of vmalert is available in vmutils-*-enterprise.tar.gz files at release page and in *-enterprise tags at Docker Hub.

Topology examples

The following sections are showing how vmalert may be used and configured for different scenarios.

Please note, not all flags in examples are required:

  • -remoteWrite.url and -remoteRead.url are optional and are needed only if you have recording rules or want to store alerts state on vmalert restarts;
  • -notifier.url is optional and is needed only if you have alerting rules.

Single-node VictoriaMetrics

The simplest configuration where one single-node VM server is used for rules execution, storing recording rules results and alerts state.

vmalert configuration flags:

./bin/vmalert -rule=rules.yml  \                    # Path to the file with rules configuration. Supports wildcard
    -datasource.url=http://victoriametrics:8428 \   # VM-single addr for executing rules expressions
    -remoteWrite.url=http://victoriametrics:8428 \  # VM-single addr to persist alerts state and recording rules results
    -remoteRead.url=http://victoriametrics:8428 \   # VM-single addr for restoring alerts state after restart
    -notifier.url=http://alertmanager:9093          # AlertManager addr to send alerts when they trigger

vmalert single

Cluster VictoriaMetrics

In cluster mode VictoriaMetrics has separate components for writing and reading path: vminsert and vmselect components respectively. vmselect is used for executing rules expressions and vminsert is used to persist recording rules results and alerts state. Cluster mode could have multiple vminsert and vmselect components.

vmalert configuration flags:

./bin/vmalert -rule=rules.yml  \                                # Path to the file with rules configuration. Supports wildcard
    -datasource.url=http://vmselect:8481/select/0/prometheus    # vmselect addr for executing rules expressions
    -remoteWrite.url=http://vminsert:8480/insert/0/prometheus   # vminsert addr to persist alerts state and recording rules results
    -remoteRead.url=http://vmselect:8481/select/0/prometheus    # vmselect addr for restoring alerts state after restart
    -notifier.url=http://alertmanager:9093                      # AlertManager addr to send alerts when they trigger

vmalert cluster

In case when you want to spread the load on these components - add balancers before them and configure vmalert with balancer's addresses. Please, see more about VM's cluster architecture here.

HA vmalert

For HA user can run multiple identically configured vmalert instances. It means all of them will execute the same rules, write state and results to the same destinations, and send alert notifications to multiple configured Alertmanagers.

vmalert configuration flags:

./bin/vmalert -rule=rules.yml \                   # Path to the file with rules configuration. Supports wildcard
    -datasource.url=http://victoriametrics:8428 \   # VM-single addr for executing rules expressions
    -remoteWrite.url=http://victoriametrics:8428 \  # VM-single addr to persist alerts state and recording rules results
    -remoteRead.url=http://victoriametrics:8428 \   # VM-single addr for restoring alerts state after restart
    -notifier.url=http://alertmanager1:9093 \       # Multiple AlertManager addresses to send alerts when they trigger
    -notifier.url=http://alertmanagerN:9093         # The same alert will be sent to all configured notifiers

vmalert ha

To avoid recording rules results and alerts state duplication in VictoriaMetrics server don't forget to configure deduplication. The recommended value for -dedup.minScrapeInterval must be greater or equal to vmalert's evaluation_interval. If you observe inconsistent or "jumping" values in series produced by vmalert, try disabling -datasource.queryTimeAlignment command line flag. Because of alignment, two or more vmalert HA pairs will produce results with the same timestamps. But due of backfilling (data delivered to the datasource with some delay) values of such results may differ, which would affect deduplication logic and result into "jumping" datapoints.

Alertmanager will automatically deduplicate alerts with identical labels, so ensure that all vmalerts are having the same config.

Don't forget to configure cluster mode for Alertmanagers for better reliability. List all Alertmanager URLs in vmalert's -notifier.url to ensure high availability.

This example uses single-node VM server for the sake of simplicity. Check how to replace it with cluster VictoriaMetrics if needed.

Downsampling and aggregation via vmalert

vmalert can't modify existing data. But it can run arbitrary PromQL/MetricsQL queries via recording rules and backfill results to the configured -remoteWrite.url. This ability allows to aggregate data. For example, the following rule will calculate the average value for metric http_requests on the 5m interval:

  - record: http_requests:avg5m
    expr: avg_over_time(http_requests[5m])

Every time this rule will be evaluated, vmalert will backfill its results as a new time series http_requests:avg5m to the configured -remoteWrite.url.

vmalert executes rules with specified interval (configured via flag -evaluationInterval or as group's interval param). The interval helps to control "resolution" of the produced series. This ability allows to downsample data. For example, the following config will execute the rule only once every 5m:

groups:
  - name: my_group
    interval: 5m
    rules:
    - record: http_requests:avg5m
      expr: avg_over_time(http_requests[5m])

Ability of vmalert to be configured with different -datasource.url and -remoteWrite.url command-line flags allows reading data from one data source and backfilling results to another. This helps to build a system for aggregating and downsampling the data.

The following example shows how to build a topology where vmalert will process data from one cluster and write results into another. Such clusters may be called as "hot" (low retention, high-speed disks, used for operative monitoring) and "cold" (long term retention, slower/cheaper disks, low resolution data). With help of vmalert, user can setup recording rules to process raw data from "hot" cluster (by applying additional transformations or reducing resolution) and push results to "cold" cluster.

vmalert configuration flags:

./bin/vmalert -rule=downsampling-rules.yml \                                        # Path to the file with rules configuration. Supports wildcard
    -datasource.url=http://raw-cluster-vmselect:8481/select/0/prometheus            # vmselect addr for executing recording rules expressions
    -remoteWrite.url=http://aggregated-cluster-vminsert:8480/insert/0/prometheus    # vminsert addr to persist recording rules results

vmalert multi cluster

Please note, replay feature may be used for transforming historical data.

Flags -remoteRead.url and -notifier.url are omitted since we assume only recording rules are used.

See also stream aggregation and downsampling.

Multiple remote writes

For persisting recording or alerting rule results vmalert requires -remoteWrite.url to be set. But this flag supports only one destination. To persist rule results to multiple destinations we recommend using vmagent as fan-out proxy:

vmalert multiple remote write destinations

In this topology, vmalert is configured to persist rule results to vmagent. And vmagent is configured to fan-out received data to two or more destinations. Using vmagent as a proxy provides additional benefits such as data persisting when storage is unreachable, or time series modification via relabeling.

Web

vmalert runs a web-server (-httpListenAddr) for serving metrics and alerts endpoints:

  • http://<vmalert-addr> - UI;
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/api/v1/rules - list of all loaded groups and rules;
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/api/v1/alerts - list of all active alerts;
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/vmalert/api/v1/alert?group_id=<group_id>&alert_id=<alert_id> - get alert status in JSON format. Used as alert source in AlertManager.
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/vmalert/alert?group_id=<group_id>&alert_id=<alert_id> - get alert status in web UI.
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/vmalert/rule?group_id=<group_id>&rule_id=<rule_id> - get rule status in web UI.
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/metrics - application metrics.
  • http://<vmalert-addr>/-/reload - hot configuration reload.

vmalert web UI can be accessed from single-node version of VictoriaMetrics and from cluster version of VictoriaMetrics. This may be used for better integraion with Grafana unified alerting system. See the following docs for details:

Graphite

vmalert sends requests to <-datasource.url>/render?format=json during evaluation of alerting and recording rules if the corresponding group or rule contains type: "graphite" config option. It is expected that the <-datasource.url>/render implements Graphite Render API for format=json. When using vmalert with both graphite and prometheus rules configured against cluster version of VM do not forget to set -datasource.appendTypePrefix flag to true, so vmalert can adjust URL prefix automatically based on the query type.

Rules backfilling

vmalert supports alerting and recording rules backfilling (aka replay). In replay mode vmalert can read the same rules configuration as normal, evaluate them on the given time range and backfill results via remote write to the configured storage. vmalert supports any PromQL/MetricsQL compatible data source for backfilling.

How it works

In replay mode vmalert works as a cli-tool and exits immediately after work is done. To run vmalert in replay mode:

./bin/vmalert -rule=path/to/your.rules \        # path to files with rules you usually use with vmalert
    -datasource.url=http://localhost:8428 \     # Prometheus HTTP API compatible datasource
    -remoteWrite.url=http://localhost:8428 \    # remote write compatible storage to persist results
    -replay.timeFrom=2021-05-11T07:21:43Z \     # time from begin replay
    -replay.timeTo=2021-05-29T18:40:43Z         # time to finish replay

The output of the command will look like the following:

Replay mode:
from:   2021-05-11 07:21:43 +0000 UTC   # set by -replay.timeFrom
to:     2021-05-29 18:40:43 +0000 UTC   # set by -replay.timeTo
max data points per request: 1000       # set by -replay.maxDatapointsPerQuery

Group "ReplayGroup"
interval:       1m0s
requests to make:       27
max range per request:  16h40m0s
> Rule "type:vm_cache_entries:rate5m" (ID: 1792509946081842725)
27 / 27 [----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------] 100.00% 78 p/s
> Rule "go_cgo_calls_count:rate5m" (ID: 17958425467471411582)
27 / 27 [-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------] 100.00% ? p/s

Group "vmsingleReplay"
interval:       30s
requests to make:       54
max range per request:  8h20m0s
> Rule "RequestErrorsToAPI" (ID: 17645863024999990222)
54 / 54 [-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------] 100.00% ? p/s
> Rule "TooManyLogs" (ID: 9042195394653477652)
54 / 54 [-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------] 100.00% ? p/s
2021-06-07T09:59:12.098Z        info    app/vmalert/replay.go:68        replay finished! Imported 511734 samples

In replay mode all groups are executed sequentially one-by-one. Rules within the group are executed sequentially as well (concurrency setting is ignored). Vmalert sends rule's expression to /query_range endpoint of the configured -datasource.url. Returned data is then processed according to the rule type and backfilled to -remoteWrite.url via remote Write protocol. Vmalert respects evaluationInterval value set by flag or per-group during the replay. Vmalert automatically disables caching on VictoriaMetrics side by sending nocache=1 param. It allows to prevent cache pollution and unwanted time range boundaries adjustment during backfilling.

Recording rules

The result of recording rules replay should match with results of normal rules evaluation.

Alerting rules

The result of alerting rules replay is time series reflecting alert's state. To see if replayed alert has fired in the past use the following PromQL/MetricsQL expression:

ALERTS{alertname="your_alertname", alertstate="firing"}

Execute the query against storage which was used for -remoteWrite.url during the replay.

Additional configuration

There are following non-required replay flags:

  • -replay.maxDatapointsPerQuery - the max number of data points expected to receive in one request. In two words, it affects the max time range for every /query_range request. The higher the value, the fewer requests will be issued during replay.
  • -replay.ruleRetryAttempts - when datasource fails to respond vmalert will make this number of retries per rule before giving up.
  • -replay.rulesDelay - delay between sequential rules execution. Important in cases if there are chaining (rules which depend on each other) rules. It is expected, that remote storage will be able to persist previously accepted data during the delay, so data will be available for the subsequent queries. Keep it equal or bigger than -remoteWrite.flushInterval.
  • -replay.disableProgressBar - whether to disable progress bar which shows progress work. Progress bar may generate a lot of log records, which is not formatted as standard VictoriaMetrics logger. It could break logs parsing by external system and generate additional load on it.

See full description for these flags in ./vmalert -help.

Limitations

  • Graphite engine isn't supported yet;
  • query template function is disabled for performance reasons (might be changed in future);
  • limit group's param has no effect during replay (might be changed in future);

Monitoring

vmalert exports various metrics in Prometheus exposition format at http://vmalert-host:8880/metrics page. The default list of alerting rules for these metric can be found here. We recommend setting up regular scraping of this page either through vmagent or by Prometheus so that the exported metrics may be analyzed later.

Use the official Grafana dashboard for vmalert overview. Graphs on this dashboard contain useful hints - hover the i icon in the top left corner of each graph in order to read it. If you have suggestions for improvements or have found a bug - please open an issue on github or add a review to the dashboard.

Troubleshooting

vmalert executes configured rules within certain intervals. It is expected that at the moment when rule is executed, the data is already present in configured -datasource.url:

vmalert expected evaluation

Usually, troubles start to appear when data in -datasource.url is delayed or absent. In such cases, evaluations may get empty response from datasource and produce empty recording rules or reset alerts state:

vmalert evaluation when data is delayed

By default, recently written samples to VictoriaMetrics aren't visible for queries for up to 30s. This behavior is controlled by -search.latencyOffset command-line flag and the latency_offset query ag at vmselect. Usually, this results into a 30s shift for recording rules results. Note that too small value passed to -search.latencyOffset or to latency_offest query arg may lead to incomplete query results.

Try the following recommendations in such cases:

  • Always configure group's evaluationInterval to be bigger or equal to scrape_interval at which metrics are delivered to the datasource;
  • If you know in advance, that data in datasource is delayed - try changing vmalert's -datasource.lookback command-line flag to add a time shift for evaluations;
  • If time intervals between datapoints in datasource are irregular or >=5min - try changing vmalert's -datasource.queryStep command-line flag to specify how far search query can lookback for the recent datapoint. The recommendation is to have the step at least two times bigger than scrape_interval, since there are no guarantees that scrape will not fail.

Sometimes, it is not clear why some specific alert fired or didn't fire. It is very important to remember, that alerts with for: 0 fire immediately when their expression becomes true. And alerts with for > 0 will fire only after multiple consecutive evaluations, and at each evaluation their expression must be true. If at least one evaluation becomes false, then alert's state resets to the initial state.

If -remoteWrite.url command-line flag is configured, vmalert will persist alert's state in form of time series ALERTS and ALERTS_FOR_STATE to the specified destination. Such time series can be then queried via vmui or Grafana to track how alerts state changed in time.

vmalert stores last -rule.updateEntriesLimit (or update_entries_limit per-rule config) state updates for each rule. To check updates, click on Details link next to rule's name on /vmalert/groups page and check the Last updates section:

vmalert state

Rows in the section represent ordered rule evaluations and their results. The column curl contains an example of HTTP request sent by vmalert to the -datasource.url during evaluation. If specific state shows that there were no samples returned and curl command returns data - then it is very likely there was no data in datasource on the moment when rule was evaluated.

vmalert allows configuring more detailed logging for specific alerting rule. Just set debug: true in rule's configuration and vmalert will start printing additional log messages:

2022-09-15T13:35:41.155Z  DEBUG rule "TestGroup":"Conns" (2601299393013563564) at 2022-09-15T15:35:41+02:00: query returned 0 samples (elapsed: 5.896041ms)
2022-09-15T13:35:56.149Z  DEBUG datasource request: executing POST request with params "denyPartialResponse=true&query=sum%28vm_tcplistener_conns%7Binstance%3D%22localhost%3A8429%22%7D%29+by%28instance%29+%3E+0&step=15s&time=1663248945"
2022-09-15T13:35:56.178Z  DEBUG rule "TestGroup":"Conns" (2601299393013563564) at 2022-09-15T15:35:56+02:00: query returned 1 samples (elapsed: 28.368208ms)
2022-09-15T13:35:56.178Z  DEBUG datasource request: executing POST request with params "denyPartialResponse=true&query=sum%28vm_tcplistener_conns%7Binstance%3D%22localhost%3A8429%22%7D%29&step=15s&time=1663248945"
2022-09-15T13:35:56.179Z  DEBUG rule "TestGroup":"Conns" (2601299393013563564) at 2022-09-15T15:35:56+02:00: alert 10705778000901301787 {alertgroup="TestGroup",alertname="Conns",cluster="east-1",instance="localhost:8429",replica="a"} created in state PENDING
...
2022-09-15T13:36:56.153Z  DEBUG rule "TestGroup":"Conns" (2601299393013563564) at 2022-09-15T15:36:56+02:00: alert 10705778000901301787 {alertgroup="TestGroup",alertname="Conns",cluster="east-1",instance="localhost:8429",replica="a"} PENDING => FIRING: 1m0s since becoming active at 2022-09-15 15:35:56.126006 +0200 CEST m=+39.384575417

Profiling

vmalert provides handlers for collecting the following Go profiles:

  • Memory profile. It can be collected with the following command (replace 0.0.0.0 with hostname if needed):
curl http://0.0.0.0:8880/debug/pprof/heap > mem.pprof
  • CPU profile. It can be collected with the following command (replace 0.0.0.0 with hostname if needed):
curl http://0.0.0.0:8880/debug/pprof/profile > cpu.pprof

The command for collecting CPU profile waits for 30 seconds before returning.

The collected profiles may be analyzed with go tool pprof. It is safe sharing the collected profiles from security point of view, since they do not contain sensitive information.

Configuration

Flags

Pass -help to vmalert in order to see the full list of supported command-line flags with their descriptions.

The shortlist of configuration flags is the following: {% raw %}

  -clusterMode
     If clusterMode is enabled, then vmalert automatically adds the tenant specified in config groups to -datasource.url, -remoteWrite.url and -remoteRead.url. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/vmalert.html#multitenancy . This flag is available only in VictoriaMetrics enterprise. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/enterprise.html
  -configCheckInterval duration
     Interval for checking for changes in '-rule' or '-notifier.config' files. By default the checking is disabled. Send SIGHUP signal in order to force config check for changes.
  -datasource.appendTypePrefix
     Whether to add type prefix to -datasource.url based on the query type. Set to true if sending different query types to the vmselect URL.
  -datasource.basicAuth.password string
     Optional basic auth password for -datasource.url
  -datasource.basicAuth.passwordFile string
     Optional path to basic auth password to use for -datasource.url
  -datasource.basicAuth.username string
     Optional basic auth username for -datasource.url
  -datasource.bearerToken string
     Optional bearer auth token to use for -datasource.url.
  -datasource.bearerTokenFile string
     Optional path to bearer token file to use for -datasource.url.
  -datasource.disableKeepAlive
     Whether to disable long-lived connections to the datasource. If true, disables HTTP keep-alives and will only use the connection to the server for a single HTTP request.
  -datasource.headers string
     Optional HTTP extraHeaders to send with each request to the corresponding -datasource.url. For example, -datasource.headers='My-Auth:foobar' would send 'My-Auth: foobar' HTTP header with every request to the corresponding -datasource.url. Multiple headers must be delimited by '^^': -datasource.headers='header1:value1^^header2:value2'
  -datasource.lookback duration
     Lookback defines how far into the past to look when evaluating queries. For example, if the datasource.lookback=5m then param "time" with value now()-5m will be added to every query.
  -datasource.maxIdleConnections int
     Defines the number of idle (keep-alive connections) to each configured datasource. Consider setting this value equal to the value: groups_total * group.concurrency. Too low a value may result in a high number of sockets in TIME_WAIT state. (default 100)
  -datasource.oauth2.clientID string
     Optional OAuth2 clientID to use for -datasource.url. 
  -datasource.oauth2.clientSecret string
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecret to use for -datasource.url.
  -datasource.oauth2.clientSecretFile string
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecretFile to use for -datasource.url. 
  -datasource.oauth2.scopes string
     Optional OAuth2 scopes to use for -datasource.url. Scopes must be delimited by ';'
  -datasource.oauth2.tokenUrl string
     Optional OAuth2 tokenURL to use for -datasource.url.
  -datasource.queryStep duration
     How far a value can fallback to when evaluating queries. For example, if -datasource.queryStep=15s then param "step" with value "15s" will be added to every query. If set to 0, rule's evaluation interval will be used instead. (default 5m0s)
  -datasource.queryTimeAlignment
     Whether to align "time" parameter with evaluation interval.Alignment supposed to produce deterministic results despite of number of vmalert replicas or time they were started. See more details here https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/VictoriaMetrics/pull/1257 (default true)
  -datasource.roundDigits int
     Adds "round_digits" GET param to datasource requests. In VM "round_digits" limits the number of digits after the decimal point in response values.
  -datasource.showURL
     Whether to show -datasource.url in the exported metrics. It is hidden by default, since it can contain sensitive info such as auth key
  -datasource.tlsCAFile string
     Optional path to TLS CA file to use for verifying connections to -datasource.url. By default, system CA is used
  -datasource.tlsCertFile string
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate file to use when connecting to -datasource.url
  -datasource.tlsInsecureSkipVerify
     Whether to skip tls verification when connecting to -datasource.url
  -datasource.tlsKeyFile string
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate key to use when connecting to -datasource.url
  -datasource.tlsServerName string
     Optional TLS server name to use for connections to -datasource.url. By default, the server name from -datasource.url is used
  -datasource.url string
     Datasource compatible with Prometheus HTTP API. It can be single node VictoriaMetrics or vmselect URL. Required parameter. E.g. http://127.0.0.1:8428 . See also -remoteRead.disablePathAppend and -datasource.showURL
  -defaultTenant.graphite string
     Default tenant for Graphite alerting groups. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/vmalert.html#multitenancy .This flag is available only in VictoriaMetrics enterprise. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/enterprise.html
  -defaultTenant.prometheus string
     Default tenant for Prometheus alerting groups. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/vmalert.html#multitenancy . This flag is available only in VictoriaMetrics enterprise. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/enterprise.html
  -disableAlertgroupLabel
     Whether to disable adding group's Name as label to generated alerts and time series.
  -dryRun
     Whether to check only config files without running vmalert. The rules file are validated. The -rule flag must be specified.
  -enableTCP6
     Whether to enable IPv6 for listening and dialing. By default only IPv4 TCP and UDP is used
  -envflag.enable
     Whether to enable reading flags from environment variables additionally to command line. Command line flag values have priority over values from environment vars. Flags are read only from command line if this flag isn't set. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/#environment-variables for more details
  -envflag.prefix string
     Prefix for environment variables if -envflag.enable is set
  -eula
     By specifying this flag, you confirm that you have an enterprise license and accept the EULA https://victoriametrics.com/assets/VM_EULA.pdf . This flag is available only in VictoriaMetrics enterprise. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/enterprise.html
  -evaluationInterval duration
     How often to evaluate the rules (default 1m0s)
  -external.alert.source string
     External Alert Source allows to override the Source link for alerts sent to AlertManager for cases where you want to build a custom link to Grafana, Prometheus or any other service. Supports templating - see https://docs.victoriametrics.com/vmalert.html#templating . For example, link to Grafana: -external.alert.source='explore?orgId=1&left=["now-1h","now","VictoriaMetrics",{"expr":{{$expr|jsonEscape|queryEscape}} },{"mode":"Metrics"},{"ui":[true,true,true,"none"]}]' . If empty 'vmalert/alert?group_id={{.GroupID}}&alert_id={{.AlertID}}' is used.
  -external.label array
     Optional label in the form 'Name=value' to add to all generated recording rules and alerts. Pass multiple -label flags in order to add multiple label sets.
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -external.url string
     External URL is used as alert's source for sent alerts to the notifier
  -flagsAuthKey string
     Auth key for /flags endpoint. It must be passed via authKey query arg. It overrides httpAuth.* settings
  -fs.disableMmap
     Whether to use pread() instead of mmap() for reading data files. By default mmap() is used for 64-bit arches and pread() is used for 32-bit arches, since they cannot read data files bigger than 2^32 bytes in memory. mmap() is usually faster for reading small data chunks than pread()
  -http.connTimeout duration
     Incoming http connections are closed after the configured timeout. This may help to spread the incoming load among a cluster of services behind a load balancer. Please note that the real timeout may be bigger by up to 10% as a protection against the thundering herd problem (default 2m0s)
  -http.disableResponseCompression
     Disable compression of HTTP responses to save CPU resources. By default compression is enabled to save network bandwidth
  -http.idleConnTimeout duration
     Timeout for incoming idle http connections (default 1m0s)
  -http.maxGracefulShutdownDuration duration
     The maximum duration for a graceful shutdown of the HTTP server. A highly loaded server may require increased value for a graceful shutdown (default 7s)
  -http.pathPrefix string
     An optional prefix to add to all the paths handled by http server. For example, if '-http.pathPrefix=/foo/bar' is set, then all the http requests will be handled on '/foo/bar/*' paths. This may be useful for proxied requests. See https://www.robustperception.io/using-external-urls-and-proxies-with-prometheus
  -http.shutdownDelay duration
     Optional delay before http server shutdown. During this delay, the server returns non-OK responses from /health page, so load balancers can route new requests to other servers
  -httpAuth.password string
     Password for HTTP Basic Auth. The authentication is disabled if -httpAuth.username is empty
  -httpAuth.username string
     Username for HTTP Basic Auth. The authentication is disabled if empty. See also -httpAuth.password
  -httpListenAddr string
     Address to listen for http connections. See also -httpListenAddr.useProxyProtocol (default ":8880")
  -httpListenAddr.useProxyProtocol
     Whether to use proxy protocol for connections accepted at -httpListenAddr . See https://www.haproxy.org/download/1.8/doc/proxy-protocol.txt
  -insert.maxQueueDuration duration
     The maximum duration to wait in the queue when -maxConcurrentInserts concurrent insert requests are executed (default 1m0s)
  -internStringMaxLen int
     The maximum length for strings to intern. Lower limit may save memory at the cost of higher CPU usage. See https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/String_interning (default 300)
  -loggerDisableTimestamps
     Whether to disable writing timestamps in logs
  -loggerErrorsPerSecondLimit int
     Per-second limit on the number of ERROR messages. If more than the given number of errors are emitted per second, the remaining errors are suppressed. Zero values disable the rate limit
  -loggerFormat string
     Format for logs. Possible values: default, json (default "default")
  -loggerJSONFields string
     Allows renaming fields in JSON formatted logs. Example: "ts:timestamp,msg:message" renames "ts" to "timestamp" and "msg" to "message". Supported fields: ts, level, caller, msg
  -loggerLevel string
     Minimum level of errors to log. Possible values: INFO, WARN, ERROR, FATAL, PANIC (default "INFO")
  -loggerOutput string
     Output for the logs. Supported values: stderr, stdout (default "stderr")
  -loggerTimezone string
     Timezone to use for timestamps in logs. Timezone must be a valid IANA Time Zone. For example: America/New_York, Europe/Berlin, Etc/GMT+3 or Local (default "UTC")
  -loggerWarnsPerSecondLimit int
     Per-second limit on the number of WARN messages. If more than the given number of warns are emitted per second, then the remaining warns are suppressed. Zero values disable the rate limit
  -maxConcurrentInserts int
     The maximum number of concurrent insert requests. Default value should work for most cases, since it minimizes the memory usage. The default value can be increased when clients send data over slow networks. See also -insert.maxQueueDuration (default 8)
  -memory.allowedBytes size
     Allowed size of system memory VictoriaMetrics caches may occupy. This option overrides -memory.allowedPercent if set to a non-zero value. Too low a value may increase the cache miss rate usually resulting in higher CPU and disk IO usage. Too high a value may evict too much data from OS page cache resulting in higher disk IO usage
     Supports the following optional suffixes for size values: KB, MB, GB, TB, KiB, MiB, GiB, TiB (default 0)
  -memory.allowedPercent float
     Allowed percent of system memory VictoriaMetrics caches may occupy. See also -memory.allowedBytes. Too low a value may increase cache miss rate usually resulting in higher CPU and disk IO usage. Too high a value may evict too much data from OS page cache which will result in higher disk IO usage (default 60)
  -metricsAuthKey string
     Auth key for /metrics endpoint. It must be passed via authKey query arg. It overrides httpAuth.* settings
  -notifier.basicAuth.password array
     Optional basic auth password for -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.basicAuth.passwordFile array
     Optional path to basic auth password file for -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.basicAuth.username array
     Optional basic auth username for -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.bearerToken array
     Optional bearer token for -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.bearerTokenFile array
     Optional path to bearer token file for -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.config string
     Path to configuration file for notifiers
  -notifier.oauth2.clientID array
     Optional OAuth2 clientID to use for -notifier.url. If multiple args are set, then they are applied independently for the corresponding -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.oauth2.clientSecret array
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecret to use for -notifier.url. If multiple args are set, then they are applied independently for the corresponding -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.oauth2.clientSecretFile array
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecretFile to use for -notifier.url. If multiple args are set, then they are applied independently for the corresponding -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.oauth2.scopes array
     Optional OAuth2 scopes to use for -notifier.url. Scopes must be delimited by ';'. If multiple args are set, then they are applied independently for the corresponding -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.oauth2.tokenUrl array
     Optional OAuth2 tokenURL to use for -notifier.url. If multiple args are set, then they are applied independently for the corresponding -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.suppressDuplicateTargetErrors
     Whether to suppress 'duplicate target' errors during discovery
  -notifier.tlsCAFile array
     Optional path to TLS CA file to use for verifying connections to -notifier.url. By default system CA is used
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.tlsCertFile array
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate file to use when connecting to -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.tlsInsecureSkipVerify array
     Whether to skip tls verification when connecting to -notifier.url
     Supports array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.tlsKeyFile array
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate key to use when connecting to -notifier.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.tlsServerName array
     Optional TLS server name to use for connections to -notifier.url. By default the server name from -notifier.url is used
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -notifier.url array
     Prometheus Alertmanager URL, e.g. http://127.0.0.1:9093. List all Alertmanager URLs if it runs in the cluster mode to ensure high availability.
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -pprofAuthKey string
     Auth key for /debug/pprof/* endpoints. It must be passed via authKey query arg. It overrides httpAuth.* settings
  -promscrape.consul.waitTime duration
     Wait time used by Consul service discovery. Default value is used if not set
  -promscrape.consulSDCheckInterval duration
     Interval for checking for changes in Consul. This works only if consul_sd_configs is configured in '-promscrape.config' file. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/sd_configs.html#consul_sd_configs for details (default 30s)
  -promscrape.discovery.concurrency int
     The maximum number of concurrent requests to Prometheus autodiscovery API (Consul, Kubernetes, etc.) (default 100)
  -promscrape.discovery.concurrentWaitTime duration
     The maximum duration for waiting to perform API requests if more than -promscrape.discovery.concurrency requests are simultaneously performed (default 1m0s)
  -promscrape.dnsSDCheckInterval duration
     Interval for checking for changes in dns. This works only if dns_sd_configs is configured in '-promscrape.config' file. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/sd_configs.html#dns_sd_configs for details (default 30s)
  -pushmetrics.extraLabel array
     Optional labels to add to metrics pushed to -pushmetrics.url . For example, -pushmetrics.extraLabel='instance="foo"' adds instance="foo" label to all the metrics pushed to -pushmetrics.url
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -pushmetrics.interval duration
     Interval for pushing metrics to -pushmetrics.url (default 10s)
  -pushmetrics.url array
     Optional URL to push metrics exposed at /metrics page. See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/#push-metrics . By default metrics exposed at /metrics page aren't pushed to any remote storage
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -remoteRead.basicAuth.password string
     Optional basic auth password for -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.basicAuth.passwordFile string
     Optional path to basic auth password to use for -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.basicAuth.username string
     Optional basic auth username for -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.bearerToken string
     Optional bearer auth token to use for -remoteRead.url.
  -remoteRead.bearerTokenFile string
     Optional path to bearer token file to use for -remoteRead.url.
  -remoteRead.disablePathAppend
     Whether to disable automatic appending of '/api/v1/query' path to the configured -datasource.url and -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.headers string
     Optional HTTP headers to send with each request to the corresponding -remoteRead.url. For example, -remoteRead.headers='My-Auth:foobar' would send 'My-Auth: foobar' HTTP header with every request to the corresponding -remoteRead.url. Multiple headers must be delimited by '^^': -remoteRead.headers='header1:value1^^header2:value2'
  -remoteRead.ignoreRestoreErrors
     Whether to ignore errors from remote storage when restoring alerts state on startup. (default true)
  -remoteRead.lookback duration
     Lookback defines how far to look into past for alerts timeseries. For example, if lookback=1h then range from now() to now()-1h will be scanned. (default 1h0m0s)
  -remoteRead.oauth2.clientID string
     Optional OAuth2 clientID to use for -remoteRead.url.
  -remoteRead.oauth2.clientSecret string
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecret to use for -remoteRead.url.
  -remoteRead.oauth2.clientSecretFile string
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecretFile to use for -remoteRead.url.
  -remoteRead.oauth2.scopes string
     Optional OAuth2 scopes to use for -remoteRead.url. Scopes must be delimited by ';'.
  -remoteRead.oauth2.tokenUrl string
     Optional OAuth2 tokenURL to use for -remoteRead.url. 
  -remoteRead.showURL
     Whether to show -remoteRead.url in the exported metrics. It is hidden by default, since it can contain sensitive info such as auth key
  -remoteRead.tlsCAFile string
     Optional path to TLS CA file to use for verifying connections to -remoteRead.url. By default system CA is used
  -remoteRead.tlsCertFile string
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate file to use when connecting to -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.tlsInsecureSkipVerify
     Whether to skip tls verification when connecting to -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.tlsKeyFile string
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate key to use when connecting to -remoteRead.url
  -remoteRead.tlsServerName string
     Optional TLS server name to use for connections to -remoteRead.url. By default the server name from -remoteRead.url is used
  -remoteRead.url vmalert
     Optional URL to datasource compatible with Prometheus HTTP API. It can be single node VictoriaMetrics or vmselect.Remote read is used to restore alerts state.This configuration makes sense only if vmalert was configured with `remoteWrite.url` before and has been successfully persisted its state. E.g. http://127.0.0.1:8428. See also '-remoteRead.disablePathAppend', '-remoteRead.showURL'.
  -remoteWrite.basicAuth.password string
     Optional basic auth password for -remoteWrite.url
  -remoteWrite.basicAuth.passwordFile string
     Optional path to basic auth password to use for -remoteWrite.url
  -remoteWrite.basicAuth.username string
     Optional basic auth username for -remoteWrite.url
  -remoteWrite.bearerToken string
     Optional bearer auth token to use for -remoteWrite.url.
  -remoteWrite.bearerTokenFile string
     Optional path to bearer token file to use for -remoteWrite.url.
  -remoteWrite.concurrency int
     Defines number of writers for concurrent writing into remote querier (default 1)
  -remoteWrite.disablePathAppend
     Whether to disable automatic appending of '/api/v1/write' path to the configured -remoteWrite.url.
  -remoteWrite.flushInterval duration
     Defines interval of flushes to remote write endpoint (default 5s)
  -remoteWrite.headers string
     Optional HTTP headers to send with each request to the corresponding -remoteWrite.url. For example, -remoteWrite.headers='My-Auth:foobar' would send 'My-Auth: foobar' HTTP header with every request to the corresponding -remoteWrite.url. Multiple headers must be delimited by '^^': -remoteWrite.headers='header1:value1^^header2:value2'
  -remoteWrite.maxBatchSize int
     Defines defines max number of timeseries to be flushed at once (default 1000)
  -remoteWrite.maxQueueSize int
     Defines the max number of pending datapoints to remote write endpoint (default 100000)
  -remoteWrite.oauth2.clientID string
     Optional OAuth2 clientID to use for -remoteWrite.url.
  -remoteWrite.oauth2.clientSecret string
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecret to use for -remoteWrite.url.
  -remoteWrite.oauth2.clientSecretFile string
     Optional OAuth2 clientSecretFile to use for -remoteWrite.url.
  -remoteWrite.oauth2.scopes string
     Optional OAuth2 scopes to use for -notifier.url. Scopes must be delimited by ';'.
  -remoteWrite.oauth2.tokenUrl string
     Optional OAuth2 tokenURL to use for -notifier.url.
  -remoteWrite.sendTimeout duration
     Timeout for sending data to the configured -remoteWrite.url. (default 30s)
  -remoteWrite.showURL
     Whether to show -remoteWrite.url in the exported metrics. It is hidden by default, since it can contain sensitive info such as auth key
  -remoteWrite.tlsCAFile string
     Optional path to TLS CA file to use for verifying connections to -remoteWrite.url. By default system CA is used
  -remoteWrite.tlsCertFile string
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate file to use when connecting to -remoteWrite.url
  -remoteWrite.tlsInsecureSkipVerify
     Whether to skip tls verification when connecting to -remoteWrite.url
  -remoteWrite.tlsKeyFile string
     Optional path to client-side TLS certificate key to use when connecting to -remoteWrite.url
  -remoteWrite.tlsServerName string
     Optional TLS server name to use for connections to -remoteWrite.url. By default the server name from -remoteWrite.url is used
  -remoteWrite.url string
     Optional URL to VictoriaMetrics or vminsert where to persist alerts state and recording rules results in form of timeseries. For example, if -remoteWrite.url=http://127.0.0.1:8428 is specified, then the alerts state will be written to http://127.0.0.1:8428/api/v1/write . See also -remoteWrite.disablePathAppend, '-remoteWrite.showURL'.
  -replay.disableProgressBar
     Whether to disable rendering progress bars during the replay. Progress bar rendering might be verbose or break the logs parsing, so it is recommended to be disabled when not used in interactive mode.
  -replay.maxDatapointsPerQuery int
     Max number of data points expected in one request. The higher the value, the less requests will be made during replay. (default 1000)
  -replay.ruleRetryAttempts int
     Defines how many retries to make before giving up on rule if request for it returns an error. (default 5)
  -replay.rulesDelay duration
     Delay between rules evaluation within the group. Could be important if there are chained rules inside of the groupand processing need to wait for previous rule results to be persisted by remote storage before evaluating the next rule.Keep it equal or bigger than -remoteWrite.flushInterval. (default 1s)
  -replay.timeFrom string
     The time filter in RFC3339 format to select time series with timestamp equal or higher than provided value. E.g. '2020-01-01T20:07:00Z'
  -replay.timeTo string
     The time filter in RFC3339 format to select timeseries with timestamp equal or lower than provided value. E.g. '2020-01-01T20:07:00Z'
  -rule array
     Path to the file with alert rules.
     Supports patterns. Flag can be specified multiple times.
     Examples:
      -rule="/path/to/file". Path to a single file with alerting rules
      -rule="dir/*.yaml" -rule="/*.yaml". Relative path to all .yaml files in "dir" folder,
     absolute path to all .yaml files in root.
     Rule files may contain %{ENV_VAR} placeholders, which are substituted by the corresponding env vars.
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -rule.configCheckInterval duration
     Interval for checking for changes in '-rule' files. By default the checking is disabled. Send SIGHUP signal in order to force config check for changes. DEPRECATED - see '-configCheckInterval' instead
  -rule.maxResolveDuration duration
     Limits the maximum duration for automatic alert expiration, which is by default equal to 3 evaluation intervals of the parent group.
  -rule.resendDelay duration
     Minimum amount of time to wait before resending an alert to notifier
  -rule.templates array
     Path or glob pattern to location with go template definitions
      for rules annotations templating. Flag can be specified multiple times.
     Examples:
      -rule.templates="/path/to/file". Path to a single file with go templates
      -rule.templates="dir/*.tpl" -rule.templates="/*.tpl". Relative path to all .tpl files in "dir" folder,
     absolute path to all .tpl files in root.
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -rule.updateEntriesLimit int
     Defines the max number of rule's state updates stored in-memory. Rule's updates are available on rule's Details page and are used for debugging purposes. The number of stored updates can be overriden per rule via update_entries_limit param. (default 20)
  -rule.validateExpressions
     Whether to validate rules expressions via MetricsQL engine (default true)
  -rule.validateTemplates
     Whether to validate annotation and label templates (default true)
  -tls
     Whether to enable TLS for incoming HTTP requests at -httpListenAddr (aka https). -tlsCertFile and -tlsKeyFile must be set if -tls is set
  -tlsCertFile string
     Path to file with TLS certificate if -tls is set. Prefer ECDSA certs instead of RSA certs as RSA certs are slower. The provided certificate file is automatically re-read every second, so it can be dynamically updated
  -tlsCipherSuites array
     Optional list of TLS cipher suites for incoming requests over HTTPS if -tls is set. See the list of supported cipher suites at https://pkg.go.dev/crypto/tls#pkg-constants
     Supports an array of values separated by comma or specified via multiple flags.
  -tlsKeyFile string
     Path to file with TLS key if -tls is set. The provided key file is automatically re-read every second, so it can be dynamically updated
  -tlsMinVersion string
     Optional minimum TLS version to use for incoming requests over HTTPS if -tls is set. Supported values: TLS10, TLS11, TLS12, TLS13
  -version
     Show VictoriaMetrics version

{% endraw %}

Hot config reload

vmalert supports "hot" config reload via the following methods:

  • send SIGHUP signal to vmalert process;
  • send GET request to /-/reload endpoint;
  • configure -configCheckInterval flag for periodic reload on config change.

URL params

To set additional URL params for datasource.url, remoteWrite.url or remoteRead.url just add them in address: -datasource.url=http://localhost:8428?nocache=1.

To set additional URL params for specific group of rules modify the params group:

groups:
  - name: TestGroup
    params:
      denyPartialResponse: ["true"]
      extra_label: ["env=dev"]

Please note, params are used only for executing rules expressions (requests to datasource.url). If there would be a conflict between URL params set in datasource.url flag and params in group definition the latter will have higher priority.

Notifier configuration file

Notifier also supports configuration via file specified with flag notifier.config:

./bin/vmalert -rule=app/vmalert/config/testdata/rules.good.rules \
  -datasource.url=http://localhost:8428 \
  -notifier.config=app/vmalert/notifier/testdata/consul.good.yaml

The configuration file allows to configure static notifiers, discover notifiers via Consul and DNS: For example:

static_configs:
  - targets:
      - localhost:9093
      - localhost:9095

consul_sd_configs:
  - server: localhost:8500
    services:
      - alertmanager

dns_sd_configs:
  - names:
      - my.domain.com
    type: 'A'
    port: 9093

The list of configured or discovered Notifiers can be explored via UI. If Alertmanager runs in cluster mode then all its URLs needs to be available during discovery to ensure high availability.

The configuration file specification is the following:

# Per-target Notifier timeout when pushing alerts.
[ timeout: <duration> | default = 10s ]

# Prefix for the HTTP path alerts are pushed to.
[ path_prefix: <path> | default = / ]

# Configures the protocol scheme used for requests.
[ scheme: <scheme> | default = http ]

# Sets the `Authorization` header on every request with the
# configured username and password.
# password and password_file are mutually exclusive.
basic_auth:
  [ username: <string> ]
  [ password: <string> ]
  [ password_file: <string> ]

# Optional `Authorization` header configuration.
authorization:
  # Sets the authentication type.
  [ type: <string> | default: Bearer ]
  # Sets the credentials. It is mutually exclusive with
  # `credentials_file`.
  [ credentials: <secret> ]
  # Sets the credentials to the credentials read from the configured file.
  # It is mutually exclusive with `credentials`.
  [ credentials_file: <filename> ]

# Configures the scrape request's TLS settings.
# see https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/configuration/#tls_config
tls_config:
  [ <tls_config> ]

# Configures Bearer authentication token via string
bearer_token: <string>
# or by passing path to the file with token.
bearer_token_file: <string>

# Configures OAuth 2.0 authentication
# see https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/configuration/#oauth2
oauth2:
  [ <oauth2_config> ]
  
# Optional list of HTTP headers in form `header-name: value`
# applied for all requests to notifiers
# For example:
#  headers:
#    - "CustomHeader: foo"
#    - "CustomHeader2: bar"
headers:
  [ <string>, ...]

# List of labeled statically configured Notifiers.
#
# Each list of targets may be additionally instructed with
# authorization params. Target's authorization params will
# inherit params from global authorization params if there
# are no conflicts.
static_configs:
  [ - targets: ]
      [ - '<host>' ]
      [ oauth2 ]
      [ basic_auth ]
      [ authorization ]
      [ tls_config ]
      [ bearer_token ]
      [ bearer_token_file ]
      [ headers ]

# List of Consul service discovery configurations.
# See https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/configuration/#consul_sd_config
consul_sd_configs:
  [ - <consul_sd_config> ... ]

# List of DNS service discovery configurations.
# See https://prometheus.io/docs/prometheus/latest/configuration/configuration/#dns_sd_config
dns_sd_configs:
  [ - <dns_sd_config> ... ]

# List of relabel configurations for entities discovered via service discovery.
# Supports the same relabeling features as the rest of VictoriaMetrics components.
# See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/vmagent.html#relabeling
relabel_configs:
  [ - <relabel_config> ... ]

# List of relabel configurations for alert labels sent via Notifier.
# Supports the same relabeling features as the rest of VictoriaMetrics components.
# See https://docs.victoriametrics.com/vmagent.html#relabeling
alert_relabel_configs:
  [ - <relabel_config> ... ]

The configuration file can be hot-reloaded.

Contributing

vmalert is mostly designed and built by VictoriaMetrics community. Feel free to share your experience and ideas for improving this software. Please keep simplicity as the main priority.

How to build from sources

It is recommended using binary releases

  • vmalert is located in vmutils-* archives there.

Docker image

You can build vmalert docker image from source and push it to your own docker repository. Run the following commands from the root folder of the repository:

make package-vmalert
docker tag victoria-metrics/vmalert:version my-repo:my-version-name
docker push my-repo:my-version-name

To run the built image in victoria-metrics-k8s-stack or VMAlert CR object apply the following config change:

kind: VMAlert
spec:
  image:
    repository: my-repo
    tag: my-version-name

Development build

  1. Install Go. The minimum supported version is Go 1.19.
  2. Run make vmalert from the root folder of the repository. It builds vmalert binary and puts it into the bin folder.

Production build

  1. Install docker.
  2. Run make vmalert-prod from the root folder of the repository. It builds vmalert-prod binary and puts it into the bin folder.

ARM build

ARM build may run on Raspberry Pi or on energy-efficient ARM servers.

Development ARM build

  1. Install Go. The minimum supported version is Go 1.19.
  2. Run make vmalert-linux-arm or make vmalert-linux-arm64 from the root folder of the repository. It builds vmalert-linux-arm or vmalert-linux-arm64 binary respectively and puts it into the bin folder.

Production ARM build

  1. Install docker.
  2. Run make vmalert-linux-arm-prod or make vmalert-linux-arm64-prod from the root folder of the repository. It builds vmalert-linux-arm-prod or vmalert-linux-arm64-prod binary respectively and puts it into the bin folder.