Veneur (venn-urr) is a server implementation of the DogStatsD protocol for aggregating metrics and sending them to downstream storage, typically Datadog. It can also act as a global aggregator for histograms, sets and counters.
More generically, Veneur is a convenient, host-local sink for various observability primitives.
Veneur is currently handling all metrics for Stripe and is considered production ready. It is under active development and maintenance!
Building Veneur requires Go 1.7 or later.
We wanted percentiles, histograms and sets to be global. Veneur helps us do that!
Veneur is a DogStatsD implementation that acts as a local collector and — optionally — as an aggregator for some metric types, such that the metrics are global rather than host-local. This is particularly useful for histograms, timers and sets, as in their normal, per-host configuration the percentiles for histograms can be less effective or even meaningless. Per-host unique sets are also often not what's desired.
Global *StatsD installations can be problematic, as they either require client-side or proxy sharding behavior to prevent an instance being a Single Point of Failure (SPoF) for all metrics. Veneur aims to solve this problem. Non-global metrics like counters and gauges are collected by a local Veneur instance and sent to storage at flush time. Global metrics (histograms and sets) are forwarded to a central Veneur instance for aggregation before being sent to storage.
Veneur is different for a few reasons. They are enumerated here.
Veneur adheres to the official DogStatsD datagram format with the exceptions below:
- The tag
veneurlocalonly
is stripped and influences forwarding behavior, as discussed below. - The tag
veneurglobalonly
is stripped and influences forwarding behavior, as discussed below.
If configured to do so, Veneur can selectively aggregate global metrics to be cumulative across all instances that report to a central Veneur, allowing global percentile calculation and global set counts.
For example, say you emit a timer foo.bar.call_duration_ms
from 20 hosts that are configured to forward to a central veneur. In Datadog you'll see the following:
- Metrics that have been "globalized"
foo.bar.call_duration_ms.50percentile
: the p50 across all hosts, by tagfoo.bar.call_duration_ms.90percentile
: the p90 across all hosts, by tagfoo.bar.call_duration_ms.95percentile
: the p95 across all hosts, by tagfoo.bar.call_duration_ms.99percentile
: the p99 across all hosts, by tag
- Metrics that remain host-local
foo.bar.call_duration_ms.avg
: by-host tagged averagefoo.bar.call_duration_ms.count
: by-host tagged count which (when summed) shows the total count of times this metric was emittedfoo.bar.call_duration_ms.max
: by-host tagged maximum valuefoo.bar.call_duration_ms.median
: by-host tagged median valuefoo.bar.call_duration_ms.min
: by-host tagged minimum valuefoo.bar.call_duration_ms.sum
: by-host tagged sum value representing the total time
Clients can choose to override this behavior by including the tag veneurlocalonly
.
Because Veneur is built to handle lots and lots of data, it uses approximate histograms. We have our own implementation of Dunning's t-digest, which has bounded memory consumption and reduced error at extreme quantiles. Metrics are consistently routed to the same worker to distribute load and to be added to the same histogram.
Datadog's DogStatsD — and StatsD — uses an exact histogram which retains all samples and is reset every flush period. This means that there is a loss of precision when using Veneur, but the resulting percentile values are meant to be more representative of a global view.
Veneur uses HyperLogLogs for approximate unique sets. These are a very efficient unique counter with fixed memory consumption.
Via an optional magic tag Veneur will forward counters to a global host for accumulation. This feature was primarily developed to control tag cardinality. Some counters are valuable but do not require per-host tagging.
By definition the hostname is not applicable to global metrics that Veneur processes. Note that if you do include a hostname tag, Veneur will not strip it for you. Veneur will add its own hostname as configured to metrics sent to Datadog.
Veneur expires all metrics on each flush. If a metric is no longer being sent (or is sent sparsely) Veneur will not send it as zeros! This was chosen because the combination of the approximation's features and the additional hysteresis imposed by retaining these approximations over time was deemed more complex than desirable.
- Global metrics are those that benefit from being aggregated for chunks — or all — of your infrastructure. These are histograms (including the percentiles generated by timers) and sets.
- Metrics that are sent to another Veneur instance for aggregation are said to be "forwarded". This terminology helps to decipher configuration and metric options below.
- Flushed, in Veneur, means metrics sent to Datadog.
To clarify how each metric type behaves in Veneur, please use the following:
- Counters: Locally accrued, flushed to Datadog (see magic tags for global version)
- Gauges: Locally accrued, flushed to Datadog
- Histograms: Locally accrued, count, max and min flushed to Datadog, percentiles forwarded to
forward_address
for global aggregation when set. - Timers: Locally accrued, count, max and min flushed to Datadog, percentiles forwarded to
forward_address
for global aggregation when set. - Sets: Locally accrued, forwarded to
forward_address
for global aggregation when set.
veneur -f example.yaml
See example.yaml for a sample config. Be sure and set your Datadog API key
!
Veneur includes optional plugins to extend it's capabilities. These plugins are enabled via configuration options. Please consult each plugin's README for more information:
- S3 Plugin - Emit flushed metrics as a TSV file to Amazon S3
- InfluxDB Plugin - Emit flushed metrics to InfluxDB (experimental)
Here we'll document some explanations of setup choices you may make when using Veneur.
When you upgrade Veneur (deploy, stop, start with new binary) there will be a brief period where Veneur will not be able to handle HTTP requests. At Stripe we use Einhorn as a shared socket manager to bridge the gap until Veneur is ready to handle HTTP requests again.
You'll need to consult Einhorn's documentation for installation, setup and usage.
But once you've done that you can tell Veneur to use Einhorn by setting http_address
to einhorn@0
. This informs goji/bind to use it's
Einhorn handling code to bind to the file descriptor for HTTP.
Veneur instances can be configured to forward their global metrics to another Veneur instance. You can use this feature to get the best of both worlds: metrics that benefit from global aggregation can be passed up to a single global Veneur, but other metrics can be published locally with host-scoped information. Note: Forwarding adds an additional delay to metric availability corresponding to the value of the interval
configuration option, as the local veneur will flush it to it's configured upstream, which will then flush any recieved metrics when it's interval expires.
If a local instance receives a histogram or set, it will publish the local parts of that metric (the count, min and max) directly to DataDog, but instead of publishing percentiles, it will package the entire histogram and send it to the global instance. The global instance will aggregate all the histograms together and publish their percentiles to DataDog.
Note that the global instance can also receive metrics over UDP. It will publish a count, min and max for the samples that were sent directly to it, but not counting any samples from other Veneur instances (this ensures that things don't get double-counted). You can even chain multiple levels of forwarding together if you want. This might be useful if, for example, your global Veneur is under too much load. The root of the tree will be the Veneur instance that has an empty forward_address
. (Do not tell a Veneur instance to forward metrics to itself. We don't support that and it doesn't really make sense in the first place.)
With respect to the tags
configuration option, the tags that will be added are those of the Veneur that actually publishes to DataDog. If a local instance forwards its histograms and sets to a global instance, the local instance's tags will not be attached to the forwarded structures. It will still use its own tags for the other metrics it publishes, but the percentiles will get extra tags only from the global instance.
To improve availability, you can leverage leverage the Veneur proxy in conjunction with Consul service discovery.
The proxy can be configured to query the Consul API for instances of a service using consul_forward_service_name
. Each healthy instance is then entered in to a hash ring. When choosing which host to forward to, Veneur will use a combination of metric name and tags to consistently choose the same host for forwarding.
Use the consul_refresh_interval
to specify how often Veneur should refresh it's list.
Consistent handling of tracing can also be used by setting consul_trace_service_name
. The trace's ID — not the span, but the overall trace — is used for the choice of destination. So long as the hosts in the service stay consistent, this means that all of a trace's spans should arrive to the same destination host.
- Veneur locks the list of servers when refreshing and flushing to avoid race conditions. If your retrieval of consul hosts (see metric
veneur.discoverer.update_duration_ns
) or flushes (see metricveneur.flush.total_duration_ns
) are slow, you see one or the other slow down. - Veneur uses a consistent hash ring to try and mitigate the impact of changes in Consul's list of healthy nodes. This is not perfect, and you can expect some churn whenever the list of healthy nodes changes in Consul.
For static configuration you need one Veneur, which we'll call the global instance, and one or more other Veneurs, which we'll call local instances. The local instances should have their forward_address
configured to the global instance's http_address
. The global instance should have an empty forward_address
(ie just don't set it). You can then report metrics to any Veneur's udp_address
as usual.
If you want a metric to be strictly host-local, you can tell Veneur not to forward it by including a veneurlocalonly
tag in the metric packet, eg foo:1|h|#veneurlocalonly
. This tag will not actually appear in DataDog; Veneur removes it.
Relatedly, if you want to forward a counter to the global Veneur instance to reduce tag cardinality, you can tell Veneur to flush it to the global instance by including a veneurglobalonly
tag in the count's metric packet. This tag will also not appear in Datadog. Note: for global counters to report correctly, the local and global Veneur instances should be configured to have the same flush interval.
Veneur also honors the same "magic" tags that the dogstatsd daemon includes in the datadog agent. The tag host
will override Hostname
in the metric and device
will override DeviceName
.
Veneur expects to have a config file supplied via -f PATH
. The include example.yaml
outlines the options:
api_hostname
- The Datadog API URL to post to. Probablyhttps://app.datadoghq.com
.metric_max_length
- How big a buffer to allocate for incoming metric lengths. Metrics longer than this will get truncated!flush_max_per_body
- how many metrics to include in each JSON body POSTed to Datadog. Veneur will POST multiple bodies in parallel if it goes over this limit. A value around 5k-10k is recommended; in practice we've seen Datadog reject bodies over about 195k.debug
- Should we output lots of debug info? :)hostname
- The hostname to be used with each metric sent. Defaults toos.Hostname()
omit_empty_hostname
- If true andhostname
is empty (""
) Veneur will not add a host tag to its own metrics.interval
- How often to flush. Something like 10s seems good. Note: If you change this, it breaks all kinds of things on Datadog's side. You'll have to change all your metric's metadata.key
- Your Datadog API keypercentiles
- The percentiles to generate from our timers and histograms. Specified as array of float64saggregates
- The aggregates to generate from our timers and histograms. Specified as array of strings, choices: min, max, median, avg, count, sum. Default: min, max, countudp_address
- The address on which to listen for metrics. Probably:8126
so as not to interfere with normal DogStatsD.http_address
- The address to serve HTTP healthchecks and other endpoints. This can be a simple ip:port combination like127.0.0.1:8127
. If you're under einhorn, you probably wanteinhorn@0
.forward_address
- The address of an upstream Veneur to forward metrics to. See below.num_workers
- The number of worker goroutines to start.num_readers
- The number of reader goroutines to start. Veneur supports SO_REUSEPORT on Linux to scale to multiple readers. On other platforms, this should always be 1; other values will probably cause errors at startup. See below.read_buffer_size_bytes
- The size of the receive buffer for the UDP socket. Defaults to 2MB, as having a lot of buffer prevents packet drops during flush!sentry_dsn
A DSN for Sentry, where errors will be sent when they happen.stats_address
- The address to send internally generated metrics. Probably127.0.0.1:8125
. In practice this means you'll be sending metrics to yourself. This is expected!tags
- Tags to add to every metric that is sent to Veneur. Expects an array of strings!
Here are the important things to monitor with Veneur:
When running as a local instance, you will be primarily concerned with the following metrics:
veneur.flush*.error_total
as a count of errors when flushing metrics to Datadog. This should rarely happen. Occasional errors are fine, but sustained is bad.veneur.flush.total_duration_ns
andveneur.flush.total_duration_ns.count
. These metrics track the per-host time spent performing a flush to Datadog. The time should be minimal!
If you are forwarding metrics to central Veneur, you'll want to monitor these:
veneur.forward.error_total
and thecause
tag. This should pretty much never happen and definitely not be sustained.veneur.forward.duration_ns
andveneur.forward.duration_ns.count
. These metrics track the per-host time spent performing a forward. The time should be minimal!
When forwarding you'll want to also monitor the global nodes you're using for aggregation:
veneur.import.request_error_total
and thecause
tag. This should pretty much never happen and definitely not be sustained.veneur.import.response_duration_ns
andveneur.import.response_duration_ns.count
to monitor duration and number of received forwards. This should not fail and not take very long. How long it takes will depend on how many metrics you're forwarding.- And the same
veneur.flush.*
metrics from the "At Local Node" section.
Veneur will emit metrics to the stats_address
configured above in DogStatsD form. Those metrics are:
veneur.packet.error_total
- Number of packets that Veneur could not parse due to some sort of formatting error by the client. Tagged bypacket_type
andreason
.veneur.flush.post_metrics_total
- The total number of time-series points that will be submitted to Datadog via POST. Datadog's rate limiting is roughly proportional to this number.veneur.forward.post_metrics_total
- Indicates how many metrics are being forwarded in a given POST request. A "metric", in this context, refers to a unique combination of name, tags and metric type.veneur.*.content_length_bytes.*
- The number of bytes in a single POST body. Remember that Veneur POSTs large sets of metrics in multiple separate bodies in parallel. Uses a histogram, so there are multiple metrics generated depending on your local DogStatsD config.veneur.flush.duration_ns
- Time taken for a single POST transaction to the Datadog API. Tagged bypart
for each sub-partmarshal
(assembling the request body) andpost
(blocking on an HTTP response).veneur.forward.duration_ns
- Same asflush.duration_ns
, but for forwarding requests.veneur.flush.total_duration_ns
- Total time spent POSTing to Datadog, across all parallel requests. Under most circumstances, this should be roughly equal to the totalveneur.flush.duration_ns
. If it's not, then some of the POSTs are happening in sequence, which suggests some kind of goroutine scheduling issue.veneur.flush.error_total
- Number of errors received POSTing to Datadog.veneur.forward.error_total
- Number of errors received POSTing to an upstream Veneur. See alsoimport.request_error_total
below.veneur.flush.worker_duration_ns
- Per-worker timing — tagged byworker
- for flush. This is important as it is the time in which the worker holds a lock and is unavailable for other work.veneur.worker.metrics_processed_total
- Total number of metric packets processed between flushes by workers, tagged byworker
. This helps you find hot spots where a single worker is handling a lot of metrics. The sum across all workers should be approximately proportional to the number of packets received.veneur.worker.metrics_flushed_total
- Total number of metrics flushed at each flush time, tagged bymetric_type
. A "metric", in this context, refers to a unique combination of name, tags and metric type. You can use this metric to detect when your clients are introducing new instrumentation, or when you acquire new clients.veneur.worker.metrics_imported_total
- Total number of metrics received via the importing endpoint. A "metric", in this context, refers to a unique combination of name, tags, type and originating host. This metric indicates how much of a Veneur instance's load is coming from imports.veneur.import.response_duration_ns
- Time spent responding to import HTTP requests. This metric is broken intopart
tags forrequest
(time spent blocking the client) andmerge
(time spent sending metrics to workers).veneur.import.request_error_total
- A counter for the number of import requests that have errored out. You can use this for monitoring and alerting when imports fail.
If you use service discovery (e.g. Consul) for forwarding or tracing, these metrics will be useful to you. Each of these is tagged with service
that has a value matching the service name supplied via the config:
veneur_proxy.discoverer.destination_number
- A gauge containing the number of hosts Veneur discovered and added to the hash ring.veneur_proxy.discoverer.errors
- A counter tracking the number of times the service discovery mechanism has failed to return any hosts. Note that Veneur will refuse to update it's list if there are 0 returned hosts and may use stale results until such as as > 1 host is returned.veneur_proxy.discoverer.update_duration_ns
- A timer describing the duration of service discovery calls.veneur_proxy.forward.content_length_bytes.*
- Length of forwarded request bodies as a histogramveneur_proxy.proxy.duration_ns.*
- A timer describing the duration of the entire proxy call.veneur_proxy.import.duration_ns.*
- A timer describing the duration of handling the "import" call, which is used to deserialize and process the incoming metrics from a child Veneur.veneur_proxy.metrics_by_destination
- A gauge describing the number of metrics that were proxied to each destination instance.
In addition to logging, Veneur will dutifully send any errors it generates to a Sentry instance. This will occur if you set the sentry_dsn
configuration option. Not setting the option will disable Sentry reporting.
Processing packets quickly is the name of the game.
The common use case for Veneur is as an aggregator and host-local replacement for DogStatsD, therefore processing UDP fast is no longer the priority. That said, we were processing > 60k packets/second in production before shifting to the current local aggregation method. This outperformed both the Datadog-provided DogStatsD and StatsD in our infrastructure.
Datadog's API is tuned for small POST bodies from lots of hosts since they work on a per-host basis. Also there are limits on the size of the body that
can be posted. As a result Veneur chunks metrics in to smaller bits — governed by flush_max_per_body
— and sends them (compressed) concurrently to
Datadog. This is essential for reasonable performance as Datadog's API seems to be somewhat O(n)
with the size of the body (which is proportional
to the number of metrics).
We've found that our hosts generate around 5k metrics and have reasonable performance, so in our case 5k is used as the flush_max_per_body
.
The following sysctl
settings are used in testing, and are the same one would use for StatsD:
sysctl -w net.ipv4.udp_rmem_min=67108864
sysctl -w net.ipv4.udp_wmem_min=67108864
sysctl -w net.core.netdev_max_backlog=200000
sysctl -w net.core.rmem_max=16777216
sysctl -w net.core.rmem_default=16777216
sysctl -w net.ipv4.udp_mem="4648512 6198016 9297024"
As other implementations have observed, there's a limit to how many UDP packets a single kernel thread can consume before it starts to fall over. Veneur supports the SO_REUSEPORT
socket option on Linux, allowing multiple threads to share the UDP socket with kernel-space balancing between them. If you've tried throwing more cores at Veneur and it's just not going fast enough, this feature can probably help by allowing more of those cores to work on the socket (which is Veneur's hottest code path by far). Note that this is only supported on Linux (right now). We have not added support for other platforms, like darwin and BSDs.
Veneur supports reading the statds protocol from TCP connections. This is mostly to support TLS encryption and authentication, but might be useful on its own. Since TCP is a continuous stream of bytes, this requires each stat to be terminated by a new line character ('\n'). Most statsd clients only add new lines between stats within a single UDP packet, and omit the final trailing new line. This means you will likely need to modify your client to use this feature.
If you specify the tls_key
and tls_certificate
options, Veneur will only accept TLS connections on its TCP port. This allows the metrics sent to Veneur to be encrypted.
If you specify the tls_authority_certificate
option, Veneur will require clients to present a client certificate, signed by this authority. This ensures that only authenticated clients can connect.
You can generate your own set of keys using openssl:
# Generate the authority key and certificate (2048-bit RSA signed using SHA-256)
openssl genrsa -out cakey.pem 2048
openssl req -new -x509 -sha256 -key cakey.pem -out cacert.pem -days 1095 -subj "/O=Example Inc/CN=Example Certificate Authority"
# Generate the server key and certificate, signed by the authority
openssl genrsa -out serverkey.pem 2048
openssl req -new -sha256 -key serverkey.pem -out serverkey.csr -days 1095 -subj "/O=Example Inc/CN=veneur.example.com"
openssl x509 -sha256 -req -in serverkey.csr -CA cacert.pem -CAkey cakey.pem -CAcreateserial -out servercert.pem -days 1095
# Generate a client key and certificate, signed by the authority
openssl genrsa -out clientkey.pem 2048
openssl req -new -sha256 -key clientkey.pem -out clientkey.csr -days 1095 -subj "/O=Example Inc/CN=Veneur client key"
openssl x509 -req -in clientkey.csr -CA cacert.pem -CAkey cakey.pem -CAcreateserial -out clientcert.pem -days 1095
Set tcp_address
, tls_key
, tls_certificate
, and tls_authority_certificate
:
tcp_address: "localhost:8129"
tls_certificate: |
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIIC8TCCAdkCCQDc2V7P5nCDLjANBgkqhkiG9w0BAQsFADBAMRUwEwYDVQQKEwxC
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
tls_key: |
-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
MIIEpAIBAAKCAQEA7Sntp4BpEYGzgwQR8byGK99YOIV2z88HHtPDwdvSP0j5ZKdg
...
-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----
tls_authority_certificate: |
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----
Establishing a TLS connection is fairly expensive, so you should reuse connections as much as possible. RSA keys are also far more expensive than using ECDH keys. Using localhost on a machine with one CPU, Veneur was able to establish ~700 connections/second using ECDH prime256v1
keys, but only ~110 connections/second using RSA 2048-bit keys. According to the Go profiling for a Veneur instance using TLS with RSA keys, approximately 25% of the CPU time was in the TLS handshake, and 13% was decrypting data.
The veneur is a person acting as superintendent of the chase and especially of hounds in French medieval venery and being an important officer of the royal household. In other words, it is the master of dogs. :)