195 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
195 lines
6.6 KiB
Plaintext
[role="xpack"]
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[[watcher-api-stats]]
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=== Get {watcher} stats API
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[subs="attributes"]
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++++
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<titleabbrev>Get {watcher} stats</titleabbrev>
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++++
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Retrieves the current {watcher} metrics.
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[[watcher-api-stats-request]]
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==== {api-request-title}
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`GET _watcher/stats` +
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`GET _watcher/stats/<metric>`
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[[watcher-api-stats-prereqs]]
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==== {api-prereq-title}
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* You must have `manage_watcher` or `monitor_watcher` cluster privileges to use
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this API. For more information, see
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<<security-privileges>>.
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//[[watcher-api-stats-desc]]
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//==== {api-description-title}
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[[watcher-api-stats-path-params]]
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==== {api-path-parms-title}
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`emit_stacktraces`::
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(Optional, Boolean) Defines whether stack traces are generated for each watch
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that is running. The default value is `false`.
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`<metric>`::
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(Optional, enum) Defines which additional metrics are included in the response.
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`current_watches`::: Includes the current executing watches in the response.
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`queued_watches`::: Includes the watches queued for execution in the response.
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`_all`::: Includes all metrics in the response.
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//[[watcher-api-stats-query-params]]
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//==== {api-query-parms-title}
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//[[watcher-api-stats-request-body]]
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//==== {api-request-body-title}
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[[watcher-api-stats-response-body]]
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==== {api-response-body-title}
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This API always returns basic metrics. You retrieve more metrics by using
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the `metric` parameter.
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`current_watches`::
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(list) The current executing watches metric gives insight into the watches
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that are currently being executed by {watcher}. Additional information is
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shared per watch that is currently executing. This information includes the
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`watch_id`, the time its execution started and its current execution phase.
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To include this metric, the `metric` option should be set to `current_watches`
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or `_all`. In addition you can also specify the `emit_stacktraces=true`
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parameter, which adds stack traces for each watch that is being executed. These
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stack traces can give you more insight into an execution of a watch.
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`queued_watches`::
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(list) {watcher} moderates the execution of watches such that their execution
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won't put too much pressure on the node and its resources. If too many watches
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trigger concurrently and there isn't enough capacity to execute them all, some
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of the watches are queued, waiting for the current executing watches to finish
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their execution. The queued watches metric gives insight on these queued
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watches.
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To include this metric, the `metric` option should include `queued_watches` or
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`_all`.
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//[[watcher-api-stats-response-codes]]
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//==== {api-response-codes-title}
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[[watcher-api-stats-example]]
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==== {api-examples-title}
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The following example calls the `stats` API to retrieve basic metrics:
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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GET _watcher/stats
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--------------------------------------------------
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A successful call returns a JSON structure similar to the following example:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"watcher_state": "started", <1>
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"watch_count": 1, <2>
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"execution_thread_pool": {
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"size": 1000, <3>
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"max_size": 1 <4>
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}
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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<1> The current state of watcher, which can be `started`, `starting`, or `stopped`.
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<2> The number of watches currently registered.
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<3> The number of watches that were triggered and currently queued for execution.
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<4> The largest size of the execution thread pool, which indicates the largest
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number of concurrent executing watches.
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The following example specifies the `metric` option as a query string argument
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and will include the basic metrics and metrics about the current executing watches:
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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GET _watcher/stats?metric=current_watches
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--------------------------------------------------
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The following example specifies the `metric` option as part of the url path:
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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GET _watcher/stats/current_watches
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--------------------------------------------------
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The following snippet shows an example of a successful JSON response that
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captures a watch in execution:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"watcher_state": "started",
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"watch_count": 2,
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"execution_thread_pool": {
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"queue_size": 1000,
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"max_size": 20
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},
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"current_watches": [ <1>
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{
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"watch_id": "slow_condition", <2>
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"watch_record_id": "slow_condition_3-2015-05-13T07:42:32.179Z", <3>
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"triggered_time": "2015-05-12T11:53:51.800Z", <4>
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"execution_time": "2015-05-13T07:42:32.179Z", <5>
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"execution_phase": "condition" <6>
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}
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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<1> A list of all the watches that are currently being executed by {watcher}.
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When no watches are currently executing, an empty array is returned. The
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captured watches are sorted by execution time in descending order. Thus the
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longest running watch is always at the top.
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<2> The id of the watch being executed.
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<3> The id of the watch record.
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<4> The time the watch was triggered by the trigger engine.
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<5> The time the watch was executed. This is just before the input is being
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executed.
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<6> The current watch execution phase. Can be `input`, `condition` `actions`,
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`awaits_execution`, `started`, `watch_transform`, `aborted`, `finished`.
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The following example specifies the `queued_watches` metric option and includes
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both the basic metrics and the queued watches:
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[source,console]
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--------------------------------------------------
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GET _watcher/stats/queued_watches
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--------------------------------------------------
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An example of a successful JSON response that captures a watch in execution:
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[source,js]
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--------------------------------------------------
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{
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"watcher_state": "started",
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"watch_count": 10,
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"execution_thread_pool": {
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"queue_size": 1000,
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"max_size": 20
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},
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"queued_watches": [ <1>
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{
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"watch_id": "slow_condition4", <2>
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"watch_record_id": "slow_condition4_223-2015-05-21T11:59:59.811Z", <3>
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"triggered_time": "2015-05-21T11:59:59.811Z", <4>
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"execution_time": "2015-05-21T11:59:59.811Z" <5>
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},
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...
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]
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}
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--------------------------------------------------
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<1> A list of all watches that are currently queued for execution. When no
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watches are queued, an empty array is returned.
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<2> The id of the watch queued for execution.
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<3> The id of the watch record.
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<4> The time the watch was triggered by the trigger engine.
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<5> The time the watch was went into a queued state.
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