Sends task execution metrics to Zabbix
Project description
Sends task execution metrics to Zabbix: how many tasks were started and have completed successfully or with failure, and how many tasks are still in the queues (supported only for broker redis). Tested against Zabbix-3.0.
Inspired by https://gitlab.com/kalibrr/celery-prometheus
Usage
Run bin/celery zabbix --zabbix-nodename myhost.example.com --zabbix-server zabbix.example.com. (Alternatively you can pass --zabix-agent-config=/etc/zabbix/zabbix_agentd.conf, then the values for server+nodename will be read from there.)
Import the corresponding Zabbix Template to set up the matching items.
Items
The following items will be sent every 60 seconds (pass --dump-interval=x to configure):
celery.task.started
celery.task.succeeded (with trigger > {$WARN_TASKS_FAILED})
celery.task.failed
celery.task.retried
These are counted from the time the monitoring process started, so you’ll need to process them as delta on the Zabbix server.
celery.task.queuetime (only if task_send_sent_event is enabled)
celery.task.runtime
These are the median values and use the item type “Numeric (float)”.
Queue lengths
If you pass --queuelength-interval=x then every x seconds the queue lengths will be checked (NOTE: this only works with redis as the broker), and the following items will also be sent:
celery.queue[myqueuename]
These are gauge values, i.e. they contain the length as it was retrieved each time, so they can go up and down.
celery.discover.queues
This is an auto-discovery item, together with the Zabbix Template this will create an item and trigger for each queue. On your host, create macros of the form {$WARN_QUEUE_LENGTH:myqueuename} to determine the trigger threshold.
Run tests
Using tox and py.test. Maybe install tox (e.g. via pip install tox) and then simply run tox.
celery_zabbix changes
1.0.0 (2018-03-06)
Initial release
Project details
Download files
Download the file for your platform. If you're not sure which to choose, learn more about installing packages.