3.7 KiB
Set up your development environment
This folder contains useful scripts and configuration so you can:
- Configure data sources in Grafana for development.
- Configure dashboards for development and test scenarios.
- Create docker-compose file with databases and fake data.
Install Docker
Grafana uses Docker to make the task of setting up databases a little easier. If you do not have it already, make sure you install Docker before proceeding to the next step.
Developer dashboards and data sources
./setup.sh
After restarting the Grafana server, there should be a number of data sources named gdev-<type>
provisioned as well as
a dashboard folder named gdev dashboards
. This folder contains dashboard and panel features tests dashboards.
Please update these dashboards or make new ones as new panels and dashboards features are developed or new bugs are
found. The dashboards are located in the devenv/dev-dashboards
folder.
docker-compose with databases
This command creates a docker-compose file with specified databases configured and ready to run. Each database has
a prepared image with some fake data ready to use. For available databases, see docker/blocks
directory. Notice that
for some databases there are multiple images with different versions. Some blocks such as slow_proxy_mac
or apache_proxy_mac
are specifically for Macs.
make devenv sources=influxdb,prometheus,elastic5
Some of the blocks support dynamic change of the image version used in the Docker file. The signature looks like this:
make devenv sources=postgres,auth/openldap,grafana postgres_version=9.2 grafana_version=6.7.0-beta1
Notes per block
Grafana
The grafana block is pre-configured with the dev-datasources and dashboards.
Tempo
The tempo block runs loki and prometheus as well and should not be ran with prometheus as a separate source. You need to install a docker plugin for the self logging to work, without it the container won't start. See https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/clients/docker-driver/#installing for installation instructions.
Jaeger
Jaeger block runs both Jaeger and Loki container. Loki container sends traces to Jaeger and also logs its own logs into itself so it is possible to setup derived field for traceID from Loki to Jaeger. You need to install a docker plugin for the self logging to work, without it the container won't start. See https://grafana.com/docs/loki/latest/clients/docker-driver/#installing for installation instructions.
Graphite
version | source name | graphite-web port | plaintext port | pickle port |
---|---|---|---|---|
1.1 | graphite | 8180 | 2103 | 2103 |
1.0 | graphite1 | 8280 | 2203 | 2203 |
0.9 | graphite09 | 8380 | 2303 | 2303 |
Debugging setup in VS Code
An example of launch.json is provided in devenv/vscode/launch.json
. It basically does what Makefile and .bra.toml do. The 'program' field is set to the folder name so VS Code loads all *.go files in it instead of just main.go.
Troubleshooting
Containers that read from log files fail to start (Mac OS)
If you are running Mac OSX, containers that read from the log files (e.g. Telegraf, Fileabeat, Promtail) can fail to start. This is because the default Docker for Mac does not have permission to create grafana
folder at the /var/log
location, as it runs as the current user. To solve this issue, manually create the folder /var/log/grafana
, then start the containers again.
sudo mkdir /var/log/grafana