:title: Statsd reporting Statsd reporting ================ Zuul comes with support for the statsd protocol, when enabled and configured (see below), the Zuul scheduler will emit raw metrics to a statsd receiver which let you in turn generate nice graphics. An example is OpenStack Zuul status page: http://status.openstack.org/zuul/ Configuration ------------- Statsd support uses the statsd python module. Note that Zuul will start without the statsd python module, so an existing Zuul installation may be missing it. The configuration is done via environment variables STATSD_HOST and STATSD_PORT. They are interpreted by the statsd module directly and there is no such parameter in zuul.conf yet. Your init script will have to initialize both of them before launching Zuul. Your init script most probably loads a configuration file named ``/etc/default/zuul`` which would contain the environment variables:: $ cat /etc/default/zuul STATSD_HOST=10.0.0.1 STATSD_PORT=8125 Metrics ------- The metrics are emitted by the Zuul scheduler (`zuul/scheduler.py`): **gerrit.events. (counters)** Gerrit emits different kind of message over its `stream-events` interface. As a convenience, Zuul emits metrics to statsd which save you from having to use a different daemon to measure Gerrit events. The Gerrit events have different types defined by Gerrit itself, Zuul will relay any type of event reusing the name defined by Gerrit. Some of the events emitted are: * patchset-created * draft-published * change-abandonned * change-restored * change-merged * merge-failed * comment-added * ref-updated * reviewer-added Refer to your Gerrit installation documentation for an exhaustive list of Gerrit event types. **zuul.pipeline.** Holds metrics specific to jobs. The hierarchy is: #. **** as defined in your `layout.yaml` file (ex: `gate`, `test`, `publish`). It contains: #. **all_jobs** counter of jobs triggered by the pipeline. #. **current_changes** A gauge for the number of Gerrit changes being processed by this pipeline. #. **job** subtree detailing per jobs statistics: #. **** The triggered job name. #. **** Result as defined in your triggering system. For Jenkins that would be SUCCESS, FAILURE, UNSTABLE, LOST. The metrics holds both an increasing counter and a timing reporting the duration of the build. Whenever the result is a SUCCESS or FAILURE, Zuul will additionally report the duration of the build as a timing event. #. **resident_time** timing representing how long the Change has been known by Zuul (which includes build time and Zuul overhead). #. **total_changes** counter of the number of change proceeding since Zuul started. Additionally, the `zuul.pipeline.` hierarchy contains `current_changes` and `resident_time` metrics for each projects. The slash separator used in Gerrit name being replaced by dots. As an example, given a job named `myjob` triggered by the `gate` pipeline which took 40 seconds to build, the Zuul scheduler will emit the following statsd events: * `zuul.pipeline.gate.job.myjob.SUCCESS` +1 * `zuul.pipeline.gate.job.myjob` 40 seconds * `zuul.pipeline.gate.all_jobs` +1