Docker
Overview¶
Harvest is container-ready and supports several deployment options:
-
Stand-up Prometheus, Grafana, and Harvest via Docker Compose. Choose this if you want to hit the ground running. Install, volume and network mounts automatically handled.
-
Stand-up Harvest via Docker Compose that offers more flexibility in configuration. Choose this if you only want to run Harvest containers. Since you pick-and-choose what gets built and how it's deployed, stronger familiarity with containers is recommended.
-
If you prefer Ansible, David Blackwell created an Ansible script that stands up Harvest, Grafana, and Prometheus.
-
Want to run Harvest on a Mac via containerd and Rancher Desktop? We got you covered.
-
K8 Deployment via Kompose
Docker Compose¶
This is a quick way to install and get started with Harvest. Follow the four steps below to:
- Setup Harvest, Grafana, and Prometheus via Docker Compose
- Harvest dashboards are automatically imported and setup in Grafana with a Prometheus data source
- A separate poller container is created for each monitored cluster
- All pollers are automatically added as Prometheus scrape targets
Setup harvest.yml¶
- Create a
harvest.yml
file with your cluster details, below is an example with annotated comments. Modify as needed for your scenario.
This config is using the Prometheus exporter port_range feature, so you don't have to manage the Prometheus exporter port mappings for each poller.
Exporters:
prometheus1:
exporter: Prometheus
addr: 0.0.0.0
port_range: 2000-2030 # <====== adjust to be greater than equal to the number of monitored clusters
Defaults:
collectors:
- Zapi
- ZapiPerf
- EMS
use_insecure_tls: true # <====== adjust as needed to enable/disable TLS checks
exporters:
- prometheus1
Pollers:
infinity: # <====== add your cluster(s) here, they use the exporter defined three lines above
datacenter: DC-01
addr: 10.0.1.2
auth_style: basic_auth
username: user
password: 123#abc
# next cluster ....
Generate a Docker compose for your Pollers¶
- Generate a Docker compose file from your
harvest.yml
docker run --rm \
--env UID=$(id -u) --env GID=$(id -g) \
--entrypoint "bin/harvest" \
--volume "$(pwd):/opt/temp" \
--volume "$(pwd)/harvest.yml:/opt/harvest/harvest.yml" \
ghcr.io/netapp/harvest \
generate docker full \
--output harvest-compose.yml
By default, the above command uses the harvest configuration file(harvest.yml
) located in the current directory. If you want to use a harvest config from a different location.
What if my harvest configuration file is somewhere else or not named harvest.yml
Use the following docker run command, updating the HYML
variable with the absolute path to your harvest.yml
.
HYML="/opt/custom_harvest.yml"; \
docker run --rm \
--env UID=$(id -u) --env GID=$(id -g) \
--entrypoint "bin/harvest" \
--volume "$(pwd):/opt/temp" \
--volume "${HYML}:${HYML}" \
ghcr.io/netapp/harvest:latest \
generate docker full \
--output harvest-compose.yml \
--config "${HYML}"
generate docker full
does two things:
- Creates a Docker compose file with a container for each Harvest poller defined in your
harvest.yml
- Creates a matching Prometheus service discovery file for each Harvest poller (located
in
container/prometheus/harvest_targets.yml
). Prometheus uses this file to scrape the Harvest pollers.
Start everything¶
Bring everything up
docker-compose -f prom-stack.yml -f harvest-compose.yml up -d --remove-orphans
Note on Docker Logging Configuration¶
By default, Docker uses the json-file
logging driver which does not limit the size of the logs. This can cause your system to run out of disk space. Docker provides several options for logging configuration, including different logging drivers and options for log rotation.
Docker recommends using the local
driver to prevent disk-exhaustion. More details can be found in Docker logging documentation
Prometheus and Grafana¶
The prom-stack.yml
compose file creates a frontend
and backend
network. Prometheus and Grafana publish their admin
ports on the front-end network and are routable to the local machine. By default, the Harvest pollers are part of the
backend network and also expose their Prometheus web end-points.
If you do not want their end-points exposed, add the --port=false
option to the generate
sub-command in the previous step.
Prometheus¶
After bringing up the prom-stack.yml
compose file, you can check Prometheus's list of targets
at http://IP_OF_PROMETHEUS:9090/targets
.
Grafana¶
After bringing up the prom-stack.yml
compose file, you can access Grafana at http://IP_OF_GRAFANA:3000
.
You will be prompted to create a new password the first time you log in. Grafana's default credentials are
username: admin
password: admin
Manage pollers¶
How do I add a new poller?¶
- Add poller to
harvest.yml
- Regenerate compose file by running harvest generate
- Run docker compose up, for example,
docker-compose -f prom-stack.yml -f harvest-compose.yml up -d --remove-orphans
Stop all containers¶
docker-compose -f prom-stack.yml -f harvest-compose.yml down
If you encounter the following error message while attempting to stop your Docker containers using docker-compose down
Error response from daemon: Conflict. The container name "/poller-u2" is already in use by container
This error is likely due to running docker-compose down
from a different directory than where you initially ran docker-compose up
.
To resolve this issue, make sure to run the docker-compose down
command from the same directory where you ran docker-compose up
. This will ensure that Docker can correctly match the container names and IDs with the directory you are working in.
Alternatively, you can stop the Harvest, Prometheus, and Grafana containers by using the following command:
docker ps -aq --filter "name=prometheus" --filter "name=grafana" --filter "name=poller-" | xargs docker stop | xargs docker rm
Note: Deleting or stopping Docker containers does not remove the data stored in Docker volumes.
Upgrade Harvest¶
Note: If you want to keep your historical Prometheus data, and you set up your Docker Compose workflow before Harvest
22.11
, please read how to migrate your Prometheus volume before continuing with the upgrade steps below.
To upgrade Harvest:
-
Retrieve the most recent version of the Harvest Docker image by executing the following command.This is needed since the new version may contain new templates, dashboards, or other files not included in the Docker image.
docker pull ghcr.io/netapp/harvest
-
Regenerate your
harvest-compose.yml
file by running harvest generate By default, generate will use thelatest
tag. If you want to upgrade to anightly
build see the twisty.I want to upgrade to a nightly build
Tell the
generate
cmd to use a different tag like so:docker run --rm \ --env UID=$(id -u) --env GID=$(id -g) \ --entrypoint "bin/harvest" \ --volume "$(pwd):/opt/temp" \ --volume "$(pwd)/harvest.yml:/opt/harvest/harvest.yml" \ ghcr.io/netapp/harvest:nightly \ generate docker full \ --image ghcr.io/netapp/harvest:nightly \ --output harvest-compose.yml
-
Restart your containers using the following:
docker-compose -f prom-stack.yml -f harvest-compose.yml up -d --remove-orphans
Building Harvest Docker Image¶
Building a custom Harvest Docker image is only necessary if you require a tailored solution. If your intention is to run Harvest using Docker without any customizations, please refer to the Overview section above.
docker build -f container/onePollerPerContainer/Dockerfile -t harvest:latest . --no-cache