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REST

Rest Collector

The Rest collectors uses the REST protocol to collect data from ONTAP systems.

The RestPerf collector is an extension of this collector, therefore they share many parameters and configuration settings.

Target System

Target system can be cDot ONTAP system. 9.12.1 and after are supported, however the default configuration files may not completely match with all versions. See REST Strategy for more details.

Requirements

No SDK or other requirements. It is recommended to create a read-only user for Harvest on the ONTAP system (see prepare monitored clusters for details)

Metrics

The collector collects a dynamic set of metrics. ONTAP returns JSON documents and Harvest allows you to define templates to extract values from the JSON document via a dot notation path. You can view ONTAP's full set of REST APIs by visiting https://docs.netapp.com/us-en/ontap-automation/reference/api_reference.html#access-a-copy-of-the-ontap-rest-api-reference-documentation

As an example, the /api/storage/aggregates endpoint, lists all data aggregates in the cluster. Below is an example response from this endpoint:

{
  "records": [
    {
      "uuid": "3e59547d-298a-4967-bd0f-8ae96cead08c",
      "name": "umeng_aff300_aggr2",
      "space": {
        "block_storage": {
          "size": 8117898706944,
          "available": 4889853616128
        }
      },
      "state": "online",
      "volume_count": 36
    }
  ]
}

The Rest collector will take this document, extract the records section and convert the metrics above into: name, space.block_storage.size, space.block_storage.available, state and volume_count. Metric names will be taken, as is, unless you specify a short display name. See counters for more details.

Parameters

The parameters of the collector are distributed across three files:

  • Harvest configuration file (default: harvest.yml)
  • Rest configuration file (default: conf/rest/default.yaml)
  • Each object has its own configuration file (located in conf/rest/$version/)

Except for addr and datacenter, all other parameters of the Rest collector can be defined in either of these three files. Parameters defined in the lower-level file, override parameters in the higher-level ones. This allows you to configure each object individually, or use the same parameters for all objects.

The full set of parameters are described below.

Collector configuration file

This configuration file contains a list of objects that should be collected and the filenames of their templates ( explained in the next section).

Additionally, this file contains the parameters that are applied as defaults to all objects. As mentioned before, any of these parameters can be defined in the Harvest or object configuration files as well.

parameter type description default
client_timeout duration (Go-syntax) how long to wait for server responses 30s
schedule list, required how frequently to retrieve metrics from ONTAP
- data duration (Go-syntax) how frequently this collector/object should retrieve metrics from ONTAP 3 minutes

The template should define objects in the objects section. Example:

objects:
  Aggregate: aggr.yaml

For each object, we define the filename of the object configuration file. The object configuration files are located in subdirectories matching the ONTAP version that was used to create these files. It is possible to have multiple version-subdirectories for multiple ONTAP versions. At runtime, the collector will select the object configuration file that closest matches the version of the target ONTAP system.

Object configuration file

The Object configuration file ("subtemplate") should contain the following parameters:

parameter type description default
name string, required display name of the collector that will collect this object
query string, required REST endpoint used to issue a REST request
object string, required short name of the object
counters string list of counters to collect (see notes below)
plugins list plugins and their parameters to run on the collected data
export_options list parameters to pass to exporters (see notes below)

Template Example:

name:                     Volume
query:                    api/storage/volumes
object:                   volume

counters:
  - ^^name                                        => volume
  - ^^svm.name                                    => svm
  - ^aggregates.#.name                            => aggr
  - ^anti_ransomware.state                        => antiRansomwareState
  - ^state                                        => state
  - ^style                                        => style
  - space.available                               => size_available
  - space.overwrite_reserve                       => overwrite_reserve_total
  - space.overwrite_reserve_used                  => overwrite_reserve_used
  - space.percent_used                            => size_used_percent
  - space.physical_used                           => space_physical_used
  - space.physical_used_percent                   => space_physical_used_percent
  - space.size                                    => size
  - space.used                                    => size_used
  - hidden_fields:
      - anti_ransomware.state
      - space
  - filter:
      - name=*harvest*

plugins:
  - LabelAgent:
      exclude_equals:
        - style `flexgroup_constituent`

export_options:
  instance_keys:
    - aggr
    - style
    - svm
    - volume
  instance_labels:
    - antiRansomwareState
    - state

Counters

This section defines the list of counters that will be collected. These counters can be labels, numeric metrics or histograms. The exact property of each counter is fetched from ONTAP and updated periodically.

The display name of a counter can be changed with => (e.g., space.block_storage.size => space_total).

Counters that are stored as labels will only be exported if they are included in the export_options section.

The counters section allows you to specify hidden_fields and filter parameters. Please find the detailed explanation below.

Hidden_fields

There are some fields that ONTAP will not return unless you explicitly ask for them, even when using the URL parameter fields=**. hidden_fields is how you tell ONTAP which additional fields it should include in the REST response.

Filter

The filter is used to constrain the data returned by the endpoint, allowing for more targeted data retrieval. The filtering uses ONTAP's REST record filtering. The example above asks ONTAP to only return records where a volume's name matches *harvest*.

If you're familiar with ONTAP's REST record filtering, the example above would become name=*harvest* and appended to the final URL like so:

https://CLUSTER_IP/api/storage/volumes?fields=*,anti_ransomware.state,space&name=*harvest*

Refer to the ONTAP API specification, sections: query parameters and record filtering, for more details.

Export_options

Parameters in this section tell the exporters how to handle the collected data.

There are two different kinds of time-series that Harvest publishes: metrics and instance labels.

  • Metrics are numeric data with associated labels (key-value pairs). E.g. volume_read_ops_total{cluster="cluster1", node="node1", volume="vol1"} 123. The volume_read_ops_total metric is exporting three labels: cluster, node, and volume and the metric value is 123.
  • Instance labels are named after their associated config object (e.g., volume_labels, qtree_labels, etc.). There will be one instance label for each object instance, and each instance label will contain a set of associated labels (key-value pairs) that are defined in the templates instance_labels parameter. E.g. volume_labels{cluster="cluster1", node="node1", volume="vol1", svm="svm1"} 1. The volume_labels instance label is exporting four labels: cluster, node, volume, and svm. Instance labels always export a metric value of 1.

The export_options section allows you to define how to export these time-series.

  • instances_keys (list): display names of labels to export to both metric and instance labels. For example, if you list the svm counter under instances_keys, that key-value will be included in all time-series metrics and all instance-labels.
  • instance_labels (list): display names of labels to export with the corresponding instance label config object. For example, if you want the volume counter to be exported with the volume_labels instance label, you would list volume in the instance_labels section.
  • include_all_labels (bool): exports all labels for all time-series metrics. If there are no metrics defined in the template, this option will do nothing. This option also overrides the previous two parameters. See also collect_only_labels.

Endpoints

In Harvest REST templates, endpoints are additional queries that enhance the data collected from the main query. The main query, identified by the query parameter, is the primary REST API for data collection. For example, the main query for a disk object is api/storage/disks. Typically endpoints are used to query the private CLI to add metrics that are not available via ONTAP's public REST API.

Within the endpoints section of a Harvest REST template, you can define multiple endpoint entries. Each entry supports its own query and associated counters, allowing you to collect additional metrics or labels from various API. These additional metrics or labels are associated with the main dataset via a key. The key is denoted by the ^^ notation in the counters of both the main query and the endpoints.

In the example below, the endpoints section makes an additional query to api/private/cli/disk, which collects metrics such as stats_io_kbps, stats_sectors_read, and stats_sectors_written. The uuid is the key that links the data from the api/storage/disks and api/private/cli/disk API. The type label from the api/private/cli/disk endpoint is included as outlined in the export_options.

name:             Disk
query:            api/storage/disks
object:           disk

counters:
  - ^^uid                       => uuid
  - ^bay                        => shelf_bay
  - ^container_type
  - ^home_node.name             => owner_node
  - ^model
  - ^name                       => disk
  - ^node.name                  => node
  - ^node.uuid
  - ^outage.reason              => outage
  - ^serial_number
  - ^shelf.uid                  => shelf
  - ^state
  - bytes_per_sector            => bytes_per_sector
  - sector_count                => sectors
  - stats.average_latency       => stats_average_latency
  - stats.power_on_hours        => power_on_hours
  - usable_size

endpoints:
  - query: api/private/cli/disk
    counters:
      - ^^uid                   => uuid
      - ^type
      - disk_io_kbps_total      => stats_io_kbps
      - sectors_read            => stats_sectors_read
      - sectors_written         => stats_sectors_written

plugins:
  - Disk
  - LabelAgent:
      value_to_num:
        - new_status outage - - `0` #ok_value is empty value, '-' would be converted to blank while processing.
      join:
        - index `_` node,disk
  - MetricAgent:
      compute_metric:
        - uptime MULTIPLY stats.power_on_hours 60 60 #convert to second for zapi parity

export_options:
  instance_keys:
    - disk
    - index
    - node
  instance_labels:
    - container_type
    - failed
    - model
    - outage
    - owner_node
    - serial_number
    - shared
    - shelf
    - shelf_bay
    - type

RestPerf Collector

RestPerf collects performance metrics from ONTAP systems using the REST protocol. The collector is designed to be easily extendable to collect new objects or to collect additional counters from already configured objects.

This collector is an extension of the Rest collector. The major difference between them is that RestPerf collects only the performance (perf) APIs. Additionally, RestPerf always calculates final values from the deltas of two subsequent polls.

Metrics

RestPerf metrics are calculated the same as ZapiPerf metrics. More details about how performance metrics are calculated can be found here.

Parameters

The parameters of the collector are distributed across three files:

  • Harvest configuration file (default: harvest.yml)
  • RestPerf configuration file (default: conf/restperf/default.yaml)
  • Each object has its own configuration file (located in conf/restperf/$version/)

Except for addr, datacenter and auth_style, all other parameters of the RestPerf collector can be defined in either of these three files. Parameters defined in the lower-level file, override parameters in the higher-level file. This allows the user to configure each objects individually, or use the same parameters for all objects.

The full set of parameters are described below.

RestPerf configuration file

This configuration file (the "template") contains a list of objects that should be collected and the filenames of their configuration (explained in the next section).

Additionally, this file contains the parameters that are applied as defaults to all objects. (As mentioned before, any of these parameters can be defined in the Harvest or object configuration files as well).

parameter type description default
use_insecure_tls bool, optional skip verifying TLS certificate of the target system false
client_timeout duration (Go-syntax) how long to wait for server responses 30s
latency_io_reqd int, optional threshold of IOPs for calculating latency metrics (latencies based on very few IOPs are unreliable) 10
jitter duration (Go-syntax), optional Each Harvest collector runs independently, which means that at startup, each collector may send its REST queries at nearly the same time. To spread out the collector startup times over a broader period, you can use jitter to randomly distribute collector startup across a specified duration. For example, a jitter of 1m starts each collector after a random delay between 0 and 60 seconds. For more details, refer to this discussion.
schedule list, required the poll frequencies of the collector/object, should include exactly these three elements in the exact same other:
- counter duration (Go-syntax) poll frequency of updating the counter metadata cache 20 minutes
- instance duration (Go-syntax) poll frequency of updating the instance cache 10 minutes
- data duration (Go-syntax) poll frequency of updating the data cache

Note Harvest allows defining poll intervals on sub-second level (e.g. 1ms), however keep in mind the following:
  • API response of an ONTAP system can take several seconds, so the collector is likely to enter failed state if the poll interval is less than client_timeout.
  • Small poll intervals will create significant workload on the ONTAP system, as many counters are aggregated on-demand.
  • Some metric values become less significant if they are calculated for very short intervals (e.g. latencies)
1 minute

The template should define objects in the objects section. Example:

objects:
  SystemNode: system_node.yaml
  HostAdapter: hostadapter.yaml

Note that for each object we only define the filename of the object configuration file. The object configuration files are located in subdirectories matching to the ONTAP version that was used to create these files. It is possible to have multiple version-subdirectories for multiple ONTAP versions. At runtime, the collector will select the object configuration file that closest matches to the version of the target ONTAP system. (A mismatch is tolerated since RestPerf will fetch and validate counter metadata from the system.)

Object configuration file

Refer Object configuration file

Counters

See Counters

Some counters require a "base-counter" for post-processing. If the base-counter is missing, RestPerf will still run, but the missing data won't be exported.

Export_options

See Export Options

ONTAP Private CLI

The ONTAP private CLI allows for more granular control and access to non-public counters. It can be used to fill gaps in the REST API, especially in cases where certain data is not yet available through the REST API. Harvest's REST collector can make full use of ONTAP's private CLI. This means when ONTAP's public REST API is missing counters, Harvest can still collect them as long as those counters are available via ONTAP's CLI.

For more information on using the ONTAP private CLI with the REST API, you can refer to the following resources:

Creating Templates That Use ONTAP's Private CLI

Let's take an example of how we can make Harvest use the system fru-check show CLI command.

system fru-check show

REST APIs endpoint:

/api/private/cli/system/fru-check?fields=node,fru_name,fru_status

Converting the CLI command system fru-check show for use with a private CLI REST API can be achieved by adhering to the path rules outlined in the ONTAP documentation. Generally, this involves substituting all spaces within the CLI command with a forward slash (/), and converting the ONTAP CLI verb into the corresponding REST verb.

The show command gets converted to the HTTP method GET call. From the CLI, look at the required field names and pass them as a comma-separated value in fields= in the API endpoint.

Note: If the field name contains a hyphen (-), it should be converted to an underscore (_) in the REST API field. For example, fru-name becomes fru_name. ONTAP is flexible with the input format and can freely convert between hyphen (-) and underscore (_) forms. However, when it comes to output, ONTAP returns field names with underscores. For compatibility and consistency, it is mandatory to use underscores in field names when working with Harvest REST templates for ONTAP private CLI.

Advanced and Diagnostic Mode Commands

The CLI pass through allows you to execute advanced and diagnostic mode CLI commands by including the privilege_level field in your request under the filter setting like so:

counters:
  - filter:
      - privilege_level=diagnostic

Creating a Harvest Template for Private CLI

Here's a Harvest template that uses ONTAP's private CLI to collect field-replaceable units (FRU) counters by using ONTAP's CLI command system fru-check show

name:                         FruCheck
query:                        api/private/cli/system/fru-check
object:                       fru_check

counters:
  - ^^node
  - ^^serial_number              => serial_number
  - ^fru_name                    => name
  - ^fru_status                  => status

export_options:
  instance_keys:
    - node
    - serial_number
  instance_labels:
    - name
    - status

In this template, the query field specifies the private CLI command to be used (system fru-check show). The counters field maps the output of the private CLI command to the fields of the fru_check object. To identify the ONTAP counter names (the left side of the '=>' symbol in the template, such as fru_name), you can establish an SSH connection to your ONTAP cluster. Once connected, leverage ONTAP's command completion functionality to reveal the counter names. For instance, you can type system fru-check show -fields, then press the '?' key. This will display a list of ONTAP field names, as demonstrated below.

cluster-01::> system fru-check show -fields ?
  node                        Node
  serial-number               FRU Serial Number
  fru-name                    FRU Name
  fru-type                    FRU Type
  fru-status                  Status
  display-name                Display Name
  location                    Location
  additional-info             Additional Info
  reason                      Details

The export_options field specifies how the data should be exported. The instance_keys field lists the fields that will be added as labels to all exported instances of the fru_check object. The instance_labels field lists the fields that should be included as labels in the exported data.

The output of this template would look like:

fru_check_labels{cluster="umeng-aff300-01-02",datacenter="u2",name="DIMM-1",node="umeng-aff300-02",serial_number="s2",status="pass"} 1.0
fru_check_labels{cluster="umeng-aff300-01-02",datacenter="u2",name="PCIe Devices",node="umeng-aff300-02",serial_number="s1",status="pass"} 1.0

Partial Aggregation

There are instances when ONTAP may report partial aggregate results for certain objects (for example, during a node outage). In such cases, the RestPerf Collector will skip the reporting of performance counters for the affected objects.

To determine whether partial aggregation affects an object, check the numPartials entry in the Harvest logs. If numPartials is greater than zero, it indicates that partial aggregations have occurred for that object. e.g. Collected Poller=aff-251 collector=RestPerf:NFSv4 instances=56 numPartials=15