This is an IPMI exporter for Prometheus.
It supports both the regular /metrics
endpoint, exposing metrics from the
host that the exporter is running on, as well as an /ipmi
endpoint that
supports IPMI over RMCP - one exporter running on one host can be used to
monitor a large number of IPMI interfaces by passing the target
parameter to
a scrape.
The exporter relies on tools from the FreeIPMI suite for the actual IPMI implementation.
For most use-cases, simply download the the latest release.
You need a Go development environment. Then, simply run make
to build the
executable:
make
This uses the common prometheus tooling to build and run some tests.
Alternatively, you can use the standard Go tooling, which will install the
executable in $GOPATH/bin
:
go get github.com/soundcloud/ipmi_exporter
You can build a Docker container with the included docker
make target:
make docker
This will not even require Go tooling on the host. See the included docker compose example for how to use the resulting container.
A minimal invocation looks like this:
./ipmi_exporter
Supported parameters include:
web.listen-address
: the address/port to listen on (default:":9290"
)config.file
: path to the configuration file (default: none)freeipmi.path
: path to the FreeIPMI executables (default: rely on$PATH
)
For syntax and a complete list of available parameters, run:
./ipmi_exporter -h
Make sure you have the following tools from the FreeIPMI suite installed:
ipmimonitoring
/ipmi-sensors
ipmi-dcmi
bmc-info
ipmi-sel
If you are running the exporter as unprivileged user, but need to execute the FreeIPMI tools as root, you can do the following:
- Add sudoers files to permit the following commands
ipmi-exporter ALL = NOPASSWD: /usr/sbin/ipmimonitoring,\ /usr/sbin/ipmi-sensors,\ /usr/sbin/ipmi-dcmi,\ /usr/sbin/bmc-info,\ /usr/sbin/ipmi-chassis,\ /usr/sbin/ipmi-sel
- Create the script under user dir with execute permission
#!/bin/sh sudo /usr/sbin/$(basename $0) "$@"
- Create symlinks under user dir
ln -s /home/ipmi-exporter/[script name] /home/ipmi-exporter/ipmimonitoring ln -s /home/ipmi-exporter/[script name] /home/ipmi-exporter/ipmi-sensors ln -s /home/ipmi-exporter/[script name] /home/ipmi-exporter/ipmi-dcmi ln -s /home/ipmi-exporter/[script name] /home/ipmi-exporter/bmc-info ln -s /home/ipmi-exporter/[script name] /home/ipmi-exporter/ipmi-chassis
- Execute ipmi-exporter with the option
--freeipmi.path=/home/ipmi-exporter
NOTE: you should only use Docker for remote metrics.
See Building a Docker container and the example
docker-compose.yml
. Edit the ipmi_remote.yml
file to configure IPMI
credentials, then run with:
sudo docker-compose up -d
By default, the server will bind on 0.0.0.0:9290
.
Simply scraping the standard /metrics
endpoint will make the exporter emit
local IPMI metrics. No special configuration is required.
For remote metrics, the general configuration pattern is similar to that of the
blackbox exporter, i.e.
Prometheus scrapes a small number (possibly one) of IPMI exporters with a
target
and module
URL parameter to tell the exporter which IPMI device it
should use to retrieve the IPMI metrics. We offer this approach as IPMI devices
often provide useful information even while the supervised host is turned off.
If you are running the exporter on a separate host anyway, it makes more sense
to have only a few of them, each probing many (possibly thousands of) IPMI
devices, rather than one exporter per IPMI device.
NOTE: If you are using remote metrics, but still want to get the local
process metrics from the instance, you must use a default
module with an
empty collectors list and use other modules for the remote hosts.
The exporter can read a configuration file by setting config.file
(see
above). To collect local metrics, you might not even need one. For
remote metrics, it must contain at least user names and passwords for IPMI
access to all targets to be scraped. You can additionally specify the IPMI
driver type and privilege level to use (see man 5 freeipmi.conf
for more
details and possible values).
The config file supports the notion of "modules", so that different configurations can be re-used for groups of targets. See the section below on how to set the module parameter in Prometheus. The special module "default" is used in case the scrape does not request a specific module.
The configuration file also supports a blacklist of sensors, useful in case of OEM-specific sensors that FreeIPMI cannot deal with properly or otherwise misbehaving sensors. This applies to both local and remote metrics.
There are two commented example configuration files, see ipmi_local.yml
for
scraping local host metrics and ipmi_remote.yml
for scraping remote IPMI
interfaces.
Collecting local IPMI metrics is fairly straightforward. Simply configure your server to scrape the default metrics endpoint on the hosts running the exporter.
- job_name: ipmi
scrape_interval: 1m
scrape_timeout: 30s
metrics_path: /metrics
scheme: http
static_configs:
- targets:
- 10.1.2.23:9290
- 10.1.2.24:9290
- 10.1.2.25:9290
To add your IPMI targets to Prometheus, you can use any of the supported service discovery mechanism of your choice. The following example uses the file-based SD and should be easy to adjust to other scenarios.
Create a YAML file that contains a list of targets, e.g.:
---
- targets:
- 10.1.2.23
- 10.1.2.24
- 10.1.2.25
- 10.1.2.26
- 10.1.2.27
- 10.1.2.28
- 10.1.2.29
- 10.1.2.30
labels:
job: ipmi_exporter
This file needs to be stored on the Prometheus server host. Assuming that this
file is called /srv/ipmi_exporter/targets.yml
, and the IPMI exporter is
running on a host that has the DNS name ipmi-exporter.internal.example.com
,
add the following to your Prometheus config:
- job_name: ipmi
params:
module: default
scrape_interval: 1m
scrape_timeout: 30s
metrics_path: /ipmi
scheme: http
file_sd_configs:
- files:
- /srv/ipmi_exporter/targets.yml
refresh_interval: 5m
relabel_configs:
- source_labels: [__address__]
separator: ;
regex: (.*)
target_label: __param_target
replacement: ${1}
action: replace
- source_labels: [__param_target]
separator: ;
regex: (.*)
target_label: instance
replacement: ${1}
action: replace
- separator: ;
regex: .*
target_label: __address__
replacement: ipmi-exporter.internal.example.com:9290
action: replace
This assumes that all hosts use the default module. If you are using modules in
the config file, like in the provided ipmi_remote.yml
example config, you
will need to specify on job for each module, using the respective group of
targets.
In a more extreme case, for example if you are using different passwords on
every host, a good approach is to generate an exporter config file that uses
the target name as module names, which would allow you to have single job that
uses label replace to set the module. Leave out the params
in the job
definition and instead add a relabel rule like this one:
- source_labels: [__address__]
separator: ;
regex: (.*)
target_label: __param_module
replacement: ${1}
action: replace
For more information, e.g. how to use mechanisms other than a file to discover the list of hosts to scrape, please refer to the Prometheus documentation.
These metrics provide data about the scrape itself:
ipmi_up{collector="<NAME>"}
is1
if the data for this collector could successfully be retrieved from the remote host,0
otherwise. The following collectors are available and can be enabled or disabled in the config:ipmi
: collects IPMI sensor data. If it fails, sensor metrics (see below) will not be availabledcmi
: collects DCMI data, currently only power consumption. If it fails, power consumption metrics (see below) will not be availablebmc
: collects BMC details. If if fails, BMC info metrics (see below) will not be available
ipmi_scrape_duration_seconds
is the amount of time it took to retrieve the data
This metric is only provided if the bmc
collector is enabled.
For some basic information, there is a constant metric ipmi_bmc_info
with
value 1
and labels providing the firmware revision and manufacturer as
returned from the BMC. Example:
ipmi_bmc_info{firmware_revision="2.52",manufacturer_id="Dell Inc. (674)"} 1
This metric is only provided if the chassis
collector is enabled.
The metric ipmi_chassis_power_state
shows the current chassis power state of
the machine. The value is 1 for power on, and 0 otherwise.
This metric is only provided if the dcmi
collector is enabled.
The metric ipmi_dcmi_power_consumption_current_watts
can be used to monitor
the live power consumption of the machine in Watts. If in doubt, this metric
should be used over any of the sensor data (see below), even if their name
might suggest that they measure the same thing. This metric has no labels.
These metrics is only provided if the sel
collector is enabled (it isn't by
default).
The metric ipmi_sel_entries_count
contains the current number of entries in
the SEL. It is a gauge, as the SEL can be cleared at any time. This metric has
no labels.
The metric ipmi_sel_free_space_bytes
contains the current number of free
space for new SEL entries, in bytes. This metric has no labels.
These metric are only provided if the ipmi
collector is enabled.
IPMI sensors in general have one or two distinct pieces of information that are of interest: a value and/or a state. The exporter always exports both, even if the value is NaN or the state non-sensical. This is so one can still always find the metrics to avoid ending up in a situation where one is looking for e.g. the value of a sensor that is in a critical state, but can't find it and assume this to be a problem.
The state of a sensor can be one of nominal, warning, critical, or N/A,
reflected by the metric values 0
, 1
, 2
, and NaN
respectively. Think of
this as a kind of severity.
For sensors with known semantics (i.e. units), corresponding specific metrics are exported. For everything else, generic metrics are exported.
Temperature sensors measure a temperature in degrees Celsius and their state usually reflects the temperature going above the vendor-recommended value. For each temperature sensor, two metrics are exported (state and value), using the sensor ID and the sensor name as labels. Example:
ipmi_temperature_celsius{id="18",name="Inlet Temp"} 24
ipmi_temperature_state{id="18",name="Inlet Temp"} 0
Fan speed sensors measure fan speed in rotations per minute (RPM) and their state usually reflects the speed being to low, indicating the fan might be broken. For each fan speed sensor, two metrics are exported (state and value), using the sensor ID and the sensor name as labels. Example:
ipmi_fan_speed_rpm{id="12",name="Fan1A"} 4560
ipmi_fan_speed_state{id="12",name="Fan1A"} 0
Voltage sensors measure a voltage in Volts. For each voltage sensor, two metrics are exported (state and value), using the sensor ID and the sensor name as labels. Example:
ipmi_voltage_state{id="2416",name="12V"} 0
ipmi_voltage_volts{id="2416",name="12V"} 12
Current sensors measure a current in Amperes. For each current sensor, two metrics are exported (state and value), using the sensor ID and the sensor name as labels. Example:
ipmi_current_state{id="83",name="Current 1"} 0
ipmi_current_amperes{id="83",name="Current 1"} 0
Power sensors measure power in Watts. For each power sensor, two metrics are exported (state and value), using the sensor ID and the sensor name as labels. Example:
ipmi_power_state{id="90",name="Pwr Consumption"} 0
ipmi_power_watts{id="90",name="Pwr Consumption"} 70
Note that based on our observations, this may or may not be a reading reflecting the actual live power consumption. We recommend using the more explicit power consumption metrics for this.
For all sensors that can not be classified, two generic metrics are exported, the state and the value. However, to provide a little more context, the sensor type is added as label (in addition to name and ID). Example:
ipmi_sensor_state{id="139",name="Power Cable",type="Cable/Interconnect"} 0
ipmi_sensor_value{id="139",name="Power Cable",type="Cable/Interconnect"} NaN