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This is a simple service that scrapes metrics from OpenLDAP and exports them via HTTP for Prometheus consumption.

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OpenLDAP Prometheus Exporter

This is a simple service that scrapes metrics from OpenLDAP and exports them via HTTP for Prometheus consumption.

This exporter is based on the ideas in https://github.com/jcollie/openldap_exporter, but it is written in golang to allow for simpler distribution and installation.

Setting up OpenLDAP for monitoring

slapd supports an optional LDAP monitoring interface you can use to obtain information regarding the current state of your slapd instance. Documentation for this backend can be found in the OpenLDAP backend guide and administration guide.

To enable the backend add the following to the bottom of your slapd.conf file:

database monitor
rootdn "cn=monitoring,cn=Monitor"
rootpw YOUR_MONITORING_ROOT_PASSWORD

Technically you don't need rootdn or rootpw, but having unauthenticated access to slapd feels a little wrong.

You may need to also load the monitoring backend module if your slapd installation needs to load backends as modules by adding this to your slapd.conf:

moduleload  back_monitor

Once you've built the exporter (see below), or downloaded the latest release, you can install it on the same server as your slapd instance, and run it as a service. You can then configure Prometheus to pull metrics from the exporter's /metrics endpoint on port 9330, and check to see that it is working via curl:

$> curl -s http://localhost:9330/metrics
...
# HELP openldap_monitor_counter_object cn=Monitor (objectClass=monitorCounterObject) monitorCounter
# TYPE openldap_monitor_counter_object gauge
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Bytes,cn=Statistics,cn=Monitor"} 1.857812777e+09
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Current,cn=Connections,cn=Monitor"} 50
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Entries,cn=Statistics,cn=Monitor"} 4.226632e+06
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Max File Descriptors,cn=Connections,cn=Monitor"} 1024
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=PDU,cn=Statistics,cn=Monitor"} 4.446117e+06
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Read,cn=Waiters,cn=Monitor"} 31
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Referrals,cn=Statistics,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Total,cn=Connections,cn=Monitor"} 65383
openldap_monitor_counter_object{dn="cn=Write,cn=Waiters,cn=Monitor"} 0
# HELP openldap_monitor_operation cn=Operations,cn=Monitor (objectClass=monitorOperation) monitorOpCompleted
# TYPE openldap_monitor_operation gauge
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Abandon,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Add,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Bind,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 57698
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Compare,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Delete,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Extended,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Modify,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Modrdn,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Search,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 161789
openldap_monitor_operation{dn="cn=Unbind,cn=Operations,cn=Monitor"} 9336
# HELP openldap_monitored_object cn=Monitor (objectClass=monitoredObject) monitoredInfo
# TYPE openldap_monitored_object gauge
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Active,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 1
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Backload,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 1
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Max Pending,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Max,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 16
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Open,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 8
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Pending,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Starting,cn=Threads,cn=Monitor"} 0
openldap_monitored_object{dn="cn=Uptime,cn=Time,cn=Monitor"} 1.225737e+06
# HELP openldap_scrape successful vs unsuccessful ldap scrape attempts
# TYPE openldap_scrape counter
openldap_scrape{result="ok"} 6985
...

Configuration

You can configure openldap_exporter using multiple configuration sources at the same time. All configuration sources are optional, if none are provided then the default values will be used.

The precedence of these configuration sources is as follows (from the highest to the lowest):

  1. Command line flags
  2. Environment variables
  3. YAML configuration file parameters
  4. Default values
NAME:
   openldap_exporter - Export OpenLDAP metrics to Prometheus

USAGE:
   openldap_exporter [global options] [arguments...]

VERSION:
   v2.2.0

GLOBAL OPTIONS:
   --promAddr value           Bind address for Prometheus HTTP metrics server (default: ":9330") [$PROM_ADDR]
   --metrPath value           Path on which to expose Prometheus metrics (default: "/metrics") [$METRICS_PATH]
   --ldapNet value            Network of OpenLDAP server (default: "tcp") [$LDAP_NET]
   --ldapAddr value           Address and port of OpenLDAP server (default: "localhost:389") [$LDAP_ADDR]
   --ldapUser value           OpenLDAP bind username (optional) [$LDAP_USER]
   --ldapPass value           OpenLDAP bind password (optional) [$LDAP_PASS]
   --interval value           Scrape interval (default: 30s) [$INTERVAL]
   --webCfgFile FILE          Prometheus metrics web config FILE (optional) [$WEB_CFG_FILE]
   --jsonLog                  Output logs in JSON format (default: false) [$JSON_LOG]
   --replicationObject value  Object to watch replication upon
   --config YAML_FILE         Optional configuration from a YAML_FILE
   --help, -h                 show help (default: false)
   --version, -v              print the version (default: false)

Example:

INTERVAL=10s /usr/sbin/openldap_exporter --promAddr ":8080" --config /etc/slapd/exporter.yaml

Where exporter.yaml looks like this:

---
ldapUser: "cn=monitoring,cn=Monitor"
ldapPass: "sekret"

NOTES:

  • ldapNet allows you to configure tcp or unix socket connections to your co-located OpenLDAP server.
  • webCfgFile can be used to provide authentication and TLS configuration for the prometheus web exporter.

Build

  1. Install Go 1.20 from https://golang.org/
  2. Build the binaries: make build

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This is a simple service that scrapes metrics from OpenLDAP and exports them via HTTP for Prometheus consumption.

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