Windows Exporter Metrics

A plugin based on Prometheus Windows Exporter to collect system and host level metrics

Prometheus Windows Exporter is a popular way to collect system level metrics from Microsoft Windows, such as CPU, Disk, Network, and Process statistics. Fluent Bit 1.9.0 and later includes the Windows Exporter metrics plugin that builds off the Prometheus design to collect system level metrics without having to manage two separate processes or agents.

The initial release of Windows Exporter metrics contains a single collector available from Prometheus Windows Exporter.

Metrics collected with Windows Exporter metrics flow through a separate pipeline from logs and current filters don't operate on top of metrics.

Configuration

Key
Description
Default

scrape_interval

The rate at which metrics are collected.

5 seconds

we.logical_disk.allow_disk_regex

Specify the regular expression for logical disk metrics to allow collection of.

"/.+/" (all)

we.logical_disk.deny_disk_regex

Specify the regular expression for logical disk metrics to prevent collection of or ignore.

NULL (all)

we.net.allow_nic_regex

Specify the regular expression for network metrics captured by the name of the NIC.

"/.+/" (all)

we.service.where

Specify the WHERE clause for retrieving service metrics.

NULL

we.service.include

Specify the key value pairs for the include condition for the WHERE clause of service metrics.

NULL

we.service.exclude

Specify the key value pairs for the exclude condition for the WHERE clause of service metrics.

NULL

we.process.allow_process_regex

Specify the regular expression covering the process metrics to collect.

"/.+/" (all)

we.process.deny_process_regex

Specify the regular expression for process metrics to prevent collection of or ignore.

NULL (all)

collector.cpu.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which cpu metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.net.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which net metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.logical_disk.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which logical_disk metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.cs.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which cs metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.os.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which os metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.thermalzone.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which thermalzone metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.cpu_info.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which cpu_info metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.logon.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which logon metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.system.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which system metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.service.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which service metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.memory.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which memory metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.paging_file.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which paging_file metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

collector.process.scrape_interval

The rate in seconds at which process metrics are collected. Values greater than 0 override the global default. Otherwise, the global default is used.

0 seconds

metrics

Specify which metrics are collected.

"cpu,cpu_info,os,net,logical_disk,cs,thermalzone,logon,system,service"

Collectors available

The following table describes the available collectors as part of this plugin. All collectors are enabled by default and respect the original metrics name, descriptions, and types from Prometheus Windows Exporter, so you can use your current dashboards without any compatibility problem.

The Version column specifies the Fluent Bit version where the collector is available.

Name
Description
OS
Version

cpu

Exposes CPU statistics.

Windows

v1.9

net

Exposes Network statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

logical_disk

Exposes logical_disk statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

cs

Exposes cs statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

os

Exposes OS statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

thermalzone

Exposes thermalzone statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

cpu_info

Exposes cpu_info statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

logon

Exposes logon statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

system

Exposes system statistics.

Windows

v2.0.8

service

Exposes service statistics.

Windows

v2.1.6

memory

Exposes memory statistics.

Windows

v2.1.9

paging_file

Exposes paging_file statistics.

Windows

v2.1.9

process

Exposes process statistics.

Windows

v2.1.9

Threading

This input always runs in its own thread.

Get started

Configuration file

In the following configuration file, the input plugin windows_exporter_metrics collects metrics every two seconds and exposes them through the Prometheus Exporter output plugin on HTTP/TCP port 2021.

# Node Exporter Metrics + Prometheus Exporter
# -------------------------------------------
# The following example collect host metrics on Linux and expose
# them through a Prometheus HTTP end-point.
#
# After starting the service try it with:
#
# $ curl http://127.0.0.1:2021/metrics
#
[SERVICE]
    flush           1
    log_level       info

[INPUT]
    name            windows_exporter_metrics
    tag             node_metrics
    scrape_interval 2

[OUTPUT]
    name            prometheus_exporter
    match           node_metrics
    host            0.0.0.0
    port            2021

You can test the expose of the metrics by using curl:

curl http://127.0.0.1:2021/metrics

Service where clause

Windows service collector will retrieve all of the service information for the local node or container. we.service.where, we.service.include, and we.service.exclude can be used to filter the service metrics.

To filter these metrics, users should specify a WHERE clause. This syntax is defined in the WMI Query Language (WQL).

Here is how these parameters should work:

we.service.where

we.service.where is handled as a raw WHERE clause. For example, when a user specifies the parameter as follows:

we.service.where Status!='OK'

This creates a WMI query like so:

SELECT * FROM Win32_Service WHERE Status!='OK'

The WMI mechanism will then handle it and return the information which has a not OK status in this example.

we.service.include

When defined, the we.service.include is interpreted into a WHERE clause. If multiple key-value pairs are specified, the values will be concatenated with OR. Also, if the values contain % character then a LIKE operator will be used in the clause instead of the = operator. When a user specifies the parameter as follows:

we.service.include {"Name":"docker","Name":"%Svc%", "Name":"%Service"}

The parameter will be interpreted as:

(Name='docker' OR Name LIKE '%Svc%' OR Name LIKE '%Service')

The WMI query will be called with the translated parameter as:

SELECT * FROM Win32_Service WHERE (Name='docker' OR Name LIKE '%Svc%' OR Name LIKE '%Service')

we.service.exclude

When defined, the we.service.exclude is interpreted into a WHERE clause. If multiple key-value pairs are specified, the values will be concatenated with AND.

Also, if the values contain % character then a LIKE operator will be used in the translated clause instead of the != operator. When a user specifies the parameter as follows:

we.service.exclude {"Name":"UdkUserSvc%","Name":"webthreatdefusersvc%","Name":"XboxNetApiSvc"}

The parameter will be interpreted as:

(NOT Name LIKE 'UdkUserSvc%' AND NOT Name LIKE 'webthreatdefusersvc%' AND Name!='XboxNetApiSvc')

The WMI query will be called with the translated parameter as:

SELECT * FROM Win32_Service WHERE (NOT Name LIKE 'UdkUserSvc%' AND NOT Name LIKE 'webthreatdefusersvc%' AND Name!='XboxNetApiSvc')

Advanced usage

we.service.where, we.service.include, and we.service.exclude can all be used at the same time subject to the following rules.

  1. we.service.include translated and applied into the where clause in the service collector

  2. we.service.exclude translated and applied into the where clause in the service collector

    1. If the we.service.include is applied, translated we.service.include and we.service.exclude conditions are concatenated with AND.

  3. we.service.where is handled as-is into the where clause in the service collector .

    1. If either of the previous parameters is applied, the clause will be applied with AND ( the value of we.service.where ).

For example, when a user specifies the parameter as follows:

we.service.include {"Name":"docker","Name":"%Svc%", "Name":"%Service"}
we.service.exclude {"Name":"UdkUserSvc%","Name":"XboxNetApiSvc"}
we.service.where NOT Name LIKE 'webthreatdefusersvc%'

The WMI query will be called with the translated parameter as:

 SELECT * FROM Win32_Service WHERE (Name='docker' OR Name LIKE '%Svc%' OR Name LIKE '%Service') AND (NOT Name LIKE 'UdkUserSvc%' AND Name!='XboxNetApiSvc') AND (NOT Name LIKE 'webthreatdefusersvc%')

Enhancement requests

The plugin implements a subset of the available collectors in the original Prometheus Windows Exporter. If you would like a specific collector prioritized, open a Github issue by using the following template:

Last updated

Was this helpful?