Hi Jeff,
Thanks for your reply!
Regarding grouping by remote address, I understand and for now I'll keep a close eye. Maybe it's an option to group by /24 for ipv4 and /64 for IPv6? We currently do that based on the logs but the OpenMetrics endpoint seem a lot easier.
A slight hijack of the original question: but I tried to log only IP addresses (+ result) of failed login attempts but it seems I cannot find a metric that would contain that information. Am I looking in the wrong direction? The auth_userdb_request_finished and auth_passdb_request_finished stats work as intended but they do not contain any information about the connecting client.
Thanks again!
Daan
From: Josef 'Jeff' Sipek <jeff.sipek@open-xchange.com> Sent: 24 August 2020 20:47 To: Daan van Gorkum <daan.vangorkum@vusam.com> Cc: Dovecot Mailing List <dovecot@dovecot.org> Subject: Re: Metric label values truncated when using OpenMetrics endpoint
On Sat, Aug 22, 2020 at 00:31:36 +0000, Daan van Gorkum wrote:
Hi,
Recently we upgraded to Dovecot 2.3.11.3 and configured an example metric like this:
metric imap_command { event_name = imap_command_finished group_by = cmd_name tagged_reply_state user remote_ip
Grouping by remote_ip seems a bit dangerous unless the ips are somehow limited. Each unique value will result in (permanent) memory allocation, so this has the potential to slowly grow the stats process large enough that the vsize limit kicks in and the stats process gets killed and respawned.
} ... While the result is great, I noticed that some metrics are being truncated (three dots at the end of the label value):
dovecot_imap_command_duration_usecs_sum{cmd_name="FETCH",tagged_reply_state="OK",user="xxxxxxxxxxx.inbox@xxxxxxxxxxxxx…",remote_ip="XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:XXXX:cc6b:cc7a:d…"} 2346 1598055662473
I couldn't find this information in the documentation so I'm wondering if this is a bug.
Hm. The submetric names are truncated to 32 bytes because nobody will ever want metrics bigger than that. ;) Obviously, we need to revisit that decision. There is no workaround that I can think of.
Jeff.
-- I'm somewhere between geek and normal. - Linus Torvalds