Anyways, we can post images in here, and also due to the holidays they might be a lot of delay in our chat, so this keeps a transcript you can always go back and read
// ParseDuration is equivalent to time.ParseDuration, but supports time units specified at http://opentsdb.net/docs/build/html/user_guide/query/dates.html. func ParseDuration(s string) (Duration, error) {
but the input of that function is whatever the user entered in the alert def right? shouldn't that always be something like "10m" ?
but if it's the native opentsdb format, why does it need to be parsed at all? can't bosun then just use the literal variables given by the user and pass those on straight to opentsdb?
Ya I think so, part of what makes this hard is the code refactoring for this. i.e. it shouldn't be opentsdb.ParseDuration, it should be bosun.ParseDuration or something
the graphite docs say they support: "The following time units can be used to specify the amount: years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes, or seconds. These units can be used in singular or plural form, and abbreviated naturally or to a single letter (e.g. +3days, -1wk, -3y). Several time units can be combined (e.g., -5mon1w2d) or concatenated (e.g., -5h45min = -5h-45min = -6h+15min = -7h+1h30m-15min, etc.)"
Matt, true, graphite's native format is different, but i don't think bosun should write parsers for all timeformats of all backends just to able to do that go-back-in-history thing
i rather tell bosun users "do it in this format" and we make sure we generate a request to graphite it understands
if we're parsing and converting to time.Duration and then generating the opentsdb/graphite/... request later we can make the accepted format as simple or complex as we want to support
also why is the opentsdb Request Start and End not just a time.Duration? it seems to be the string format, which means that func (r *Request) SetTime(t time.Time) has to parse the Start for example, add the diff, and then format as string again.
since graphite supports unix timestamps for from/until, i think i'ld just make the graphite Request Start/End unix timestamps; that way it doesn't support the full graphite from/until spec, but i'm not that ambitious
and it keeps the parsing and generation of timestamps easy. thoughts?
hey @mjibson i'm getting a bit confused. i've tried stacktracing but there's so much walk/walkbinary/walkFunc going on and i lost track.
func GraphiteQuery(e *State, T miniprofiler.Timer, query string, sduration, eduration string) (r *Results, err error) { <-- is anything ever being done with the r being returned?
cause right now my r is just a pointer to a new Results, but it doesn't contain anything, should it?
or expose the opentsdb port 4242 when running the bosun image (http://bosun.org/quickstart.html#docker) docker run -d -p 4242:4242 -p 8070:8070 stackexchange/bosun
@mjibson @KyleBrandt i'm realizing i can't just uncomment the timeRequest() call because that's what actually executes the check, via e.context.Query(), but the whole context/state thing all seems very opentsdb specific, so i'm trying to turn that into a generic interface, but that seems a bit like a rabbithole
mostly because it has a bunch of properties.. i'll just have 1 State type that has properties for both opentsdb and graphite
But yes the results is a little bit confusing. Results is a struct, one of that struct's members is Results, which is an array (slice) of pointers to expr.Result
But browsing that godoc link might help you figure things out a lot more
So in funcs.go, there is the builtins. That maps the function you enter in bosun to functions in Go code. It also creates a signature
Okay, thia actually just changed, need @mjibson to explain
the way the opentsdb Context is done is interesting, it's an interface, but the only implementation of it i could find is Host, which is just a type alias for a string and just calls the request.Query with itself as arg
Ya, so I'm not entirely sure what the right pattern is there, maybe the interface should be expr.Context or something, and both graphite and opentsdb fulfill it
@Dieter_be: K, well to answer the question it is either the schedule package, which is running the alert rules loaded from the conf, or the web package which is gettings its requests via the web api (which the web interface calls)
I think what needs to happen is that it should take an expr.Context, and both opentsdb and graphite should fulfill that interface. But I haven't really created many interfaces, only used them, so haven't had much practice with design there
matt just so you know the problem is my GraphiteQuery() in funcs.go needs to call e.graphiteContext.Query() and i was trying to figure out where to set the graphitecontext (graphite hostname) on the state
can't do now, i have to go somewhere unfortunately
i do need a graphite context, because the graphite context is ust the graphite url (just like opentsdb does it), how else would i track the graphite url?