vendor: update buildkit

Signed-off-by: CrazyMax <crazy-max@users.noreply.github.com>
This commit is contained in:
CrazyMax
2021-09-21 07:49:39 +02:00
parent 06541ebd0f
commit 45e4550c36
1040 changed files with 100774 additions and 7915 deletions

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@ -1,29 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2019 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
// +build go1.12
package prometheus
import "runtime/debug"
// readBuildInfo is a wrapper around debug.ReadBuildInfo for Go 1.12+.
func readBuildInfo() (path, version, sum string) {
path, version, sum = "unknown", "unknown", "unknown"
if bi, ok := debug.ReadBuildInfo(); ok {
path = bi.Main.Path
version = bi.Main.Version
sum = bi.Main.Sum
}
return
}

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@ -1,22 +0,0 @@
// Copyright 2019 The Prometheus Authors
// Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
// you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
// You may obtain a copy of the License at
//
// http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
//
// Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
// distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
// WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
// See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
// limitations under the License.
// +build !go1.12
package prometheus
// readBuildInfo is a wrapper around debug.ReadBuildInfo for Go versions before
// 1.12. Remove this whole file once the minimum supported Go version is 1.12.
func readBuildInfo() (path, version, sum string) {
return "unknown", "unknown", "unknown"
}

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@ -163,7 +163,7 @@ func (c *counter) updateExemplar(v float64, l Labels) {
// (e.g. number of HTTP requests, partitioned by response code and
// method). Create instances with NewCounterVec.
type CounterVec struct {
*metricVec
*MetricVec
}
// NewCounterVec creates a new CounterVec based on the provided CounterOpts and
@ -176,11 +176,11 @@ func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &CounterVec{
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
if len(lvs) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, lvs))
}
result := &counter{desc: desc, labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, lvs), now: time.Now}
result := &counter{desc: desc, labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, lvs), now: time.Now}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}),
@ -188,7 +188,7 @@ func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Counter for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Counter is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Counter to only
@ -202,7 +202,7 @@ func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
// Counter with the same label values is created later.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
@ -211,7 +211,7 @@ func NewCounterVec(opts CounterOpts, labelNames []string) *CounterVec {
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Counter), err
}
@ -219,19 +219,19 @@ func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Counter, error) {
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Counter for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Counter is created. Implications of
// creating a Counter without using it and keeping the Counter for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *CounterVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Counter, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Counter), err
}
@ -275,7 +275,7 @@ func (v *CounterVec) With(labels Labels) Counter {
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *CounterVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*CounterVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &CounterVec{vec}, err
}

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@ -20,7 +20,7 @@ import (
"strings"
"github.com/cespare/xxhash/v2"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
@ -51,7 +51,7 @@ type Desc struct {
// constLabelPairs contains precalculated DTO label pairs based on
// the constant labels.
constLabelPairs []*dto.LabelPair
// VariableLabels contains names of labels for which the metric
// variableLabels contains names of labels for which the metric
// maintains variable values.
variableLabels []string
// id is a hash of the values of the ConstLabels and fqName. This

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@ -22,43 +22,10 @@ type expvarCollector struct {
exports map[string]*Desc
}
// NewExpvarCollector returns a newly allocated expvar Collector that still has
// to be registered with a Prometheus registry.
// NewExpvarCollector is the obsolete version of collectors.NewExpvarCollector.
// See there for documentation.
//
// An expvar Collector collects metrics from the expvar interface. It provides a
// quick way to expose numeric values that are already exported via expvar as
// Prometheus metrics. Note that the data models of expvar and Prometheus are
// fundamentally different, and that the expvar Collector is inherently slower
// than native Prometheus metrics. Thus, the expvar Collector is probably great
// for experiments and prototying, but you should seriously consider a more
// direct implementation of Prometheus metrics for monitoring production
// systems.
//
// The exports map has the following meaning:
//
// The keys in the map correspond to expvar keys, i.e. for every expvar key you
// want to export as Prometheus metric, you need an entry in the exports
// map. The descriptor mapped to each key describes how to export the expvar
// value. It defines the name and the help string of the Prometheus metric
// proxying the expvar value. The type will always be Untyped.
//
// For descriptors without variable labels, the expvar value must be a number or
// a bool. The number is then directly exported as the Prometheus sample
// value. (For a bool, 'false' translates to 0 and 'true' to 1). Expvar values
// that are not numbers or bools are silently ignored.
//
// If the descriptor has one variable label, the expvar value must be an expvar
// map. The keys in the expvar map become the various values of the one
// Prometheus label. The values in the expvar map must be numbers or bools again
// as above.
//
// For descriptors with more than one variable label, the expvar must be a
// nested expvar map, i.e. where the values of the topmost map are maps again
// etc. until a depth is reached that corresponds to the number of labels. The
// leaves of that structure must be numbers or bools as above to serve as the
// sample values.
//
// Anything that does not fit into the scheme above is silently ignored.
// Deprecated: Use collectors.NewExpvarCollector instead.
func NewExpvarCollector(exports map[string]*Desc) Collector {
return &expvarCollector{
exports: exports,

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@ -132,7 +132,7 @@ func (g *gauge) Write(out *dto.Metric) error {
// (e.g. number of operations queued, partitioned by user and operation
// type). Create instances with NewGaugeVec.
type GaugeVec struct {
*metricVec
*MetricVec
}
// NewGaugeVec creates a new GaugeVec based on the provided GaugeOpts and
@ -145,11 +145,11 @@ func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &GaugeVec{
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
if len(lvs) != len(desc.variableLabels) {
panic(makeInconsistentCardinalityError(desc.fqName, desc.variableLabels, lvs))
}
result := &gauge{desc: desc, labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, lvs)}
result := &gauge{desc: desc, labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, lvs)}
result.init(result) // Init self-collection.
return result
}),
@ -157,7 +157,7 @@ func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Gauge for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Gauge is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Gauge to only
@ -172,7 +172,7 @@ func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
@ -180,7 +180,7 @@ func NewGaugeVec(opts GaugeOpts, labelNames []string) *GaugeVec {
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Gauge), err
}
@ -188,19 +188,19 @@ func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Gauge, error) {
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Gauge for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Gauge is created. Implications of
// creating a Gauge without using it and keeping the Gauge for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *GaugeVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Gauge, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Gauge), err
}
@ -244,7 +244,7 @@ func (v *GaugeVec) With(labels Labels) Gauge {
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *GaugeVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*GaugeVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &GaugeVec{vec}, err
}

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@ -36,31 +36,10 @@ type goCollector struct {
msMaxAge time.Duration // Maximum allowed age of old memstats.
}
// NewGoCollector returns a collector that exports metrics about the current Go
// process. This includes memory stats. To collect those, runtime.ReadMemStats
// is called. This requires to “stop the world”, which usually only happens for
// garbage collection (GC). Take the following implications into account when
// deciding whether to use the Go collector:
// NewGoCollector is the obsolete version of collectors.NewGoCollector.
// See there for documentation.
//
// 1. The performance impact of stopping the world is the more relevant the more
// frequently metrics are collected. However, with Go1.9 or later the
// stop-the-world time per metrics collection is very short (~25µs) so that the
// performance impact will only matter in rare cases. However, with older Go
// versions, the stop-the-world duration depends on the heap size and can be
// quite significant (~1.7 ms/GiB as per
// https://go-review.googlesource.com/c/go/+/34937).
//
// 2. During an ongoing GC, nothing else can stop the world. Therefore, if the
// metrics collection happens to coincide with GC, it will only complete after
// GC has finished. Usually, GC is fast enough to not cause problems. However,
// with a very large heap, GC might take multiple seconds, which is enough to
// cause scrape timeouts in common setups. To avoid this problem, the Go
// collector will use the memstats from a previous collection if
// runtime.ReadMemStats takes more than 1s. However, if there are no previously
// collected memstats, or their collection is more than 5m ago, the collection
// will block until runtime.ReadMemStats succeeds. (The problem might be solved
// in Go1.13, see https://github.com/golang/go/issues/19812 for the related Go
// issue.)
// Deprecated: Use collectors.NewGoCollector instead.
func NewGoCollector() Collector {
return &goCollector{
goroutinesDesc: NewDesc(
@ -365,25 +344,17 @@ type memStatsMetrics []struct {
valType ValueType
}
// NewBuildInfoCollector returns a collector collecting a single metric
// "go_build_info" with the constant value 1 and three labels "path", "version",
// and "checksum". Their label values contain the main module path, version, and
// checksum, respectively. The labels will only have meaningful values if the
// binary is built with Go module support and from source code retrieved from
// the source repository (rather than the local file system). This is usually
// accomplished by building from outside of GOPATH, specifying the full address
// of the main package, e.g. "GO111MODULE=on go run
// github.com/prometheus/client_golang/examples/random". If built without Go
// module support, all label values will be "unknown". If built with Go module
// support but using the source code from the local file system, the "path" will
// be set appropriately, but "checksum" will be empty and "version" will be
// "(devel)".
// NewBuildInfoCollector is the obsolete version of collectors.NewBuildInfoCollector.
// See there for documentation.
//
// This collector uses only the build information for the main module. See
// https://github.com/povilasv/prommod for an example of a collector for the
// module dependencies.
// Deprecated: Use collectors.NewBuildInfoCollector instead.
func NewBuildInfoCollector() Collector {
path, version, sum := readBuildInfo()
path, version, sum := "unknown", "unknown", "unknown"
if bi, ok := debug.ReadBuildInfo(); ok {
path = bi.Main.Path
version = bi.Main.Version
sum = bi.Main.Sum
}
c := &selfCollector{MustNewConstMetric(
NewDesc(
"go_build_info",

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@ -22,7 +22,7 @@ import (
"sync/atomic"
"time"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
@ -47,7 +47,12 @@ type Histogram interface {
Metric
Collector
// Observe adds a single observation to the histogram.
// Observe adds a single observation to the histogram. Observations are
// usually positive or zero. Negative observations are accepted but
// prevent current versions of Prometheus from properly detecting
// counter resets in the sum of observations. See
// https://prometheus.io/docs/practices/histograms/#count-and-sum-of-observations
// for details.
Observe(float64)
}
@ -192,7 +197,7 @@ func newHistogram(desc *Desc, opts HistogramOpts, labelValues ...string) Histogr
h := &histogram{
desc: desc,
upperBounds: opts.Buckets,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
counts: [2]*histogramCounts{{}, {}},
now: time.Now,
}
@ -409,7 +414,7 @@ func (h *histogram) updateExemplar(v float64, bucket int, l Labels) {
// (e.g. HTTP request latencies, partitioned by status code and method). Create
// instances with NewHistogramVec.
type HistogramVec struct {
*metricVec
*MetricVec
}
// NewHistogramVec creates a new HistogramVec based on the provided HistogramOpts and
@ -422,14 +427,14 @@ func NewHistogramVec(opts HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *HistogramVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &HistogramVec{
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newHistogram(desc, opts, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Histogram for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Histogram is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Histogram to only
@ -444,7 +449,7 @@ func NewHistogramVec(opts HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *HistogramVec {
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
@ -453,7 +458,7 @@ func NewHistogramVec(opts HistogramOpts, labelNames []string) *HistogramVec {
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
@ -461,19 +466,19 @@ func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error)
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Histogram for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Histogram is created. Implications of
// creating a Histogram without using it and keeping the Histogram for later use
// are the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *HistogramVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
@ -517,7 +522,7 @@ func (v *HistogramVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *HistogramVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (ObserverVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &HistogramVec{vec}, err
}
@ -602,7 +607,7 @@ func NewConstHistogram(
count: count,
sum: sum,
buckets: buckets,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}, nil
}

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@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ import (
"strings"
"time"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
@ -58,7 +58,7 @@ type Metric interface {
}
// Opts bundles the options for creating most Metric types. Each metric
// implementation XXX has its own XXXOpts type, but in most cases, it is just be
// implementation XXX has its own XXXOpts type, but in most cases, it is just
// an alias of this type (which might change when the requirement arises.)
//
// It is mandatory to set Name to a non-empty string. All other fields are
@ -89,7 +89,7 @@ type Opts struct {
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels,-not-static-scraped-labels
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
}

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@ -15,7 +15,11 @@ package prometheus
import (
"errors"
"fmt"
"io/ioutil"
"os"
"strconv"
"strings"
)
type processCollector struct {
@ -50,16 +54,10 @@ type ProcessCollectorOpts struct {
ReportErrors bool
}
// NewProcessCollector returns a collector which exports the current state of
// process metrics including CPU, memory and file descriptor usage as well as
// the process start time. The detailed behavior is defined by the provided
// ProcessCollectorOpts. The zero value of ProcessCollectorOpts creates a
// collector for the current process with an empty namespace string and no error
// reporting.
// NewProcessCollector is the obsolete version of collectors.NewProcessCollector.
// See there for documentation.
//
// The collector only works on operating systems with a Linux-style proc
// filesystem and on Microsoft Windows. On other operating systems, it will not
// collect any metrics.
// Deprecated: Use collectors.NewProcessCollector instead.
func NewProcessCollector(opts ProcessCollectorOpts) Collector {
ns := ""
if len(opts.Namespace) > 0 {
@ -149,3 +147,20 @@ func (c *processCollector) reportError(ch chan<- Metric, desc *Desc, err error)
}
ch <- NewInvalidMetric(desc, err)
}
// NewPidFileFn returns a function that retrieves a pid from the specified file.
// It is meant to be used for the PidFn field in ProcessCollectorOpts.
func NewPidFileFn(pidFilePath string) func() (int, error) {
return func() (int, error) {
content, err := ioutil.ReadFile(pidFilePath)
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("can't read pid file %q: %+v", pidFilePath, err)
}
pid, err := strconv.Atoi(strings.TrimSpace(string(content)))
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("can't parse pid file %q: %+v", pidFilePath, err)
}
return pid, nil
}
}

View File

@ -83,8 +83,7 @@ type readerFromDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
type pusherDelegator struct{ *responseWriterDelegator }
func (d closeNotifierDelegator) CloseNotify() <-chan bool {
//lint:ignore SA1019 http.CloseNotifier is deprecated but we don't want to
//remove support from client_golang yet.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. http.CloseNotifier is deprecated but we keep it here to not break existing users.
return d.ResponseWriter.(http.CloseNotifier).CloseNotify()
}
func (d flusherDelegator) Flush() {
@ -348,8 +347,7 @@ func newDelegator(w http.ResponseWriter, observeWriteHeaderFunc func(int)) deleg
}
id := 0
//lint:ignore SA1019 http.CloseNotifier is deprecated but we don't want to
//remove support from client_golang yet.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. http.CloseNotifier is deprecated but we keep it here to not break existing users.
if _, ok := w.(http.CloseNotifier); ok {
id += closeNotifier
}

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@ -99,7 +99,7 @@ func HandlerFor(reg prometheus.Gatherer, opts HandlerOpts) http.Handler {
inFlightSem = make(chan struct{}, opts.MaxRequestsInFlight)
}
if opts.Registry != nil {
// Initialize all possibilites that can occur below.
// Initialize all possibilities that can occur below.
errCnt.WithLabelValues("gathering")
errCnt.WithLabelValues("encoding")
if err := opts.Registry.Register(errCnt); err != nil {
@ -303,8 +303,12 @@ type Logger interface {
// HandlerOpts specifies options how to serve metrics via an http.Handler. The
// zero value of HandlerOpts is a reasonable default.
type HandlerOpts struct {
// ErrorLog specifies an optional logger for errors collecting and
// serving metrics. If nil, errors are not logged at all.
// ErrorLog specifies an optional Logger for errors collecting and
// serving metrics. If nil, errors are not logged at all. Note that the
// type of a reported error is often prometheus.MultiError, which
// formats into a multi-line error string. If you want to avoid the
// latter, create a Logger implementation that detects a
// prometheus.MultiError and formats the contained errors into one line.
ErrorLog Logger
// ErrorHandling defines how errors are handled. Note that errors are
// logged regardless of the configured ErrorHandling provided ErrorLog

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@ -43,14 +43,14 @@ func InstrumentHandlerInFlight(g prometheus.Gauge, next http.Handler) http.Handl
// InstrumentHandlerDuration is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request duration with the provided ObserverVec.
// The ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is
// called with the request duration in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP
// status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are
// present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an
// ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
// expensive and should be used judiciously.
// The ObserverVec must have valid metric and label names and must have zero,
// one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label
// names are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe
// method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request duration
// in seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if
// the respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -79,12 +79,13 @@ func InstrumentHandlerDuration(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler) ht
}
// InstrumentHandlerCounter is a middleware that wraps the provided http.Handler
// to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec. The CounterVec
// must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only
// allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function panics
// otherwise. Partitioning of the CounterVec happens by HTTP status code and/or
// HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in the
// CounterVec. For unpartitioned counting, use a CounterVec with zero labels.
// to observe the request result with the provided CounterVec. The CounterVec
// must have valid metric and label names and must have zero, one, or two
// non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names are
// "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. Partitioning of the
// CounterVec happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the respective
// instance label names are present in the CounterVec. For unpartitioned
// counting, use a CounterVec with zero labels.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -110,14 +111,15 @@ func InstrumentHandlerCounter(counter *prometheus.CounterVec, next http.Handler)
// InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe with the provided ObserverVec the request duration
// until the response headers are written. The ObserverVec must have zero, one,
// or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names
// are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of
// the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request duration in
// seconds. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
// until the response headers are written. The ObserverVec must have valid
// metric and label names and must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried
// labels. For those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The
// function panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the
// ObserverVec is called with the request duration in seconds. Partitioning
// happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance
// label names are present in the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations,
// use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is
// expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler panics before calling WriteHeader, no value is
// reported.
@ -139,15 +141,15 @@ func InstrumentHandlerTimeToWriteHeader(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Ha
}
// InstrumentHandlerRequestSize is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the request size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is
// called with the request size in bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status
// code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in
// the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero
// labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used
// judiciously.
// http.Handler to observe the request size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have valid metric and label names and must have zero, one,
// or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names
// are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of
// the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the request size in
// bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -174,15 +176,15 @@ func InstrumentHandlerRequestSize(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler)
}
// InstrumentHandlerResponseSize is a middleware that wraps the provided
// http.Handler to observe the response size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have zero, one, or two non-const non-curried labels. For
// those, the only allowed label names are "code" and "method". The function
// panics otherwise. The Observe method of the Observer in the ObserverVec is
// called with the response size in bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status
// code and/or HTTP method if the respective instance label names are present in
// the ObserverVec. For unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero
// labels. Note that partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used
// judiciously.
// http.Handler to observe the response size with the provided ObserverVec. The
// ObserverVec must have valid metric and label names and must have zero, one,
// or two non-const non-curried labels. For those, the only allowed label names
// are "code" and "method". The function panics otherwise. The Observe method of
// the Observer in the ObserverVec is called with the response size in
// bytes. Partitioning happens by HTTP status code and/or HTTP method if the
// respective instance label names are present in the ObserverVec. For
// unpartitioned observations, use an ObserverVec with zero labels. Note that
// partitioning of Histograms is expensive and should be used judiciously.
//
// If the wrapped Handler does not set a status code, a status code of 200 is assumed.
//
@ -198,6 +200,11 @@ func InstrumentHandlerResponseSize(obs prometheus.ObserverVec, next http.Handler
})
}
// checkLabels returns whether the provided Collector has a non-const,
// non-curried label named "code" and/or "method". It panics if the provided
// Collector does not have a Desc or has more than one Desc or its Desc is
// invalid. It also panics if the Collector has any non-const, non-curried
// labels that are not named "code" or "method".
func checkLabels(c prometheus.Collector) (code bool, method bool) {
// TODO(beorn7): Remove this hacky way to check for instance labels
// once Descriptors can have their dimensionality queried.
@ -225,6 +232,10 @@ func checkLabels(c prometheus.Collector) (code bool, method bool) {
close(descc)
// Make sure the Collector has a valid Desc by registering it with a
// temporary registry.
prometheus.NewRegistry().MustRegister(c)
// Create a ConstMetric with the Desc. Since we don't know how many
// variable labels there are, try for as long as it needs.
for err := errors.New("dummy"); err != nil; lvs = append(lvs, magicString) {

View File

@ -26,7 +26,7 @@ import (
"unicode/utf8"
"github.com/cespare/xxhash/v2"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
@ -215,6 +215,8 @@ func (err AlreadyRegisteredError) Error() string {
// by a Gatherer to report multiple errors during MetricFamily gathering.
type MultiError []error
// Error formats the contained errors as a bullet point list, preceded by the
// total number of errors. Note that this results in a multi-line string.
func (errs MultiError) Error() string {
if len(errs) == 0 {
return ""

View File

@ -23,7 +23,7 @@ import (
"time"
"github.com/beorn7/perks/quantile"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
@ -55,7 +55,12 @@ type Summary interface {
Metric
Collector
// Observe adds a single observation to the summary.
// Observe adds a single observation to the summary. Observations are
// usually positive or zero. Negative observations are accepted but
// prevent current versions of Prometheus from properly detecting
// counter resets in the sum of observations. See
// https://prometheus.io/docs/practices/histograms/#count-and-sum-of-observations
// for details.
Observe(float64)
}
@ -110,7 +115,7 @@ type SummaryOpts struct {
// better covered by target labels set by the scraping Prometheus
// server, or by one specific metric (e.g. a build_info or a
// machine_role metric). See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels,-not-static-scraped-labels
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
ConstLabels Labels
// Objectives defines the quantile rank estimates with their respective
@ -121,7 +126,9 @@ type SummaryOpts struct {
Objectives map[float64]float64
// MaxAge defines the duration for which an observation stays relevant
// for the summary. Must be positive. The default value is DefMaxAge.
// for the summary. Only applies to pre-calculated quantiles, does not
// apply to _sum and _count. Must be positive. The default value is
// DefMaxAge.
MaxAge time.Duration
// AgeBuckets is the number of buckets used to exclude observations that
@ -208,7 +215,7 @@ func newSummary(desc *Desc, opts SummaryOpts, labelValues ...string) Summary {
// Use the lock-free implementation of a Summary without objectives.
s := &noObjectivesSummary{
desc: desc,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
counts: [2]*summaryCounts{{}, {}},
}
s.init(s) // Init self-collection.
@ -221,7 +228,7 @@ func newSummary(desc *Desc, opts SummaryOpts, labelValues ...string) Summary {
objectives: opts.Objectives,
sortedObjectives: make([]float64, 0, len(opts.Objectives)),
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
hotBuf: make([]float64, 0, opts.BufCap),
coldBuf: make([]float64, 0, opts.BufCap),
@ -513,7 +520,7 @@ func (s quantSort) Less(i, j int) bool {
// (e.g. HTTP request latencies, partitioned by status code and method). Create
// instances with NewSummaryVec.
type SummaryVec struct {
*metricVec
*MetricVec
}
// NewSummaryVec creates a new SummaryVec based on the provided SummaryOpts and
@ -535,14 +542,14 @@ func NewSummaryVec(opts SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *SummaryVec {
opts.ConstLabels,
)
return &SummaryVec{
metricVec: newMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
MetricVec: NewMetricVec(desc, func(lvs ...string) Metric {
return newSummary(desc, opts, lvs...)
}),
}
}
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Summary for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the VariableLabels in Desc). If that combination of
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Summary is created.
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Summary to only
@ -557,7 +564,7 @@ func NewSummaryVec(opts SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *SummaryVec {
// example.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
@ -566,7 +573,7 @@ func NewSummaryVec(opts SummaryOpts, labelNames []string) *SummaryVec {
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the GaugeVec example.
func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs...)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
@ -574,19 +581,19 @@ func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Observer, error) {
}
// GetMetricWith returns the Summary for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the VariableLabels in Desc). If that label map is
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Summary is created. Implications of
// creating a Summary without using it and keeping the Summary for later use are
// the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the VariableLabels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
func (v *SummaryVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Observer, error) {
metric, err := v.metricVec.getMetricWith(labels)
metric, err := v.MetricVec.GetMetricWith(labels)
if metric != nil {
return metric.(Observer), err
}
@ -630,7 +637,7 @@ func (v *SummaryVec) With(labels Labels) Observer {
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
func (v *SummaryVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (ObserverVec, error) {
vec, err := v.curryWith(labels)
vec, err := v.MetricVec.CurryWith(labels)
if vec != nil {
return &SummaryVec{vec}, err
}
@ -716,7 +723,7 @@ func NewConstSummary(
count: count,
sum: sum,
quantiles: quantiles,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}, nil
}

View File

@ -19,7 +19,7 @@ import (
"time"
"unicode/utf8"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
"github.com/golang/protobuf/ptypes"
@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ func newValueFunc(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, function func() float64) *val
desc: desc,
valType: valueType,
function: function,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, nil),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, nil),
}
result.init(result)
return result
@ -95,7 +95,7 @@ func NewConstMetric(desc *Desc, valueType ValueType, value float64, labelValues
desc: desc,
valType: valueType,
val: value,
labelPairs: makeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
labelPairs: MakeLabelPairs(desc, labelValues),
}, nil
}
@ -145,7 +145,14 @@ func populateMetric(
return nil
}
func makeLabelPairs(desc *Desc, labelValues []string) []*dto.LabelPair {
// MakeLabelPairs is a helper function to create protobuf LabelPairs from the
// variable and constant labels in the provided Desc. The values for the
// variable labels are defined by the labelValues slice, which must be in the
// same order as the corresponding variable labels in the Desc.
//
// This function is only needed for custom Metric implementations. See MetricVec
// example.
func MakeLabelPairs(desc *Desc, labelValues []string) []*dto.LabelPair {
totalLen := len(desc.variableLabels) + len(desc.constLabelPairs)
if totalLen == 0 {
// Super fast path.

View File

@ -20,12 +20,20 @@ import (
"github.com/prometheus/common/model"
)
// metricVec is a Collector to bundle metrics of the same name that differ in
// their label values. metricVec is not used directly (and therefore
// unexported). It is used as a building block for implementations of vectors of
// a given metric type, like GaugeVec, CounterVec, SummaryVec, and HistogramVec.
// It also handles label currying.
type metricVec struct {
// MetricVec is a Collector to bundle metrics of the same name that differ in
// their label values. MetricVec is not used directly but as a building block
// for implementations of vectors of a given metric type, like GaugeVec,
// CounterVec, SummaryVec, and HistogramVec. It is exported so that it can be
// used for custom Metric implementations.
//
// To create a FooVec for custom Metric Foo, embed a pointer to MetricVec in
// FooVec and initialize it with NewMetricVec. Implement wrappers for
// GetMetricWithLabelValues and GetMetricWith that return (Foo, error) rather
// than (Metric, error). Similarly, create a wrapper for CurryWith that returns
// (*FooVec, error) rather than (*MetricVec, error). It is recommended to also
// add the convenience methods WithLabelValues, With, and MustCurryWith, which
// panic instead of returning errors. See also the MetricVec example.
type MetricVec struct {
*metricMap
curry []curriedLabelValue
@ -35,9 +43,9 @@ type metricVec struct {
hashAddByte func(h uint64, b byte) uint64
}
// newMetricVec returns an initialized metricVec.
func newMetricVec(desc *Desc, newMetric func(lvs ...string) Metric) *metricVec {
return &metricVec{
// NewMetricVec returns an initialized metricVec.
func NewMetricVec(desc *Desc, newMetric func(lvs ...string) Metric) *MetricVec {
return &MetricVec{
metricMap: &metricMap{
metrics: map[uint64][]metricWithLabelValues{},
desc: desc,
@ -63,7 +71,7 @@ func newMetricVec(desc *Desc, newMetric func(lvs ...string) Metric) *metricVec {
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
// See also the CounterVec example.
func (m *metricVec) DeleteLabelValues(lvs ...string) bool {
func (m *MetricVec) DeleteLabelValues(lvs ...string) bool {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return false
@ -82,7 +90,7 @@ func (m *metricVec) DeleteLabelValues(lvs ...string) bool {
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as DeleteLabelValues(...string). See
// there for pros and cons of the two methods.
func (m *metricVec) Delete(labels Labels) bool {
func (m *MetricVec) Delete(labels Labels) bool {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return false
@ -95,15 +103,32 @@ func (m *metricVec) Delete(labels Labels) bool {
// show up in GoDoc.
// Describe implements Collector.
func (m *metricVec) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) { m.metricMap.Describe(ch) }
func (m *MetricVec) Describe(ch chan<- *Desc) { m.metricMap.Describe(ch) }
// Collect implements Collector.
func (m *metricVec) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) { m.metricMap.Collect(ch) }
func (m *MetricVec) Collect(ch chan<- Metric) { m.metricMap.Collect(ch) }
// Reset deletes all metrics in this vector.
func (m *metricVec) Reset() { m.metricMap.Reset() }
func (m *MetricVec) Reset() { m.metricMap.Reset() }
func (m *metricVec) curryWith(labels Labels) (*metricVec, error) {
// CurryWith returns a vector curried with the provided labels, i.e. the
// returned vector has those labels pre-set for all labeled operations performed
// on it. The cardinality of the curried vector is reduced accordingly. The
// order of the remaining labels stays the same (just with the curried labels
// taken out of the sequence which is relevant for the
// (GetMetric)WithLabelValues methods). It is possible to curry a curried
// vector, but only with labels not yet used for currying before.
//
// The metrics contained in the MetricVec are shared between the curried and
// uncurried vectors. They are just accessed differently. Curried and uncurried
// vectors behave identically in terms of collection. Only one must be
// registered with a given registry (usually the uncurried version). The Reset
// method deletes all metrics, even if called on a curried vector.
//
// Note that CurryWith is usually not called directly but through a wrapper
// around MetricVec, implementing a vector for a specific Metric
// implementation, for example GaugeVec.
func (m *MetricVec) CurryWith(labels Labels) (*MetricVec, error) {
var (
newCurry []curriedLabelValue
oldCurry = m.curry
@ -128,7 +153,7 @@ func (m *metricVec) curryWith(labels Labels) (*metricVec, error) {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("%d unknown label(s) found during currying", l)
}
return &metricVec{
return &MetricVec{
metricMap: m.metricMap,
curry: newCurry,
hashAdd: m.hashAdd,
@ -136,7 +161,34 @@ func (m *metricVec) curryWith(labels Labels) (*metricVec, error) {
}, nil
}
func (m *metricVec) getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Metric, error) {
// GetMetricWithLabelValues returns the Metric for the given slice of label
// values (same order as the variable labels in Desc). If that combination of
// label values is accessed for the first time, a new Metric is created (by
// calling the newMetric function provided during construction of the
// MetricVec).
//
// It is possible to call this method without using the returned Metric to only
// create the new Metric but leave it in its initial state.
//
// Keeping the Metric for later use is possible (and should be considered if
// performance is critical), but keep in mind that Reset, DeleteLabelValues and
// Delete can be used to delete the Metric from the MetricVec. In that case, the
// Metric will still exist, but it will not be exported anymore, even if a
// Metric with the same label values is created later.
//
// An error is returned if the number of label values is not the same as the
// number of variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// Note that for more than one label value, this method is prone to mistakes
// caused by an incorrect order of arguments. Consider GetMetricWith(Labels) as
// an alternative to avoid that type of mistake. For higher label numbers, the
// latter has a much more readable (albeit more verbose) syntax, but it comes
// with a performance overhead (for creating and processing the Labels map).
//
// Note that GetMetricWithLabelValues is usually not called directly but through
// a wrapper around MetricVec, implementing a vector for a specific Metric
// implementation, for example GaugeVec.
func (m *MetricVec) GetMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabelValues(lvs)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
@ -145,7 +197,23 @@ func (m *metricVec) getMetricWithLabelValues(lvs ...string) (Metric, error) {
return m.metricMap.getOrCreateMetricWithLabelValues(h, lvs, m.curry), nil
}
func (m *metricVec) getMetricWith(labels Labels) (Metric, error) {
// GetMetricWith returns the Metric for the given Labels map (the label names
// must match those of the variable labels in Desc). If that label map is
// accessed for the first time, a new Metric is created. Implications of
// creating a Metric without using it and keeping the Metric for later use
// are the same as for GetMetricWithLabelValues.
//
// An error is returned if the number and names of the Labels are inconsistent
// with those of the variable labels in Desc (minus any curried labels).
//
// This method is used for the same purpose as
// GetMetricWithLabelValues(...string). See there for pros and cons of the two
// methods.
//
// Note that GetMetricWith is usually not called directly but through a wrapper
// around MetricVec, implementing a vector for a specific Metric implementation,
// for example GaugeVec.
func (m *MetricVec) GetMetricWith(labels Labels) (Metric, error) {
h, err := m.hashLabels(labels)
if err != nil {
return nil, err
@ -154,7 +222,7 @@ func (m *metricVec) getMetricWith(labels Labels) (Metric, error) {
return m.metricMap.getOrCreateMetricWithLabels(h, labels, m.curry), nil
}
func (m *metricVec) hashLabelValues(vals []string) (uint64, error) {
func (m *MetricVec) hashLabelValues(vals []string) (uint64, error) {
if err := validateLabelValues(vals, len(m.desc.variableLabels)-len(m.curry)); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
@ -177,7 +245,7 @@ func (m *metricVec) hashLabelValues(vals []string) (uint64, error) {
return h, nil
}
func (m *metricVec) hashLabels(labels Labels) (uint64, error) {
func (m *MetricVec) hashLabels(labels Labels) (uint64, error) {
if err := validateValuesInLabels(labels, len(m.desc.variableLabels)-len(m.curry)); err != nil {
return 0, err
}
@ -276,7 +344,9 @@ func (m *metricMap) deleteByHashWithLabelValues(
}
if len(metrics) > 1 {
old := metrics
m.metrics[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
old[len(old)-1] = metricWithLabelValues{}
} else {
delete(m.metrics, h)
}
@ -302,7 +372,9 @@ func (m *metricMap) deleteByHashWithLabels(
}
if len(metrics) > 1 {
old := metrics
m.metrics[h] = append(metrics[:i], metrics[i+1:]...)
old[len(old)-1] = metricWithLabelValues{}
} else {
delete(m.metrics, h)
}

View File

@ -17,7 +17,7 @@ import (
"fmt"
"sort"
//lint:ignore SA1019 Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
//nolint:staticcheck // Ignore SA1019. Need to keep deprecated package for compatibility.
"github.com/golang/protobuf/proto"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
@ -32,7 +32,9 @@ import (
// in a no-op Registerer.
//
// WrapRegistererWith provides a way to add fixed labels to a subset of
// Collectors. It should not be used to add fixed labels to all metrics exposed.
// Collectors. It should not be used to add fixed labels to all metrics
// exposed. See also
// https://prometheus.io/docs/instrumenting/writing_exporters/#target-labels-not-static-scraped-labels
//
// Conflicts between Collectors registered through the original Registerer with
// Collectors registered through the wrapping Registerer will still be