VictoriaMetrics/docs/managed-victoriametrics/how-to-monitor-k8s.md

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---
sort: 3
weight: 3
title: Kubernetes Monitoring with Managed VictoriaMetrics
menu:
docs:
parent: "managed"
weight: 3
aliases:
- /managed-victoriametrics/how-to-monitor-k8s.html
---
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# Kubernetes Monitoring with Managed VictoriaMetrics
Monitoring kubernetes cluster is necessary to build SLO/SLI, to analyze performance and cost-efficiency of your workloads.
To enable kubernetes cluster monitoring, we will be collecting metrics about cluster performance and utilization from kubernetes components like `kube-api-server`, `kube-controller-manager`, `kube-scheduler`, `kube-state-metrics`, `etcd`, `core-dns`, `kubelet` and `kube-proxy`. We will also install some recording rules, alert rules and dashboards to provide visibility of cluster performance, as well as alerting for cluster metrics.
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For node resource utilization we will be collecting metrics from `node-exporter`. We will also install dashboard and alerts for node related metrics
For workloads monitoring in kubernetes cluster we will have [VictoriaMetrics Operator](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/VictoriaMetrics-Operator.html). It enables us to define scrape jobs using kubernetes CRDs [VMServiceScrape](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/design.html#vmservicescrape), [VMPodScrape](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/design.html#vmpodscrape). To add alerts or recording rules for workloads we can use [VMRule](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/design.html#vmrule) CRD
## Overview
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In this guide we will be using [victoria-metrics-k8s-stack](https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/helm-charts/tree/master/charts/victoria-metrics-k8s-stack) helm chart
This chart will install `VMOperator`, `VMAgent`, `NodeExporter`, `kube-state-metrics`, `grafana` and some service scrape configurations to start monitoring kubernetes cluster components
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## Prerequisites
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- Active Managed VictoriaMetrics instance. You can learn how to signup for Managed VictoriaMetrics [here](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/managed-victoriametrics/quickstart.html#how-to-register).
- Access to your kubernetes cluster
- Helm binary. You can find installation [here](https://helm.sh/docs/intro/install/)
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## Installation steps
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Install the Helm chart in a custom namespace
1. Create a unique Kubernetes namespace, for example `monitoring`
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```bash
kubectl create namespace monitoring
```
</div>
1. Create kubernetes-secrets with token to access your dbaas deployment
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```bash
kubectl --namespace monitoring create secret generic dbaas-write-access-token --from-literal=bearerToken=your-token
kubectl --namespace monitoring create secret generic dbaas-read-access-token --from-literal=bearerToken=your-token
```
</div>
You can find your access token on the "Access" tab of your deployment
<img src="how-to-monitor-k8s_access-token.png" width="800">
1. Set up a Helm repository using the following commands:
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```bash
helm repo add grafana https://grafana.github.io/helm-charts
helm repo add prometheus-community https://prometheus-community.github.io/helm-charts
helm repo add vm https://victoriametrics.github.io/helm-charts
helm repo update
```
</div>
1. Create a YAML file of Helm values called dbaas.yaml with following content
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```yaml
externalVM:
read:
url: <reading url, you can find it in examples on Access page>
bearerTokenSecret:
name: dbaas-write-access-token
key: bearerToken
write:
url: <reading url, you can find it in examples on Access page>
bearerTokenSecret:
name: dbaas-read-access-token
key: bearerToken
vmsingle:
enabled: false
vmcluster:
enabled: false
vmalert:
enabled: true
spec:
evaluationInterval: 15s
vmagent:
enabled: true
spec:
scrapeInterval: 30s
externalLabels:
cluster: <your cluster name>
# dependencies
# Grafana dependency chart configuration. For possible values refer to https://github.com/grafana/helm-charts/tree/main/charts/grafana#configuration
grafana:
enabled: true
```
</div>
1. Install VictoriaMetrics-k8s-stack helm chart
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```bash
helm --namespace monitoring install vm vm/victoria-metrics-k8s-stack -f dbaas.yaml -n monitoring
```
</div>
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## Connect grafana
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Connect to grafana and create your datasource
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> If you are using external grafana, you can skip steps 1-3 and you will need to import dashboards that can be found here manually
1. Get grafana password
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```bash
kubectl --namespace monitoring get secret vm-grafana -o jsonpath="{.data.admin-password}" | base64 -d
```
</div>
1. Connect to grafana
<div class="with-copy" markdown="1">
```bash
kubectl --namespace monitoring port-forward service/vm-grafana 3000:80
```
</div>
1. Open grafana in your browser [http://localhost:3000/datasources](http://localhost:3000/datasources)
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Use admin as username and password from previous step
1. Click on add datasource
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Choose VictoriaMetrics or Prometheus as datasource type. Make sure you made this datasource as default for dashboards to work.
> You can find token and URL in your deployment, on Access tab
<img src="how-to-monitor-k8s_datasource.png" width="800">
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## Test it
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- You should be able to see data that was sent to your dbaas using VMAgent dashboard [http://localhost:3000/d/G7Z9GzMGz/victoriametrics-vmagent/](http://localhost:3000/d/G7Z9GzMGz/victoriametrics-vmagent/)
- You also will be able to see bunch of kubernetes dashboards in your grafana