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---
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weight: 1
title: QuickStart
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menu:
docs:
parent: "operator"
weight: 1
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aliases:
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- /operator/quick-start/
- /operator/quick-start/index.html
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---
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VictoriaMetrics Operator serves to make running VictoriaMetrics applications on top of Kubernetes as easy as possible
while preserving Kubernetes-native configuration options.
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The shortest way to deploy full-stack monitoring cluster with VictoriaMetrics Operator is
to use Helm-chart [victoria-metrics-k8s-stack ](https://victoriametrics.github.io/helm-charts/charts/victoria-metrics-k8s-stack/ ).
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Also you can follow the other steps in documentation to use VictoriaMetrics Operator:
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- [Setup ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/setup )
- [Security ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/security )
- [Configuration ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/configuration )
- [Migration from Prometheus ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/migration )
- [Monitoring ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/monitoring )
- [Authorization and exposing components ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/auth )
- [High Availability ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/high-availability )
- [Enterprise ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/enterprise )
- [Custom resources ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/ )
- [FAQ (Frequency Asked Questions) ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/faq )
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But if you want to deploy VictoriaMetrics Operator quickly from scratch (without using templating for custom resources),
you can follow this guide:
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- [Setup operator ](#setup-operator )
- [Deploy components ](#deploy-components )
- [VMCluster ](#vmcluster-vmselect-vminsert-vmstorage )
- [Scraping ](#scraping )
- [VMAgent ](#vmagent )
- [VMServiceScrape ](#vmservicescrape )
- [Access ](#access )
- [VMAuth ](#vmauth )
- [VMUser ](#vmuser )
- [Alerting ](#alerting )
- [VMAlertmanager ](#vmalertmanager )
- [VMAlert ](#vmalert )
- [VMRule ](#vmrule )
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- [VMUser ](#vmuser )
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- [Anythings else? ](#anythings-else )
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Let's start!
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## Setup operator
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You can find out how to and instructions for installing the VictoriaMetrics operator into your kubernetes cluster
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on the [Setup page ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/setup ).
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Here we will elaborate on just one of the ways - for instance, we will install operator via Helm-chart
[victoria-metrics-operator ](https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/helm-charts/blob/master/charts/victoria-metrics-operator/README.md ):
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Add repo with helm-chart:
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```shell
helm repo add vm https://victoriametrics.github.io/helm-charts/
helm repo update
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```
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Render `values.yaml` with default operator configuration:
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```shell
helm show values vm/victoria-metrics-operator > values.yaml
```
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Now you can configure operator - open rendered `values.yaml` file in your text editor. For example:
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```shell
code values.yaml
```
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![Values ](quick-start_values.webp )
{width="1200"}
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Now you can change configuration in `values.yaml` . For more details about configuration options and methods,
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see [configuration -> victoria-metrics-operator ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/configuration#victoria-metrics-operator ).
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If you migrated from prometheus-operator, you can read about prometheus-operator objects conversion on
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the [migration from prometheus-operator ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/migration ).
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Since we're looking at installing from scratch, let's disable prometheus-operator objects conversion,
and also let's set some resources for operator in `values.yaml` :
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```yaml
# ...
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operator:
# -- By default, operator converts prometheus-operator objects.
disable_prometheus_converter: true
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# -- Resources for operator
resources:
limits:
cpu: 500m
memory: 500Mi
requests:
cpu: 100m
memory: 150Mi
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# ...
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```
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You will need a kubernetes namespace to deploy the operator and VM components. Let's create it:
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```shell
kubectl create namespace vm
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```
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After finishing with `values.yaml` and creating namespace, you can test the installation with command:
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```shell
helm install vmoperator vm/victoria-metrics-operator -f values.yaml -n vm --debug --dry-run
```
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Where `vm` is the namespace where you want to install operator.
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If everything is ok, you can install operator with command:
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```shell
helm install vmoperator vm/victoria-metrics-operator -f values.yaml -n vm
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# NAME: vmoperator
# LAST DEPLOYED: Thu Sep 14 15:13:04 2023
# NAMESPACE: vm
# STATUS: deployed
# REVISION: 1
# TEST SUITE: None
# NOTES:
# victoria-metrics-operator has been installed. Check its status by running:
# kubectl --namespace vm get pods -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=vmoperator"
#
# Get more information on https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/helm-charts/tree/master/charts/victoria-metrics-operator.
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# See "Getting started guide for VM Operator" on https://docs.victoriametrics.com/guides/getting-started-with-vm-operator/.
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```
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And check that operator is running:
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```shell
kubectl get pods -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=vmoperator"
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# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# vmoperator-victoria-metrics-operator-7b88bd6df9-q9qwz 1/1 Running 0 98s
```
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## Deploy components
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Now you can create instances of VictoriaMetrics applications.
Let's create fullstack monitoring cluster with
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[`vmagent` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmagent ),
[`vmauth` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmauth ),
[`vmalert` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmalert ),
[`vmalertmanager` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmalertmanager ),
[`vmcluster` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmcluster )
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(a component for deploying a cluster version of
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[VictoriaMetrics ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/Cluster-VictoriaMetrics#architecture-overview )
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consisting of `vmstorage` , `vmselect` and `vminsert` ):
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![Cluster Scheme ](quick-start_cluster-scheme.webp )
{width="1200"}
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More details about resources of VictoriaMetrics operator you can find on the [resources page ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/ ).
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### VMCluster (vmselect, vminsert, vmstorage)
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Let's start by deploying the [`vmcluster` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmcluster ) resource.
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Create file `vmcluster.yaml`
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```shell
code vmcluster.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
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# vmcluster.yaml
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apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
kind: VMCluster
metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
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retentionPeriod: "1"
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replicationFactor: 2
vmstorage:
replicaCount: 2
storageDataPath: "/vm-data"
storage:
volumeClaimTemplate:
spec:
resources:
requests:
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storage: "10Gi"
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resources:
limits:
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cpu: "1"
memory: "1Gi"
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vmselect:
replicaCount: 2
cacheMountPath: "/select-cache"
storage:
volumeClaimTemplate:
spec:
resources:
requests:
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storage: "1Gi"
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resources:
limits:
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cpu: "1"
memory: "1Gi"
requests:
cpu: "0.5"
memory: "500Mi"
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vminsert:
replicaCount: 2
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resources:
limits:
cpu: "1"
memory: "1Gi"
requests:
cpu: "0.5"
memory: "500Mi"
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmcluster` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmcluster.yaml -n vm
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# vmcluster.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
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```
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Check that `vmcluster` is running:
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```shell
kubectl get pods -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=demo"
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# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# vminsert-demo-8688d88ff7-fnbnw 1/1 Running 0 3m39s
# vminsert-demo-8688d88ff7-5wbj7 1/1 Running 0 3m39s
# vmselect-demo-0 1/1 Running 0 3m39s
# vmselect-demo-1 1/1 Running 0 3m39s
# vmstorage-demo-1 1/1 Running 0 22s
# vmstorage-demo-0 1/1 Running 0 6s
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```
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Now you can see that 6 components of your demo vmcluster is running.
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In addition, you can see that the operator created services for each of the component type:
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```shell
kubectl get svc -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=demo"
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# NAME TYPE CLUSTER-IP EXTERNAL-IP PORT(S) AGE
# vmstorage-demo ClusterIP None <none> 8482/TCP,8400/TCP,8401/TCP 8m3s
# vmselect-demo ClusterIP None <none> 8481/TCP 8m3s
# vminsert-demo ClusterIP 192.168.194.183 <none> 8480/TCP 8m3s
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```
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We'll need them in the next steps.
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More information about `vmcluster` resource you can find on
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the [vmcluster page ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmcluster ).
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### Scraping
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#### VMAgent
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Now let's deploy [`vmagent` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmagent ) resource.
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Create file `vmagent.yaml`
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```shell
code vmagent.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
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kind: VMAgent
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metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
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selectAllByDefault: true
remoteWrite:
- url: "http://vminsert-demo.vm.svc:8480/insert/0/prometheus/api/v1/write"
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmagent` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmagent.yaml -n vm
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# vmagent.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
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```
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Check that `vmagent` is running:
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```shell
kubectl get pods -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=demo" -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=vmagent"
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# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# vmagent-demo-6785f7d7b9-zpbv6 2/2 Running 0 72s
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```
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More information about `vmagent` resource you can find on
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the [vmagent page ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmagent ).
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#### VMServiceScrape
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Now we have the timeseries database (vmcluster) and the tool to collect metrics (vmagent) and send it to the database.
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But we need to tell vmagent what metrics to collect. For this we will use [`vmservicescrape` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmservicescrape ) resource
or [other `*scrape` resources ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/ ).
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By default, operator creates `vmservicescrape` resource for each component that it manages. More details about this you can find on
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the [monitoring page ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/configuration#monitoring-of-cluster-components ).
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For instance, we can create `vmservicescrape` for VictoriaMetrics operator manually. Let's create file `vmservicescrape.yaml` :
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```shell
code vmservicescrape.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
kind: VMServiceScrape
metadata:
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name: vmoperator-demo
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spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
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app.kubernetes.io/instance: vmoperator
app.kubernetes.io/name: victoria-metrics-operator
namespaceSelector:
matchNames:
- vm
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endpoints:
- port: http
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmservicescrape` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmservicescrape.yaml -n vm
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# vmservicescrape.operator.victoriametrics.com/vmoperator-demo created
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```
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### Access
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We need to look at the results of what we got. Up until now, we've just been looking only at the status of the pods.
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#### VMAuth
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Let's expose our components with [`vmauth` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmauth ).
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Create file `vmauth.yaml`
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```shell
code vmauth.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
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kind: VMAuth
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metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
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selectAllByDefault: true
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userNamespaceSelector: {}
userSelector: {}
ingress:
class_name: nginx # < -- change this to your ingress-controller
host: vm-demo.k8s.orb.local # < -- change this to your domain
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```
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**Note** that content of `ingress` field depends on your ingress-controller and domain.
Your cluster will have them differently.
Also, for simplicity, we don't use tls, but in real environments not having tls is unsafe.
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#### VMUser
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To get authorized access to our data it is necessary to create a user using
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the [vmuser ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmuser ) resource.
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Create file `vmuser.yaml`
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```shell
code vmuser.yaml
```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
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kind: VMUser
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metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
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name: demo
username: demo
generatePassword: true
targetRefs:
# vmui + vmselect
- crd:
kind: VMCluster/vmselect
name: demo
namespace: vm
target_path_suffix: "/select/0"
paths:
- "/vmui"
- "/vmui/.*"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/query"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/query_range"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/series"
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- "/prometheus/api/v1/status/.*"
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- "/prometheus/api/v1/label/"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/label/[^/]+/values"
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmauth` and `vmuser` resources to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmauth.yaml -n vm
kubectl apply -f vmuser.yaml -n vm
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# vmauth.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
# vmuser.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
```
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Operator automatically creates a secret with username/password token for `VMUser` resource with `generatePassword=true` :
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```shell
kubectl get secret -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=demo" -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=vmuser"
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# NAME TYPE DATA AGE
# vmuser-demo Opaque 3 29m
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```
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You can get password for your user with command:
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```shell
kubectl get secret -n vm vmuser-demo -o jsonpath="{.data.password}" | base64 --decode
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# Yt3N2r3cPl
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```
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Now you can get access to your data with url `http://vm-demo.k8s.orb.local/vmui` , username `demo`
and your given password (`Yt3N2r3cPl` in our case):
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![Select 1 ](quick-start_select-1.webp )
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![Select 2 ](quick-start_select-2.webp )
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### Alerting
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The remaining components will be needed for alerting.
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#### VMAlertmanager
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Let's start with [`vmalertmanager` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmalertmanager ).
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Create file `vmalertmanager.yaml`
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```shell
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code vmalertmanager.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
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kind: VMAlertmanager
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metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
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configRawYaml: |
global:
resolve_timeout: 5m
route:
group_wait: 30s
group_interval: 5m
repeat_interval: 12h
receiver: 'webhook'
receivers:
- name: 'webhook'
webhook_configs:
- url: 'http://your-webhook-url'
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```
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where webhook-url is the address of the webhook to receive notifications
(configuration of AlertManager notifications will remain out of scope).
You can find more details about `alertmanager` configuration in
the [Alertmanager documentation ](https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/latest/configuration/ ).
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After that you can deploy `vmalertmanager` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmalertmanager.yaml -n vm
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# vmalertmanager.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
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```
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Check that `vmalertmanager` is running:
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```shell
kubectl get pods -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=demo" -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=vmalertmanager"
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# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# vmalertmanager-demo-0 2/2 Running 0 107s
```
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#### VMAlert
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And now you can create [`vmalert` ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmalert ) resource.
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Create file `vmalert.yaml`
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```shell
code vmalert.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
kind: VMAlert
metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
datasource:
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url: "http://vmselect-demo.vm.svc:8481/select/0/prometheus"
remoteWrite:
url: "http://vminsert-demo.vm.svc:8480/insert/0/prometheus"
remoteRead:
url: "http://vmselect-demo.vm.svc:8481/select/0/prometheus"
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notifier:
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url: "http://vmalertmanager-demo.vm.svc:9093"
evaluationInterval: "30s"
selectAllByDefault: true
# for accessing to vmalert via vmauth with path prefix
extraArgs:
http.pathPrefix: /vmalert
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmalert` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmalert.yaml -n vm
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# vmalert.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
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```
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Check that `vmalert` is running:
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```shell
kubectl get pods -n vm -l "app.kubernetes.io/instance=demo" -l "app.kubernetes.io/name=vmalert"
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# NAME READY STATUS RESTARTS AGE
# vmalert-demo-bf75c67cb-hh4qd 2/2 Running 0 5s
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```
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#### VMRule
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Now you can create [vmrule ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmrule ) resource
for [vmalert ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/vmalert ).
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Create file `vmrule.yaml`
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```shell
code vmrule.yaml
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```
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with the following content:
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```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
kind: VMRule
metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
groups:
- name: vmalert
rules:
- alert: vmalert config reload error
expr: delta(vmalert_config_last_reload_errors_total[5m]) > 0
for: 10s
labels:
severity: major
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job: "{{ $labels.job }}"
annotations:
value: "{{ $value }}"
description: 'error reloading vmalert config, reload count for 5 min {{ $value }}'
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmrule` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmrule.yaml -n vm
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# vmrule.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
```
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#### VMUser update
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Let's update our user with access to `vmalert` and `vmalertmanager` :
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```shell
code vmuser.yaml
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```
```yaml
apiVersion: operator.victoriametrics.com/v1beta1
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kind: VMUser
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metadata:
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name: demo
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spec:
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name: demo
username: demo
generatePassword: true
targetRefs:
# vmui + vmselect
- crd:
kind: VMCluster/vmselect
name: demo
namespace: vm
target_path_suffix: "/select/0"
paths:
- "/vmui"
- "/vmui/.*"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/query"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/query_range"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/series"
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- "/prometheus/api/v1/status/.*"
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- "/prometheus/api/v1/label/"
- "/prometheus/api/v1/label/[^/]+/values"
# vmalert
- crd:
kind: VMAlert
name: demo
namespace: vm
paths:
- "/vmalert"
- "/vmalert/.*"
- "/api/v1/groups"
- "/api/v1/alert"
- "/api/v1/alerts"
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```
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After that you can deploy `vmuser` resource to the kubernetes cluster:
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```shell
kubectl apply -f vmuser.yaml -n vm
# vmuser.operator.victoriametrics.com/demo created
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```
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And now you can get access to your data with url `http://vm-demo.k8s.orb.local/vmalert`
(for your environment it most likely will be different) with username `demo` :
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![Alert 1 ](quick-start_alert-1.webp )
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![Alert 2 ](quick-start_alert-2.webp )
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## Anything else
That's it. We obtained a monitoring cluster corresponding to the target topology:
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![Cluster Scheme ](quick-start_cluster-scheme.webp )
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You have a full-stack monitoring cluster with VictoriaMetrics Operator.
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You can find information about these and other resources of operator on the [Custom resources page ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/resources/ ).
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In addition, check out other sections of the documentation for VictoriaMetrics Operator:
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- [Setup ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/setup )
- [Security ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/security )
- [Configuration ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/configuration )
- [Migration from Prometheus ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/migration )
- [Monitoring ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/monitoring )
- [Authorization and exposing components ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/auth )
- [High Availability ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/high-availability )
- [Enterprise ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/enterprise )
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If you have any questions, check out our [FAQ ](https://docs.victoriametrics.com/operator/faq )
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and feel free to can ask them:
- [VictoriaMetrics Slack ](https://victoriametrics.slack.com/ )
- [VictoriaMetrics Telegram ](https://t.me/VictoriaMetrics_en )
If you have any suggestions or find a bug, please create an issue
on [GitHub ](https://github.com/VictoriaMetrics/operator/issues/new ).