--- sort: 4 title: Writer weight: 4 menu: docs: parent: "vmanomaly-components" weight: 4 aliases: - /anomaly-detection/components/writer.html --- # Writer For exporting data, VictoriaMetrics Anomaly Detection (`vmanomaly`) primarily employs the [VmWriter](#vm-writer), which writes produces anomaly scores (preserving initial labelset and optionally applying additional ones) back to VictoriaMetrics. This writer is tailored for smooth data export within the VictoriaMetrics ecosystem. Future updates will introduce additional export methods, offering users more flexibility in data handling and integration. ## VM writer ### Config parameters
Parameter Example Description
class "writer.vm.VmWriter" Name of the class needed to enable writing to VictoriaMetrics or Prometheus. VmWriter is the default option, if not specified.
datasource_url "http://localhost:8481/" Datasource URL address
tenant_id "0:0" For VictoriaMetrics Cluster version only, tenants are identified by accountID or accountID:projectID. See VictoriaMetrics Cluster multitenancy docs
metric_format __name__: "vmanomaly_$VAR" Metrics to save the output (in metric names or labels). Must have __name__ key. Must have a value with $VAR placeholder in it to distinguish between resulting metrics. Supported placeholders:
  • $VAR -- Variables that model provides, all models provide the following set: {"anomaly_score", "y", "yhat", "yhat_lower", "yhat_upper"}. Description of standard output is here. Depending on model type it can provide more metrics, like "trend", "seasonality" etc.
  • $QUERY_KEY -- E.g. "ingestion_rate".
Other keys are supposed to be configured by the user to help identify generated metrics, e.g., specific config file name etc. More details on metric formatting are here.
for: "$QUERY_KEY"
run: "test_metric_format"
config: "io_vm_single.yaml"
import_json_path "/api/v1/import" Optional, to override the default import path
health_path "health" Absolute or relative URL address where to check the availability of the datasource. Optional, to override the default "/health" path.
user "USERNAME" BasicAuth username
password "PASSWORD" BasicAuth password
timeout "5s" Timeout for the requests, passed as a string. Defaults to "5s"
verify_tls "false" Allows disabling TLS verification of the remote certificate.
bearer_token "token" Token is passed in the standard format with the header: "Authorization: bearer {token}"
Config example: ```yaml writer: class: "writer.vm.VmWriter" datasource_url: "http://localhost:8428/" tenant_id: "0:0" metric_format: __name__: "vmanomaly_$VAR" for: "$QUERY_KEY" run: "test_metric_format" config: "io_vm_single.yaml" import_json_path: "/api/v1/import" health_path: "health" user: "foo" password: "bar" ``` ### Healthcheck metrics `VmWriter` exposes [several healthchecks metrics](./monitoring.html#writer-behaviour-metrics). ### Metrics formatting There should be 2 mandatory parameters set in `metric_format` - `__name__` and `for`. ```yaml __name__: PREFIX1_$VAR for: PREFIX2_$QUERY_KEY ``` * for `__name__` parameter it will name metrics returned by models as `PREFIX1_anomaly_score`, `PREFIX1_yhat_lower`, etc. Vmanomaly output metrics names described [here](anomaly-detection/components/models/models.html#vmanomaly-output) * for `for` parameter will add labels `PREFIX2_query_name_1`, `PREFIX2_query_name_2`, etc. Query names are set as aliases in config `reader` section in [`queries`](anomaly-detection/components/reader.html#config-parameters) parameter. It is possible to specify other custom label names needed. For example: ```yaml custom_label_1: label_name_1 custom_label_2: label_name_2 ``` Apart from specified labels, output metrics will return labels inherited from input metrics returned by [queries](/anomaly-detection/components/reader.html#config-parameters). For example if input data contains labels such as `cpu=1, device=eth0, instance=node-exporter:9100` all these labels will be present in vmanomaly output metrics. So if metric_format section was set up like this: ```yaml metric_format: __name__: "PREFIX1_$VAR" for: "PREFIX2_$QUERY_KEY" custom_label_1: label_name_1 custom_label_2: label_name_2 ``` It will return metrics that will look like: ```yaml {__name__="PREFIX1_anomaly_score", for="PREFIX2_query_name_1", custom_label_1="label_name_1", custom_label_2="label_name_2", cpu=1, device="eth0", instance="node-exporter:9100"} {__name__="PREFIX1_yhat_lower", for="PREFIX2_query_name_1", custom_label_1="label_name_1", custom_label_2="label_name_2", cpu=1, device="eth0", instance="node-exporter:9100"} {__name__="PREFIX1_anomaly_score", for="PREFIX2_query_name_2", custom_label_1="label_name_1", custom_label_2="label_name_2", cpu=1, device="eth0", instance="node-exporter:9100"} {__name__="PREFIX1_yhat_lower", for="PREFIX2_query_name_2", custom_label_1="label_name_1", custom_label_2="label_name_2", cpu=1, device="eth0", instance="node-exporter:9100"} ```