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Brubeck (unmaintained)

Brubeck is a statsd-compatible stats aggregator written in C. Brubeck is currently unmaintained.

List of known maintained forks

What is statsd?

Statsd is a metrics aggregator for Graphite (and other data storage backends). This technical documentation assumes working knowledge of what statsd is and how it works; please read the statsd documentation for more details.

Statsd is a good idea, and if you're using Graphite for metrics collection in your infrastructure, you probably want a statsd-compatible aggregator in front of it.

Tradeoffs

Building

Brubeck has the following dependencies:

Build brubeck by typing:

./script/bootstrap

Other operating systems or kernels can probably build Brubeck too. More specifically, Brubeck has been seen to work under FreeBSD and OpenBSD, but this is not supported.

Supported Metric Types

Brubeck supports most of the metric types from statsd and many other implementations.

Client-sent sampling rates are ignored.

Visit the statsd docs for more information on metric types.

Interfacing

The are several ways to interact with a running Brubeck daemon.

Signals

Brubeck answers to the following signals:

HTTP Endpoint

If enabled on the config file, Brubeck can provide an HTTP API to poll its status. The following routes are available:

Configuration

The configuration for Brubeck is loaded through a JSON file, passed on the commandline.

./brubeck --config=my.config.json

If no configuration file is passed to the daemon, it will load config.default.json, which contains useful defaults for local development/testing.

The JSON file can contain the following sections:

Testing

There's some tests in the test folder for key parts of the system (such as packet parsing, and all concurrent data access); besides that we test the behavior of the daemon live on staging and production systems.

When in doubt, please refer to the part of the MIT license that says "THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED 'AS IS', WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED". We use Brubeck in production and have been doing so for years, but we cannot make any promises regarding availability or performance.

FAQ

Make sure receiver-side scaling is properly configured in your kernel and that IRQs are being serviced by different cores, and that the daemon's threads are not pinned to a specific core. Make sure you're running the daemon in a physical machine and not a cheap cloud VPS. Make sure your NIC has the right drivers and it's not bottlenecking. Install a newer kernel and try running with SO_REUSEPORT.

If nothing works, refunds are available upon request. Just get mad at me on Twitter.