client_golang/prometheus/testutil/testutil.go

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// Copyright 2018 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.
// Package testutil provides helpers to test code using the prometheus package
// of client_golang.
//
// While writing unit tests to verify correct instrumentation of your code, it's
// a common mistake to mostly test the instrumentation library instead of your
// own code. Rather than verifying that a prometheus.Counter's value has changed
// as expected or that it shows up in the exposition after registration, it is
// in general more robust and more faithful to the concept of unit tests to use
// mock implementations of the prometheus.Counter and prometheus.Registerer
// interfaces that simply assert that the Add or Register methods have been
// called with the expected arguments. However, this might be overkill in simple
// scenarios. The ToFloat64 function is provided for simple inspection of a
// single-value metric, but it has to be used with caution.
//
// End-to-end tests to verify all or larger parts of the metrics exposition can
// be implemented with the CollectAndCompare or GatherAndCompare functions. The
// most appropriate use is not so much testing instrumentation of your code, but
// testing custom prometheus.Collector implementations and in particular whole
// exporters, i.e. programs that retrieve telemetry data from a 3rd party source
// and convert it into Prometheus metrics.
//
// In a similar pattern, CollectAndLint and GatherAndLint can be used to detect
// metrics that have issues with their name, type, or metadata without being
// necessarily invalid, e.g. a counter with a name missing the “_total” suffix.
package testutil
import (
"bytes"
"fmt"
"io"
"net/http"
"reflect"
"github.com/davecgh/go-spew/spew"
dto "github.com/prometheus/client_model/go"
"github.com/prometheus/common/expfmt"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/internal/errcapture"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus"
"github.com/prometheus/client_golang/prometheus/internal"
)
// ToFloat64 collects all Metrics from the provided Collector. It expects that
// this results in exactly one Metric being collected, which must be a Gauge,
// Counter, or Untyped. In all other cases, ToFloat64 panics. ToFloat64 returns
// the value of the collected Metric.
//
// The Collector provided is typically a simple instance of Gauge or Counter, or
// less commonly a GaugeVec or CounterVec with exactly one element. But any
// Collector fulfilling the prerequisites described above will do.
//
// Use this function with caution. It is computationally very expensive and thus
// not suited at all to read values from Metrics in regular code. This is really
// only for testing purposes, and even for testing, other approaches are often
// more appropriate (see this package's documentation).
//
// A clear anti-pattern would be to use a metric type from the prometheus
// package to track values that are also needed for something else than the
// exposition of Prometheus metrics. For example, you would like to track the
// number of items in a queue because your code should reject queuing further
// items if a certain limit is reached. It is tempting to track the number of
// items in a prometheus.Gauge, as it is then easily available as a metric for
// exposition, too. However, then you would need to call ToFloat64 in your
// regular code, potentially quite often. The recommended way is to track the
// number of items conventionally (in the way you would have done it without
// considering Prometheus metrics) and then expose the number with a
// prometheus.GaugeFunc.
func ToFloat64(c prometheus.Collector) float64 {
var (
m prometheus.Metric
mCount int
mChan = make(chan prometheus.Metric)
done = make(chan struct{})
)
go func() {
for m = range mChan {
mCount++
}
close(done)
}()
c.Collect(mChan)
close(mChan)
<-done
if mCount != 1 {
panic(fmt.Errorf("collected %d metrics instead of exactly 1", mCount))
}
pb := &dto.Metric{}
if err := m.Write(pb); err != nil {
panic(fmt.Errorf("error happened while collecting metrics: %w", err))
}
if pb.Gauge != nil {
return pb.Gauge.GetValue()
}
if pb.Counter != nil {
return pb.Counter.GetValue()
}
if pb.Untyped != nil {
return pb.Untyped.GetValue()
}
panic(fmt.Errorf("collected a non-gauge/counter/untyped metric: %s", pb))
}
// CollectAndCount registers the provided Collector with a newly created
// pedantic Registry. It then calls GatherAndCount with that Registry and with
// the provided metricNames. In the unlikely case that the registration or the
// gathering fails, this function panics. (This is inconsistent with the other
// CollectAnd… functions in this package and has historical reasons. Changing
// the function signature would be a breaking change and will therefore only
// happen with the next major version bump.)
func CollectAndCount(c prometheus.Collector, metricNames ...string) int {
reg := prometheus.NewPedanticRegistry()
if err := reg.Register(c); err != nil {
panic(fmt.Errorf("registering collector failed: %w", err))
}
result, err := GatherAndCount(reg, metricNames...)
if err != nil {
panic(err)
}
return result
}
// GatherAndCount gathers all metrics from the provided Gatherer and counts
// them. It returns the number of metric children in all gathered metric
// families together. If any metricNames are provided, only metrics with those
// names are counted.
func GatherAndCount(g prometheus.Gatherer, metricNames ...string) (int, error) {
got, err := g.Gather()
if err != nil {
return 0, fmt.Errorf("gathering metrics failed: %w", err)
}
if metricNames != nil {
got = filterMetrics(got, metricNames)
}
result := 0
for _, mf := range got {
result += len(mf.GetMetric())
}
return result, nil
}
// ScrapeAndCompare calls a remote exporter's endpoint which is expected to return some metrics in
// plain text format. Then it compares it with the results that the `expected` would return.
// If the `metricNames` is not empty it would filter the comparison only to the given metric names.
func ScrapeAndCompare(url string, expected io.Reader, metricNames ...string) (err error) {
resp, err := http.Get(url)
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("scraping metrics failed: %w", err)
}
defer errcapture.ExhaustClose(&err, resp.Body, "close response body")
if resp.StatusCode != http.StatusOK {
return fmt.Errorf("the scraping target returned a status code other than 200: %d",
resp.StatusCode)
}
scraped, err := convertReaderToMetricFamily(resp.Body)
if err != nil {
return err
}
wanted, err := convertReaderToMetricFamily(expected)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return compareMetricFamilies(scraped, wanted, metricNames...)
}
// CollectAndCompare registers the provided Collector with a newly created
// pedantic Registry. It then calls GatherAndCompare with that Registry and with
// the provided metricNames.
func CollectAndCompare(c prometheus.Collector, expected io.Reader, metricNames ...string) error {
reg := prometheus.NewPedanticRegistry()
if err := reg.Register(c); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("registering collector failed: %w", err)
}
return GatherAndCompare(reg, expected, metricNames...)
}
// GatherAndCompare gathers all metrics from the provided Gatherer and compares
// it to an expected output read from the provided Reader in the Prometheus text
// exposition format. If any metricNames are provided, only metrics with those
// names are compared.
func GatherAndCompare(g prometheus.Gatherer, expected io.Reader, metricNames ...string) error {
return TransactionalGatherAndCompare(prometheus.ToTransactionalGatherer(g), expected, metricNames...)
}
// TransactionalGatherAndCompare gathers all metrics from the provided Gatherer and compares
// it to an expected output read from the provided Reader in the Prometheus text
// exposition format. If any metricNames are provided, only metrics with those
// names are compared.
func TransactionalGatherAndCompare(g prometheus.TransactionalGatherer, expected io.Reader, metricNames ...string) error {
got, done, err := g.Gather()
defer done()
if err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("gathering metrics failed: %w", err)
}
wanted, err := convertReaderToMetricFamily(expected)
if err != nil {
return err
}
return compareMetricFamilies(got, wanted, metricNames...)
}
// convertReaderToMetricFamily would read from a io.Reader object and convert it to a slice of
// dto.MetricFamily.
func convertReaderToMetricFamily(reader io.Reader) ([]*dto.MetricFamily, error) {
var tp expfmt.TextParser
notNormalized, err := tp.TextToMetricFamilies(reader)
if err != nil {
return nil, fmt.Errorf("converting reader to metric families failed: %w", err)
}
return internal.NormalizeMetricFamilies(notNormalized), nil
}
// compareMetricFamilies would compare 2 slices of metric families, and optionally filters both of
// them to the `metricNames` provided.
func compareMetricFamilies(got, expected []*dto.MetricFamily, metricNames ...string) error {
if metricNames != nil {
got = filterMetrics(got, metricNames)
}
return compare(got, expected)
}
// compare encodes both provided slices of metric families into the text format,
// compares their string message, and returns an error if they do not match.
// The error contains the encoded text of both the desired and the actual
// result.
func compare(got, want []*dto.MetricFamily) error {
var gotBuf, wantBuf bytes.Buffer
enc := expfmt.NewEncoder(&gotBuf, expfmt.FmtText)
for _, mf := range got {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("encoding gathered metrics failed: %w", err)
}
}
enc = expfmt.NewEncoder(&wantBuf, expfmt.FmtText)
for _, mf := range want {
if err := enc.Encode(mf); err != nil {
return fmt.Errorf("encoding expected metrics failed: %w", err)
}
}
if diffErr := diff(wantBuf, gotBuf); diffErr != "" {
return fmt.Errorf(diffErr)
}
return nil
}
// diff returns a diff of both values as long as both are of the same type and
// are a struct, map, slice, array or string. Otherwise it returns an empty string.
func diff(expected, actual interface{}) string {
if expected == nil || actual == nil {
return ""
}
et, ek := typeAndKind(expected)
at, _ := typeAndKind(actual)
if et != at {
return ""
}
if ek != reflect.Struct && ek != reflect.Map && ek != reflect.Slice && ek != reflect.Array && ek != reflect.String {
return ""
}
var e, a string
c := spew.ConfigState{
Indent: " ",
DisablePointerAddresses: true,
DisableCapacities: true,
SortKeys: true,
}
if et != reflect.TypeOf("") {
e = c.Sdump(expected)
a = c.Sdump(actual)
} else {
e = reflect.ValueOf(expected).String()
a = reflect.ValueOf(actual).String()
}
diff, _ := internal.GetUnifiedDiffString(internal.UnifiedDiff{
A: internal.SplitLines(e),
B: internal.SplitLines(a),
FromFile: "metric output does not match expectation; want",
FromDate: "",
ToFile: "got:",
ToDate: "",
Context: 1,
})
if diff == "" {
return ""
}
return "\n\nDiff:\n" + diff
}
// typeAndKind returns the type and kind of the given interface{}
func typeAndKind(v interface{}) (reflect.Type, reflect.Kind) {
t := reflect.TypeOf(v)
k := t.Kind()
if k == reflect.Ptr {
t = t.Elem()
k = t.Kind()
}
return t, k
}
func filterMetrics(metrics []*dto.MetricFamily, names []string) []*dto.MetricFamily {
var filtered []*dto.MetricFamily
for _, m := range metrics {
for _, name := range names {
if m.GetName() == name {
filtered = append(filtered, m)
break
}
}
}
return filtered
}