Exposition formats
Metrics can be exposed to Prometheus using a simple text-based exposition format. There are various client libraries that implement this format for you. If your preferred language doesn’t have a client library you can create your own.
NOTE: Some earlier versions of Prometheus supported an exposition format based on Protocol Buffers (aka Protobuf) in addition to the current text-based format. As of version 2.0, however, Prometheus no longer supports the Protobuf-based format. You can read about the reasoning behind this change in this document.
Text-based format
As of Prometheus version 2.0, all processes that expose metrics to Prometheus need to use a text-based format. In this section you can find some basic information about this format as well as a more detailed breakdown of the format.
Basic info
Aspect | Description |
---|---|
Inception | April 2014 |
Supported in | Prometheus version >=0.4.0 |
Transmission | HTTP |
Encoding | UTF-8, \n line endings |
HTTP Content-Type | text/plain; version=0.0.4 (A missing version value will lead to a fall-back to the most recent text format version.) |
Optional HTTP Content-Encoding | gzip |
Advantages |
|
Limitations |
|
Supported metric primitives |
|
Text format details
Prometheus’ text-based format is line oriented. Lines are separated by a line feed character (\n
). The last line must end with a line feed character. Empty lines are ignored.
Line format
Within a line, tokens can be separated by any number of blanks and/or tabs (and must be separated by at least one if they would otherwise merge with the previous token). Leading and trailing whitespace is ignored.
Comments, help text, and type information
Lines with a #
as the first non-whitespace character are comments. They are ignored unless the first token after #
is either HELP
or TYPE
. Those lines are treated as follows: If the token is HELP
, at least one more token is expected, which is the metric name. All remaining tokens are considered the docstring for that metric name. HELP
lines may contain any sequence of UTF-8 characters (after the metric name), but the backslash and the line feed characters have to be escaped as \\
and \n
, respectively. Only one HELP
line may exist for any given metric name.
If the token is TYPE
, exactly two more tokens are expected. The first is the metric name, and the second is either counter
, gauge
, histogram
, summary
, or untyped
, defining the type for the metric of that name. Only one TYPE
line may exist for a given metric name. The TYPE
line for a metric name must appear before the first sample is reported for that metric name. If there is no TYPE
line for a metric name, the type is set to untyped
.
The remaining lines describe samples (one per line) using the following syntax (EBNF):
metric_name [
"{" label_name "=" `"` label_value `"` { "," label_name "=" `"` label_value `"` } [ "," ] "}"
] value [ timestamp ]
In the sample syntax:
metric_name
andlabel_name
carry the usual Prometheus expression language restrictions.label_value
can be any sequence of UTF-8 characters, but the backslash (\
), double-quote ("
), and line feed (\n
) characters have to be escaped as\\
,\"
, and\n
, respectively.value
is a float represented as required by Go’sParseFloat()
function. In addition to standard numerical values,NaN
,+Inf
, and-Inf
are valid values representing not a number, positive infinity, and negative infinity, respectively.- The
timestamp
is anint64
(milliseconds since epoch, i.e. 1970-01-01 00:00:00 UTC, excluding leap seconds), represented as required by Go’sParseInt()
function.
Grouping and sorting
All lines for a given metric must be provided as one single group, with the optional HELP
and TYPE
lines first (in no particular order). Beyond that, reproducible sorting in repeated expositions is preferred but not required, i.e. do not sort if the computational cost is prohibitive.
Each line must have a unique combination of a metric name and labels. Otherwise, the ingestion behavior is undefined.
Histograms and summaries
The histogram
and summary
types are difficult to represent in the text format. The following conventions apply:
- The sample sum for a summary or histogram named
x
is given as a separate sample namedx_sum
. - The sample count for a summary or histogram named
x
is given as a separate sample namedx_count
. - Each quantile of a summary named
x
is given as a separate sample line with the same namex
and a label{quantile="y"}
. - Each bucket count of a histogram named
x
is given as a separate sample line with the namex_bucket
and a label{le="y"}
(wherey
is the upper bound of the bucket). - A histogram must have a bucket with
{le="+Inf"}
. Its value must be identical to the value ofx_count
. - The buckets of a histogram and the quantiles of a summary must appear in increasing numerical order of their label values (for the
le
or thequantile
label, respectively).
Text format example
Below is an example of a full-fledged Prometheus metric exposition, including comments, HELP
and TYPE
expressions, a histogram, a summary, character escaping examples, and more.
# HELP http_requests_total The total number of HTTP requests.
# TYPE http_requests_total counter
http_requests_total{method="post",code="200"} 1027 1395066363000
http_requests_total{method="post",code="400"} 3 1395066363000
# Escaping in label values:
msdos_file_access_time_seconds{path="C:\\DIR\\FILE.TXT",error="Cannot find file:\n\"FILE.TXT\""} 1.458255915e9
# Minimalistic line:
metric_without_timestamp_and_labels 12.47
# A weird metric from before the epoch:
something_weird{problem="division by zero"} +Inf -3982045
# A histogram, which has a pretty complex representation in the text format:
# HELP http_request_duration_seconds A histogram of the request duration.
# TYPE http_request_duration_seconds histogram
http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.05"} 24054
http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.1"} 33444
http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.2"} 100392
http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="0.5"} 129389
http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="1"} 133988
http_request_duration_seconds_bucket{le="+Inf"} 144320
http_request_duration_seconds_sum 53423
http_request_duration_seconds_count 144320
# Finally a summary, which has a complex representation, too:
# HELP rpc_duration_seconds A summary of the RPC duration in seconds.
# TYPE rpc_duration_seconds summary
rpc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.01"} 3102
rpc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.05"} 3272
rpc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.5"} 4773
rpc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.9"} 9001
rpc_duration_seconds{quantile="0.99"} 76656
rpc_duration_seconds_sum 1.7560473e+07
rpc_duration_seconds_count 2693
Historical versions
For details on historical format versions, see the legacy Client Data Exposition Format document.