Data model
Prometheus fundamentally stores all data as time series: streams of timestamped values belonging to the same metric and the same set of labeled dimensions. Besides stored time series, Prometheus may generate temporary derived time series as the result of queries.
Metric names and labels
Every time series is uniquely identified by its metric name and optional key-value pairs called labels.
The metric name specifies the general feature of a system that is measured (e.g. http_requests_total
- the total number of HTTP requests received). It may contain ASCII letters and digits, as well as underscores and colons. It must match the regex [a-zA-Z_:][a-zA-Z0-9_:]*
.
Note: The colons are reserved for user defined recording rules. They should not be used by exporters or direct instrumentation.
Labels enable Prometheus’s dimensional data model: any given combination of labels for the same metric name identifies a particular dimensional instantiation of that metric (for example: all HTTP requests that used the method POST
to the /api/tracks
handler). The query language allows filtering and aggregation based on these dimensions. Changing any label value, including adding or removing a label, will create a new time series.
Label names may contain ASCII letters, numbers, as well as underscores. They must match the regex [a-zA-Z_][a-zA-Z0-9_]*
. Label names beginning with __
are reserved for internal use.
Label values may contain any Unicode characters.
A label with an empty label value is considered equivalent to a label that does not exist.
See also the best practices for naming metrics and labels.
Samples
Samples form the actual time series data. Each sample consists of:
- a float64 value
- a millisecond-precision timestamp
Notation
Given a metric name and a set of labels, time series are frequently identified using this notation:
<metric name>{<label name>=<label value>, ...}
For example, a time series with the metric name api_http_requests_total
and the labels method="POST"
and handler="/messages"
could be written like this:
api_http_requests_total{method="POST", handler="/messages"}
This is the same notation that OpenTSDB uses.