Performance Analyzer
Performance Analyzer is an agent and REST API that allows you to query numerous performance metrics for your cluster, including aggregations of those metrics, independent of the Java Virtual Machine (JVM). PerfTop is the default command line interface (CLI) for displaying those metrics.
To download PerfTop, see Download on the Open Distro for Elasticsearch website.
You can also install it using npm:
npm install -g @aws/opendistro-for-elasticsearch-perftop
Get started with PerfTop
The basic syntax is:
./perf-top-<operating_system> --dashboard <dashboard>.json --endpoint <endpoint>
If you’re using npm, the syntax is similar:
perf-top --dashboard <dashboard> --endpoint <endpoint>
If you’re running PerfTop from a node (i.e. locally), specify port 9600:
./perf-top-linux --dashboard dashboards/<dashboard>.json --endpoint localhost:9600
Otherwise, just specify the Elasticsearch endpoint:
./perf-top-macos --dashboard dashboards/<dashboard>.json --endpoint my-cluster.my-domain.com
PerfTop has four pre-built dashboards in the dashboards
directory, but you can also create your own.
You can also load the pre-built dashboards (ClusterOverview, ClusterNetworkMemoryAnalysis, ClusterThreadAnalysis, or NodeAnalysis) without the JSON files, such as --dashboard ClusterThreadAnalysis
.
PerfTop has no interactivity. Start the application, monitor the dashboard, and press esc, q, or Ctrl + C to quit.
Other options
- For NodeAnalysis and similar custom dashboards, you can add the
--nodename <node_name>
argument if you want your dashboard to display metrics for only a single node. - For troubleshooting, add the
--logfile <log-file>.txt
argument.
Performance Analyzer configuration
Storage
Performance Analyzer uses /dev/shm
for temporary storage. During heavy workloads on a cluster, Performance Analyzer can use up to 1 GB of space.
Docker, however, has a default /dev/shm
size of 64 MB. To change this value, you can use the docker run --shm-size 1gb
flag or a similar setting in Docker Compose.
If you’re not using Docker, check the size of /dev/shm
using df -h
. The default value is probably plenty, but if you need to change its size, add the following line to /etc/fstab
:
tmpfs /dev/shm tmpfs defaults,noexec,nosuid,size=1G 0 0
Then remount the file system:
mount -o remount /dev/shm
Security
Performance Analyzer supports encryption in transit for requests. It currently does not support client or server authentication for requests. To enable encryption in transit, edit performance-analyzer.properties
in your $ES_HOME
directory:
vi $ES_HOME/plugins/opendistro_performance_analyzer/pa_config/performance-analyzer.properties
Change the following lines to configure encryption in transit. Note that certificate-file-path
must be a certificate for the server, not a root CA:
https-enabled = true
#Setup the correct path for certificates
certificate-file-path = specify_path
private-key-file-path = specify_path