# Metrics You can optionally setup [prometheus](https://prometheus.io/) and [grafana](https://grafana.com/) for metrics. We follow this tutorial [here](https://medium.com/@chris_linguine/how-to-monitor-your-kubernetes-cluster-with-prometheus-and-grafana-2d5704187fc8): ```bash kubectl proxy # proxy to your kubernetes dashboard helm repo list # If using helm v3, the stable repository is not set, so you need to manually add it. helm repo add stable https://kubernetes-charts.storage.googleapis.com # Create a monitoring namespace for your cluster kubectl create namespace monitoring helm --namespace monitoring install prometheus stable/prometheus kubectl -n monitoring get pods # look for 'server' kubectl port-forward -n monitoring 9090 # You can now see your prometheus server on: http://localhost:9090 # Make sure you are in folder `deployment/` kubectl apply -f monitoring/grafana/config.yml helm --namespace monitoring install grafana stable/grafana -f monitoring/grafana/values.yml # Get the admin password for grafana from your kubernetes dashboard. kubectl --namespace monitoring port-forward 3000 # You can now see your grafana dashboard on: http://localhost:3000 # Login with user 'admin' and the password you just looked up. # In your dashboard import this dashboard: # https://grafana.com/grafana/dashboards/1860 # Enter ID 180 and choose "Prometheus" as datasource. # You got metrics! ``` Now you should see something like this: ![Grafana dashboard](./grafana/metrics.png) You can set up a grafana dashboard, by visiting https://grafana.com/dashboards, finding one that is suitable and copying it's id. You then go to the left hand menu in localhost, choose `Dashboard` > `Manage` > `Import` Paste in the id, click `Load`, select `Prometheus` for the data source, and click `Import` When you just installed prometheus and grafana, the data will not be available immediately, so wait for a couple of minutes and reload.