mikrotik-exporter/README.md
Ben Reedy c8a29f8423
Read credentials from env variable if not set
Allows for secrets to be provided to exporter outside of main
configuration. E.G. via Kubernetes Secrets.
Specified configuration files or flags take precedence over environment
variables.
2020-05-27 21:08:30 +10:00

3.3 KiB

Docker Pulls

prometheus-mikrotik

tl;dr - prometheus exporter for mikrotik devices

This is still a work in progress .. consider master at the moment as a preview release.

Description

A Prometheus Exporter for Mikrotik devices. Can be configured to collect metrics from a single device or multiple devices. Single device monitoring can be configured all on the command line. Multiple devices require a configuration file. A user will be required that has read-only access to the device configuration via the API.

Currently the exporter collects metrics for interfaces and system resources. Others can be added as long as published via the API.

Mikrotik Config

Create a user on the device that has API and read-only access.

/user group add name=prometheus policy=api,read,winbox

Create the user to access the API via.

/user add name=prometheus group=prometheus password=changeme

Single Device

./mikrotik-exporter -address 10.10.0.1 -device my_router -password changeme -user prometheus

where address is the address of your router. device is the label name for the device in the metrics output to prometheus. The user and password are the ones you created for the exporter to use to access the API.

User and password flags can be set with the MIKROTIK_USER and MIKROTIK_PASSWORD environment variables, respectively.

MIKROTIK_USER=prometheus
MIKROTIK_PASSWORD=changeme
./mikrotik-exporter -address 10.10.0.1 -device my_router

Config File

./mikrotik-exporter -config-file config.yml

where config-file is the path to a config file in YAML format.

example config
devices:
  - name: my_router
    address: 10.10.0.1
    user: prometheus
    password: changeme
  - name: my_second_router
    address: 10.10.0.2
    port: 8999
    user: prometheus2
    password: password_to_second_router
  - name: routers_srv_dns
    srv:
      record: _mikrotik._udp.example.com
    user: prometheus
    password: password_to_all_dns_routers
  - name: routers_srv_custom_dns
    srv:
      record: _mikrotik2._udp.example.com
      dns:
        address: 1.1.1.1
        port: 53
    user: prometheus
    password: password_to_all_dns_routers

features:
  bgp: true
  dhcp: true
  dhcpv6: true
  dhcpl: true
  routes: true
  pools: true
  optics: true

If you add a devices with the srv parameter instead of address the exporter will perform a DNS query to obtain the SRV record and discover the devices dynamically. Also, you can specify a DNS server to use on the query.

example output
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether2",name="my_router"} 1.4189902583e+10
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether3",name="my_router"} 2.263768666e+09
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether4",name="my_router"} 1.6572299e+08
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether5",name="my_router"} 1.66711315e+08
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether6",name="my_router"} 1.0026481337e+10
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether7",name="my_router"} 3.18354425e+08
mikrotik_interface_tx_byte{address="10.10.0.1",interface="ether8",name="my_router"} 1.86405031e+08