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Code Editor : vmware.url
# URL for pmdaopenmetrics(1) to use with a vmware_exporter process # running on the localhost. If you are running vmware_exporter on a # different host (perhaps in a VM on the hypervisor itself), change # 'localhost' as needed in the URL below. http://localhost:9272/metrics # The above URL is for VMWare metrics served by pryorda's vmware_exporter. # For details, see https://github.com/pryorda/vmware_exporter#readme # ### Setting up and running vmware_exporter # The easiest way to run vmware_exporter is to set up a config file 'config.env' # containing some settings (see below), then launch the pre-built container: # # podman run -it --rm -p 9272:9272 --name vmware_exporter --env-fe config.env docker.io/pryorda/vmware_exporter # # This container exposes port 9272 on the local host as the /metrics end-point # for VMware statistics, which the openmetrics PMDA will automatically discover. # There are about 88 metrics covering all of the important performance related # information you need to monitor your ESX server and it's resources. ### Setting up config.env # The file "config.env" (named on the above command line) should contain some # variable assignments for the host name of the VMware ESX host you want to # monitor, along with authentication details and a few other settings. Below # is an example - obviously you'll need to change the values for at least # VSPHERE_USER, VSPHERE_PASSWORD and VSPHERE_HOST to suit your local site, # and remove the '#' comment at the start of each line. # # -- config.env example -- # VSPHERE_USER=someuser # VSPHERE_PASSWORD=somepassword # VSPHERE_HOST=somehostname # VSPHERE_IGNORE_SSL=TRUE # VSPHERE_SPECS_SIZE=2000 ### PCP metrics # Once all of the above is setup, VMware metrics should be available in PCP # on the local host. You can check this with: pminfo -fmdt openmetrics.vmware
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