90bcd1837c
Bumps golang from 1.20.4-alpine3.17 to 1.20.5-alpine3.17. --- updated-dependencies: - dependency-name: golang dependency-type: direct:production update-type: version-update:semver-patch ... Signed-off-by: dependabot[bot] <support@github.com> |
||
---|---|---|
.github | ||
config | ||
grafana | ||
internal | ||
.gitignore | ||
.pre-commit-config.yaml | ||
dashboard-influxdb2.png | ||
dashboard.jpg | ||
docker-compose.yml | ||
Dockerfile | ||
go.mod | ||
go.sum | ||
LICENSE | ||
main.go | ||
README.md |
PI-Hole Prometheus Exporter
This is a Prometheus exporter for PI-Hole's Raspberry PI ad blocker.
Available Grafana Dasboards:
- Prometheus: Grafana Labs / JSON/Github --> Preview
- InfluxDB 2 (Flux): Grafana Labs / JSON/Github --> Preview
Prerequisites
Installation
Download binary
You can download the latest version of the binary built for your architecture here:
- Architecture i386 [ Linux / Windows ]
- Architecture amd64 [ Darwin / Linux / Windows ]
- Architecture arm [ Darwin / Linux ]
Using Docker
The exporter is also available as a Docker image. You can run it using the following example and pass configuration environment variables:
$ docker run \
-e 'PIHOLE_HOSTNAME=192.168.1.2' \
-e 'PIHOLE_PASSWORD=mypassword' \
-e 'PORT=9617' \
-p 9617:9617 \
ekofr/pihole-exporter:latest
Or use PiHole's WEBPASSWORD
as an API token instead of the password
$ API_TOKEN=$(awk -F= -v key="WEBPASSWORD" '$1==key {print $2}' /etc/pihole/setupVars.conf)
$ docker run \
-e 'PIHOLE_HOSTNAME=192.168.1.2' \
-e "PIHOLE_API_TOKEN=$API_TOKEN" \
-e 'PORT=9617' \
-p 9617:9617 \
ekofr/pihole-exporter:latest
If you are running pi-hole behind https, you must both set the PIHOLE_PROTOCOL
environment variable
as well as include your ssl certificates to the docker image as it does not have any baked in:
$ docker run \
-e 'PIHOLE_PROTOCOL=https' \
-e 'PIHOLE_HOSTNAME=192.168.1.2' \
-e 'PIHOLE_PASSWORD=mypassword' \
-e 'PORT=9617' \
-v '/etc/ssl/certs:/etc/ssl/certs:ro' \
-p 9617:9617 \
ekofr/pihole-exporter:latest
A single instance of pihole-exporter can monitor multiple pi-holes instances. To do so, you can specify a list of hostnames, protocols, passwords/API tokens and ports by separating them with commas in their respective environment variable:
$ docker run \
-e 'PIHOLE_PROTOCOL=http,http,http" \
-e 'PIHOLE_HOSTNAME=192.168.1.2,192.168.1.3,192.168.1.4"' \
-e "PIHOLE_API_TOKEN=$API_TOKEN1,$API_TOKEN2,$API_TOKEN3" \
-e "PIHOLE_PORT=8080,8081,8080" \
-e 'PORT=9617' \
-p 9617:9617 \
ekofr/pihole-exporter:latest
If port, protocol and API token/password is the same for all instances, you can specify them only once:
$ docker run \
-e 'PIHOLE_PROTOCOL=,http" \
-e 'PIHOLE_HOSTNAME=192.168.1.2,192.168.1.3,192.168.1.4"' \
-e "PIHOLE_API_TOKEN=$API_TOKEN" \
-e "PIHOLE_PORT=8080" \
-e 'PORT=9617' \
-p 9617:9617 \
ekofr/pihole-exporter:latest
From sources
Optionally, you can download and build it from the sources. You have to retrieve the project sources by using one of the following way:
$ go install github.com/eko/pihole-exporter@latest
# or
$ git clone https://github.com/eko/pihole-exporter.git
Install the needed vendors:
$ GO111MODULE=on go mod vendor
Then, build the binary (here, an example to run on Raspberry PI ARM architecture):
$ GOOS=linux GOARCH=arm GOARM=7 go build -o pihole_exporter .
Usage
In order to run the exporter, type the following command (arguments are optional):
Using a password
$ ./pihole_exporter -pihole_hostname 192.168.1.10 -pihole_password azerty
Or use PiHole's WEBPASSWORD
as an API token instead of the password
$ API_TOKEN=$(awk -F= -v key="WEBPASSWORD" '$1==key {print $2}' /etc/pihole/setupVars.conf)
$ ./pihole_exporter -pihole_hostname 192.168.1.10 -pihole_api_token $API_TOKEN
2019/05/09 20:19:52 ------------------------------------
2019/05/09 20:19:52 - PI-Hole exporter configuration -
2019/05/09 20:19:52 ------------------------------------
2019/05/09 20:19:52 PIHoleHostname : 192.168.1.10
2019/05/09 20:19:52 PIHolePassword : azerty
2019/05/09 20:19:52 Port : 9617
2019/05/09 20:19:52 Timeout : 5s
2019/05/09 20:19:52 ------------------------------------
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: domains_blocked
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: dns_queries_today
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: ads_blocked_today
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: ads_percentag_today
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: unique_domains
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: queries_forwarded
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: queries_cached
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: clients_ever_seen
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: unique_clients
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: dns_queries_all_types
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: reply
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: top_queries
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: top_ads
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: top_sources
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: forward_destinations
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: querytypes
2019/05/09 20:19:52 New Prometheus metric registered: status
2019/05/09 20:19:52 Starting HTTP server
2019/05/09 20:19:54 New tick of statistics: 648 ads blocked / 66796 total DNS querie
...
Once the exporter is running, you also have to update your prometheus.yml
configuration to let it scrape the exporter:
scrape_configs:
- job_name: 'pihole'
static_configs:
- targets: ['localhost:9617']
Available CLI options
# Hostname of the host(s) where PI-Hole is installed
-pihole_hostname string (optional) (default "127.0.0.1")
# Password defined on the PI-Hole interface
-pihole_password string (optional)
# Timeout to connect and retrieve data from a Pi-Hole instance
-timeout duration (optional) (default 5s)
# WEBPASSWORD / api token defined on the PI-Hole interface at `/etc/pihole/setupVars.conf`
-pihole_api_token string (optional)
# Address to be used for the exporter
-bind_addr string (optional) (default "0.0.0.0")
# Port to be used for the exporter
-port string (optional) (default "9617")
Available Prometheus metrics
Metric name | Description |
---|---|
pihole_domains_being_blocked | This represent the number of domains being blocked |
pihole_dns_queries_today | This represent the number of DNS queries made over the current day |
pihole_ads_blocked_today | This represent the number of ads blocked over the current day |
pihole_ads_percentage_today | This represent the percentage of ads blocked over the current day |
pihole_unique_domains | This represent the number of unique domains seen |
pihole_queries_forwarded | This represent the number of queries forwarded |
pihole_queries_cached | This represent the number of queries cached |
pihole_clients_ever_seen | This represent the number of clients ever seen |
pihole_unique_clients | This represent the number of unique clients seen |
pihole_dns_queries_all_types | This represent the number of DNS queries made for all types |
pihole_reply | This represent the number of replies made for all types |
pihole_top_queries | This represent the number of top queries made by PI-Hole by domain |
pihole_top_ads | This represent the number of top ads made by PI-Hole by domain |
pihole_top_sources | This represent the number of top sources requests made by PI-Hole by source host |
pihole_forward_destinations | This represent the number of forward destinations requests made by PI-Hole by destination |
pihole_querytypes | This represent the number of queries made by PI-Hole by type |
pihole_status | This represent if PI-Hole is enabled |
Pihole-Exporter Helm Chart
This is a simple Helm Chart to deploy the exporter in a kubernetes cluster.