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---
description: >-
If you wish to deploy Grafana for alternative graphs, follow the steps below.
---
# Using Ultrafeeder with Grafana and Prometheus
[`Grafana`](https://grafana.com/) is an analytics platform that can provide alternative graphs for `readsb`.
In this guide we will be using [`Prometheus`](https://prometheus.io/) as the data repository.
Using Grafana and Prometheus in this configuration does not require a plan, account, or credentials for their respective cloud offerings.
## Hardware requirements
Prometheus will store a lot of data, and Grafana will do a lot of data queries. As a result, it would be better if you run these containers on a different system than your feeder Raspberry Pi. This will leave your Pi focused on data collection and processing, and unbothered by the CPU and Disk IO load that Prometheus/Grafana will cause.
You *can* do it on a single system. We're assuming below that you are not. If you do it on a single system, then you can combine the `docker-compose.yml` components in a single file
## Step 1: Make Prometheus data available for the Ultrafeeder
- Edit your Ultrafeeder's `docker-compose.yml` file and ensure that the following is set for the `ultrafeeder` service:
```yaml
environment:
- PROMETHEUS_ENABLE=true
ports:
- 9273-9274:9273-9274
```
Now recreate the ultrafeeder container (`docker-compose up -d ultrafeeder`) and it will generate Prometheus data.
## Step 2: create a container stack for `prometheus` and `grafana`
On the machine where you will run Prometheus and Grafana, create a docker-compose file in the `/opt/grafana` directory:
```bash
mkdir -p -m777 /opt/grafana && cd /opt/grafana
cat > docker-compose.yml
```
Now paste in the following text:
<details>
<summary>Click the arrow to see the `docker-compose.yml` text</summary>
```yaml
version: '3.9'
services:
grafana:
image: grafana/grafana-oss:latest
restart: unless-stopped
container_name: grafana
hostname: grafana
tty: true
# uncomment the following section and set the variables if you are exposing Grafana to the internet behind a rev web proxy:
# environment:
# - GF_SERVER_ROOT_URL=https://mywebsite.com/grafana
# - GF_SERVER_SERVE_FROM_SUB_PATH=true
ports:
- 3000:3000
volumes:
- /opt/grafana/grafana/appdata:/var/lib/grafana
prometheus:
image: prom/prometheus
container_name: prometheus
hostname: prometheus
restart: unless-stopped
tmpfs:
- /tmp
volumes:
- /opt/grafana/prometheus/config:/etc/prometheus
- /opt/grafana/prometheus/data:/prometheus
ports:
- 9090:9090
```
</details>
Once you have created and saved this `docker-compose.yml` file, give these commands to create the mapped volumes:
```bash
docker compose up -d
docker compose stop prometheus
docker compose stop grafana
```
Now, you should be able to see the following directories:
- `/opt/grafana/grafana/appdata`
- `/opt/grafana/prometheus/config`
- `/opt/grafana/prometheus/data`
## Step 3: Configuring Prometheus
Prometheus needs to be told where to look for the data from the ultrafeeder. We will create a target prometheus configuration file that does this, please copy and paste the following:
```bash
sudo touch /opt/grafana/prometheus/config/prometheus.yml
sudo chmod a+rwx /opt/grafana/prometheus/config/prometheus.yml
cat > /opt/grafana/prometheus/config/prometheus.yml <<EOF
global:
scrape_interval: 15s # Set the scrape interval to every 15 seconds. Default is every 1 minute.
evaluation_interval: 15s # Evaluate rules every 15 seconds. The default is every 1 minute.
alerting:
alertmanagers:
- static_configs:
- targets:
rule_files:
scrape_configs:
# The job name is added as a label `job=<job_name>` to any timeseries scraped from this config.
- job_name: "prometheus"
static_configs:
- targets: ["localhost:9090"]
- job_name: 'readsb'
static_configs:
- targets: ['ip_of_ultrafeeder_machine:9273', 'ip_of_ultrafeeder_machine:9274']
EOF
```
Make sure to change `ip_of_ultrafeeder_machine` to the IP address or hostname of your ultrafeeder machine.
Once the file has been updated, issue the command `docker compose up -d` in the application directory to apply the changes and bring up the `prometheus` and `grafana` containers.
At this point we will need to add a collector definition to `prometheus` and restart with the new configuration.
1. Issue the command `docker exec -it prometheus sh -c "echo -e \" - job_name: 'readsb'\n static_configs:\n - targets: ['readsb:9273']\" >> /etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml"`
2. Issue the command `docker stop prometheus`
3. Issue the command `docker compose up -d`
You should also be able to point your web browser at:
* `http://docker.host.ip.addr:9090/` to access the `prometheus` console.
* `http://docker.host.ip.addr:3000/` to access the `grafana` console, use admin/admin as initial credentials, you should be prompted to change the password on first login.
Remember to change `docker.host.ip.addr` to the IP address of your docker host.
## Configuring data source and dashboard in Grafana
After you have logged into the `grafana` console the following manual steps are required to connect to `prometheus` as the data source
1. Click `Add your first data source` in the main panel
2. Click `Prometheus` from the list of options provided
3. Input or select the following options, if the option is not listed, do not input anything for that option:
Option | Input
------------- | -------------
Name | readsb
URL | http://prometheus:9090/
Clicking `Save & Test` should return a green message indicating success. The dashboard can now be imported with the following steps
1. Hover over the `four squares` icon in the sidebar, click `+ Import`
2. Enter `18398` into the `Import via grafana.com` section and click `Load`
3. Select `readsb` from the bottom drop down list
4. Click `Import` on the subsequent dialogue box
At this point you should see a very nice dashboard, you can find it under `General` in the `Dashboards` section.