Documentation

Aggregate event handler

The aggregate event handler aggregates multiple events into a single event. It subscribes to a topic and aggregates published messages within a defined interval into an aggregated topic.

Options

The following aggregate event handler options can be set in a handler file.

Name Type Description
interval duration How often to aggregate events. Interval must be specified in nanoseconds.
topic string A topic into which to publish the aggregate events.
message string A template string where {{.Interval}} and {{.Count}} are available for constructing a meaningful message.

Example: handler file

id: handler-id
topic: topic-name
kind: aggregate
options:
  interval: 300000000000
  topic: agg_5m
  message: '{{.Count}} new events in the last {{.Interval}}'

Using the aggregate event handler

The aggregate event handler subscribes to a topic and aggregates messages published to that topic at specified intervals. The TICKscript below, cpu_alert.tick, publishes alerts to the cpu topic if CPU idle usage is less than 10% (or CPU usage is greater than 90%).

cpu_alert.tick

stream
    |from()
      .measurement('cpu')
      .groupBy(*)
    |alert()
      .crit(lambda: "usage_idle" < 10)
      .topic('cpu')

Add and enable this TICKscript with the following:

kapacitor define cpu_alert -tick cpu_alert.tick
kapacitor enable cpu_alert

Create a new handler file, aggregated_cpu_alerts.yaml, using the aggregate event handler that subscribes to the cpu topic, aggregates alerts from the last 10 minutes, and publishes aggregated messages to a new aggr_cpu topic. Handler files can be YAML or JSON.

aggr_cpu_alerts.yaml

id: aggr_cpu_alerts_10m
topic: cpu
kind: aggregate
options:
  interval: 600000000000
  topic: aggr_cpu
  message: '{{.Count}} CPU alerts in the last {{.Interval}}'

Add the handler file:

kapacitor define-topic-handler aggr_cpu_alerts_10m.yaml

Aggregated CPU alert messages will be published to the aggr_cpu topic every 10 minutes. Further handling of the aggregated events can be configured on the aggr_cpu topic.


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The future of Flux

Flux is going into maintenance mode. You can continue using it as you currently are without any changes to your code.

Flux is going into maintenance mode and will not be supported in InfluxDB 3.0. This was a decision based on the broad demand for SQL and the continued growth and adoption of InfluxQL. We are continuing to support Flux for users in 1.x and 2.x so you can continue using it with no changes to your code. If you are interested in transitioning to InfluxDB 3.0 and want to future-proof your code, we suggest using InfluxQL.

For information about the future of Flux, see the following: