In today’s world of distributed systems and microservices, ensuring our application is observable and monitorable is just as important as building the core functionality. We’ve already set up critical features like a NGINX load balancer, a rate limiter, and a circuit breaker, the next step is to focus on observability and monitoring.
In this blog post, We’ll walk through how to add Spring Boot Actuator, Prometheus, and Grafana to our application to build a robust observability stack. This will help us visualize our application’s health, track performance metrics, and troubleshoot issues quickly and efficiently.
What Is Observability?
Observability refers to your ability to understand the internal state of a system based on the data it produces. The three pillars of observability are:
- Metrics: Quantifiable data points (e.g., request rates, memory usage, CPU utilization).
- Logs: Record of events (e.g., errors, warnings, or business events).
- Traces: Follow a request as it flows through multiple services.
By focusing on metrics and logs, we can build powerful dashboards and alerts that ensure your application remains performant and reliable.
Why Observability Is Important for Our Application
Our current application architecture already has essential components:
- NGINX Load Balancer: Distributes traffic across servers.
- Rate Limiter: Prevents overloading by limiting the number of requests.
- Circuit Breaker: Ensures resilience by stopping calls to failing services.
However, while these tools enhance performance and reliability, they don’t tell us why something might be failing or how our system is performing under load. Observability tools like Actuator, Prometheus, and Grafana will:
- Track real-time metrics for application health and performance.
- Help visualize trends and potential bottlenecks.
- Trigger alerts when metrics cross critical thresholds.
The Observability Stack
Add to your pom.xml file these dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>io.github.resilience4j</groupId>
<artifactId>resilience4j-micrometer</artifactId>
<version>2.2.0</version>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>org.springframework.boot</groupId>
<artifactId>spring-boot-starter-actuator</artifactId>
</dependency>
<dependency>
<groupId>io.micrometer</groupId>
<artifactId>micrometer-registry-prometheus</artifactId>
<version>1.14.1</version>
</dependency>
Update the configurations of your application.properties
resilience4j.circuitbreaker.metrics.enabled=true
management.health.circuitbreakers.enabled=true
management.endpoints.web.exposure.include=health,metrics,circuitbreakers,prometheus
management.endpoint.health.show-details=always
management.endpoint.health.access=unrestricted
management.endpoint.prometheus.access=unrestricted
management.prometheus.metrics.export.enabled=true
Explanation
management.endpoints.web.exposure.include=health,metrics,circuitbreakers,prometheus
This line is exposing the URI from actuator, so we can consume URIs like:
actuator/
-
actuator/health
, -
actuator/metrics
, -
actuator/circuitbreakers
, actuator/prometheus
Using prometheus with docker
In our docker-compose.yaml file, we create a service for prometheus:
prometheus:
image: prom/prometheus:latest
ports:
- "9090:9090"
networks:
- app_network
volumes:
- ./prometheus/prometheus.yaml:/etc/prometheus/prometheus.yml
- prometheus_data:/prometheus
Config file for prometheus
At the root of you project create a folder called prometheus
and inside that a file called prometheus.yaml
global:
scrape_interval: 15s
evaluation_interval: 15s
scrape_configs:
- job_name: 'spring-boot-app'
metrics_path: '/actuator/prometheus'
static_configs:
- targets:
- 'spring-server-1:8080'
- 'spring-server-2:8080'
labels:
environment: development
application: spring-boot
Now, when we run:
docker compose up -d
A prometheus container will start, and consume metrics from the URI actuator/metrics
from our spring-boot-servers.
We can see a dashboard at http://localhost:9090/
, for example:
But, this is not cool. We want to see some graphs, and for this we use Grafana.
Add Grafana
Update your docker compose file with another service:
grafana:
image: grafana/grafana:latest
networks:
- app_network
ports:
- "3000:3000"
volumes:
- grafana_data:/var/lib/grafana
Now you can access grafana dashboard on http://localhost:3000
First they will ask your credentials, just write admin for user and password.
Configure Prometheus
On the left up menu, go to connections > add new connection and search for Prometheus
Configure the connection url like this:
Click on the button save & test, if everything is fine you can start choose your dashboard.
Dashboards
Go to Grafana Dashboards and choose a dashboard for you.
For this, I choose the Spring Boot Resilience4j Circuit Breaker (3.x)
If everything works fine you will see something like this:
Feel free to browse other dashboards.
Final Words
By integrating Actuator, Prometheus, and Grafana into our application, we’ve taken a major step toward building a highly observable system. With metrics, logging, and monitoring in place, you’ll be able to:
- Gain full visibility into your application and infrastructure.
- Proactively detect and resolve issues.
- Optimize performance and reliability.
With these tools in place, we’ll not only monitor our system effectively but also lay the foundation for scaling confidently in the future.
Top comments (2)
Nice, explanation!
Thanks !