metrics/gauge.go

91 lines
2.3 KiB
Go

package metrics
import (
"fmt"
"io"
"math"
"sync/atomic"
)
// NewGauge registers and returns gauge with the given name, which calls f to obtain gauge value.
//
// name must be valid Prometheus-compatible metric with possible labels.
// For instance,
//
// - foo
// - foo{bar="baz"}
// - foo{bar="baz",aaa="b"}
//
// f must be safe for concurrent calls.
// if f is nil, then it is expected that the gauge value is changed via Gauge.Set() call.
//
// The returned gauge is safe to use from concurrent goroutines.
//
// See also FloatCounter for working with floating-point values.
func NewGauge(name string, f func() float64) *Gauge {
return defaultSet.NewGauge(name, f)
}
// Gauge is a float64 gauge.
type Gauge struct {
// valueBits contains uint64 representation of float64 passed to Gauge.Set.
valueBits uint64
// f is a callback, which is called for returning the gauge value.
f func() float64
}
// Get returns the current value for g.
func (g *Gauge) Get() float64 {
if f := g.f; f != nil {
return f()
}
n := atomic.LoadUint64(&g.valueBits)
return math.Float64frombits(n)
}
// Set sets g value to v.
//
// The g must be created with nil callback in order to be able to call this function.
func (g *Gauge) Set(v float64) {
if g.f != nil {
panic(fmt.Errorf("cannot call Set on gauge created with non-nil callback"))
}
n := math.Float64bits(v)
atomic.StoreUint64(&g.valueBits, n)
}
func (g *Gauge) marshalTo(prefix string, w io.Writer) {
v := g.Get()
if float64(int64(v)) == v {
// Marshal integer values without scientific notation
fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s %d\n", prefix, int64(v))
} else {
fmt.Fprintf(w, "%s %g\n", prefix, v)
}
}
func (g *Gauge) metricType() string {
return "gauge"
}
// GetOrCreateGauge returns registered gauge with the given name
// or creates new gauge if the registry doesn't contain gauge with
// the given name.
//
// name must be valid Prometheus-compatible metric with possible labels.
// For instance,
//
// - foo
// - foo{bar="baz"}
// - foo{bar="baz",aaa="b"}
//
// The returned gauge is safe to use from concurrent goroutines.
//
// Performance tip: prefer NewGauge instead of GetOrCreateGauge.
//
// See also FloatCounter for working with floating-point values.
func GetOrCreateGauge(name string, f func() float64) *Gauge {
return defaultSet.GetOrCreateGauge(name, f)
}