Working with the API

This document describes how to manage services and service-level objectives (SLOs) by using the Cloud Monitoring API.

Service Monitoring adds the following resources to the Monitoring API:

This document refers to these additions collectively as the SLO API and illustrates the primary uses. For a general overview of the structures in the SLO API, see Constructs in the API. Comprehensive reference material appears under Cloud Monitoring API v3.

You can use the SLO API to do the following:

  • Create and manage services.

  • Create service-level objectives (SLOs) based on custom or predefined service-level indicators (SLIs) for any of your services.

Valid identifiers

Several methods in the SLO API use identifiers for different elements, particularly identifiers for project and services. These IDs adhere to the following rules:

  • Length: 1–63 characters
  • Characters: only lower-case letters, number, and hyphens
  • Initial character: lower-case letter
  • Terminal character: lower-case letter or a number, but not a hyphen

The regular expression for these rules is as follows: [a-z](?:[-a-z0-9]{0,61}[a-z0-9])?

Examples using curl

This section describes the conventions and setup used for invoking the SLO API by using the curl tool. If you are using this API through a client library, you can skip this section.

The examples on this page access the SLO API by using the curl tool to send HTTP requests to REST endpoints. Use the following information about authentication and about invoking curl to set the variables used in the invocations.

Authentication

  1. Create an environment variable to hold the ID of your scoping project of a metrics scope: These examples use PROJECT_ID:

    PROJECT_ID=my-test-service
    
  2. Authenticate to the Google Cloud CLI:

    gcloud auth login
    
  3. To avoid having to specify your project ID with each command, set it as the default by using gcloud CLI:

    gcloud config set project ${PROJECT_ID}
    
  4. Create an authorization token and capture it in an environment variable. These examples call the variable ACCESS_TOKEN:

    ACCESS_TOKEN=`gcloud auth print-access-token`
    

    You have to periodically refresh the access token. If commands that worked suddenly report that you are unauthenticated, re-issue this command.

  5. To verify that you got an access token, echo the ACCESS_TOKEN variable:

    echo ${ACCESS_TOKEN}
    ya29.GluiBj8o....
    

Invoking curl

Each curl invocation includes a set of arguments, followed by the URL of a SLO API resource. The common arguments include values specified by the PROJECT_ID and ACCESS_TOKEN environment variables. You might also have to specify other arguments, for example, to specify the type of the HTTP request (for example, -X DELETE). The default request is GET, so the examples don't specify it.

Each curl invocation has this general structure:

curl --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" <other_args> https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/<request>

For example, to list all the services in your project, issue the following GET request:

curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services

This request returns an array of service descriptions, with entries like the following, a GKE workload service with the service ID “my-test-service”:

{
  "services": [
    {
      "name": "projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/services/my-test-service",
      "displayName": "My Test GKE Workload Service",
      "basicService": {
        "serviceType": "GKE_WORKLOAD",
        "serviceLabels": {
          "cluster_name": "workload-test",
          "location": "us-central1-c",
          "namespace_name": "kube-system",
          "project_id": "lesser-weevil",
          "top_level_controller_name": "gke-metrics-controller",
          "top_level_controller_type": "DaemonSet"
        }
      },
      "gkeWorkload": {
        "projectId": "lesser-weevil",
        "location": "us-central1-c",
        "clusterName": "workload-test",
        "namespaceName": "kube-system",
        "topLevelControllerType": "DaemonSet",
        "topLevelControllerName": "gke-metrics-controller"
      },
      "source": "USER",
      "telemetry": {
        "resourceName": "//container.googleapis.com/projects/PROJECT_ID/zones/us-central1-c/clusters/workload-test/k8s/namespaces/kube-system/apps/daemonsets/gke-metrics-controller"
      }
    },
   ...
  ]
}

To see the configuration used to create this service, see Creating a service. Note that the gkeWorkload structure in this listing is derived from the basicService structure used to create the service. See Service for more information about the structure of a service.

Managing services

The Service resource acts as the root element for organizing your services. Aspects of a particular service, like its SLOs for example, are organized under the name of the service. The following service types are supported:

  • App Engine service: APP_ENGINE
  • Cloud Endpoints service: CLOUD_ENDPOINTS
  • Canonical Istio service: ISTIO_CANONICAL_SERVICE`
  • Cluster Istio service: CLUSTER_ISTIO
  • Cloud Run service: CLOUD_RUN
  • A set of Google Kubernetes Engine-based services:
    • GKE service: GKE_SERVICE
    • GKE namespace: GKE_NAMESPACE
    • GKE workload: GKE_WORKLOAD
  • Custom services: CUSTOM

For more information, see Basic service types or Basic GKE service types.

You can add SLOs to any service in your project by using the API. Managing SLOs covers commands to manipulate SLOs.

Service IDs

Each service has a fully qualified identifier called the resource name. This identifier is stored in the name field of the service description, for example:

"name": "projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/services/PROJECT_ID-zone-us-central1-a-cloudrun-istio-system-cluster-local-gateway",

Embedded in the resource name is a shorter ID for the service, the part of the resource name after the substring projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/services/

If you created your own service with the resource name projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/services/my-test-service, the service ID is my-test-service.

For brevity and accuracy, many curl examples assume the service ID is held in the environment variable SERVICE_ID so you can refer to it repeatedly.

Listing services

To retrieve information about all the services in your project, invoke the services.list method. To retrieve information about a specific service by service ID, use the services.get method:

Protocol

To list information about services by using curl, invoke the services.list or services.get method by sending a GET request to:

  • https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services to list all services
  • https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/SERVICE_ID to get a specific service

For example, the following request retrieves information about the service identified by the value stored in the environment variable SERVICE_ID:

curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}

Creating a service

To create a service, you specify a representation of the service type and send it to the services.create method. You can the service-type structures described in Basic service types and Basic GKE service types.

The structures vary, but the process for calling the API is the same. You must specify a display name for the service and a basicService field holding the service representation.

You can optionally specify the service ID you want the service to have. The following example shows the creation of a {[gke_name_short}} workload service:

Protocol

To create the service by using curl, send a POST message to the https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services endpoint:

  1. If you want to provide an ID for the service, create a variable for the service ID:

    SERVICE_ID=my-test-service
    

    This value is supplied in the URL query parameter service_id.

  2. Create a variable to hold the request body that describes the service:

    CREATE_SERVICE_POST_BODY=$(cat <<EOF
    {
      "displayName": "My Test GKE Workload Service",
      "basicService": {
        "serviceType": "GKE_WORKLOAD",
        "serviceLabels": {
          "cluster_name": "workload-test",
          "location": "us-central1-c",
          "namespace_name": "kube-system",
          "project_id": "PROJECT_ID",
          "top_level_controller_name": "gke-metrics-controller",
          "top_level_controller_type": "DaemonSet"
        }
      }
    }
    EOF
    )
    
  3. Post the request body to the endpoint, and specify the service ID as the value of the service_id query parameter:

    curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" --header "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d "${CREATE_SERVICE_POST_BODY}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services?service_id=${SERVICE_ID}
    

For examples of the structures associated with other services, see Basic service types or Basic GKE service types.

Deleting a service

To delete a service you created, invoke the services.delete method and specify the service ID.

Protocol

To delete a service by using curl, send a DELETE request to the https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/SERVICE_ID endpoint:

curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" -X DELETE https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}

Managing SLOs

You can create, delete, and retrieve SLOs by using the SLO API. You can have up to 500 SLOs for each service.

To manage SLOs for a service, you must have the service ID. SLOs are named based on the service they belong to. For information about identifying service IDs, see Service IDs.

Listing SLOs

To retrieve information about all the SLOs associated with a service, invoke the services.serviceLevelObjectives.list method. To retrieve information about a specific SLO by name, use the services.serviceLevelObjectives.get method:

Protocol

To list information about services by using curl, invoke the services.serviceLevelObjectives.list or services.serviceLevelObjectives.get method by sending a GET request to:

  • https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/[SERVICE_ID]/serviceLevelObjectives to list all SLOs
  • https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/[SERVICE_ID]/serviceLevelObjectives/SLO_ID to get a specific SLO

For example, the following request lists all SLOs associated with the service ID stored in the environment variable SERVICE_ID:

curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}/serviceLevelObjectives

The following is an availability SLO retrieved from the “currencyservice” service:

{
  "name": "projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/services/PROJECT_ID-zone-us-central1-c-csm-main-default-currencyservice/serviceLevelObjectives/3kavNVTtTMuzL7KcXAxqCQ",
  "displayName": "98% Availability in Calendar Week"
  "serviceLevelIndicator": {
    "basicSli": {
      "availability": {},
      "location": [
        "us-central1-c"
      ]
    }
  },
  "goal": 0.98,
  "calendarPeriod": "WEEK",
},

This SLO is built on an availability SLI, it sets a target performance goal of 98 percent, and it measures compliance over a calendar week. For more information on availability SLIs, see Service-level indicators.

See ServiceLevelObjective for more information about the structure of SLOs.

Retrieving a specific SLO

Each SLO has a unique identifier within the service, consisting of the string following serviceLevelObjectives in the SLO's name field. In the following example:

"name": "projects/PROJECT_NUMBER/services/PROJECT_ID-zone-us-central1-c-csm-main-default-currencyservice/serviceLevelObjectives/3kavNVTtTMuzL7KcXAxqCQ",

the SLO ID is the string 3kavNVTtTMuzL7KcXAxqCQ.

To retrieve information about this particular SLO, request the SLO by ID.

Protocol

To get a specific SLO by using curl, invoke the services.serviceLevelObjectives.get method by sending a GET request to https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/SERVICE_ID/serviceLevelObjectives/SLO_ID:

SLO_ID=dhefHDM4TwSRZEKIV4ZYEg

curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}/serviceLevelObjectives/${SLO_ID}

Creating an SLO

To create an SLO by using the SLO API, you must create a ServiceLevelObjective object and pass it to the serviceLevelObjectives.create method.

The structure of an SLO has many embedded structures, including one for the value of the serviceLevelIndicator field.

  • For Anthos Service Mesh, Istio on Google Kubernetes Engine, and App Engine services, the SLIs are pre-defined. You can use the Anthos Service Mesh console to create SLOs; all you have to do is specify the performance goals and compliance periods.

  • For other services, you must define SLOs by using the SLO API. To specify an SLO, you must create a value for the serviceLevelIndicator field, as well. See Creating a service-level indicator for some techniques, and Creating SLIs from metrics for a set of examples based on various sources.

You can also create SLIs by using the Google Cloud console. For more information, see Creating an SLO.

Skeleton of a SLO

The basic skeleton for building the SLO is as follows:

{
  "displayName": string,
  "serviceLevelIndicator": {
    object (ServiceLevelIndicator)
  },
  "goal": number,

  // Union field period can be only one of the following:
  "rollingPeriod": string,
  "calendarPeriod": enum (CalendarPeriod)
  // End of list of possible types for union field period.
}

You must specify the following:

  • Display name: a description of the SLO
  • A service-level indicator, which is one of the three types:
  • The performance goal (a percentage)
  • The compliance period, which one of two types:
    • A rolling period of some length (in seconds)
    • A calendar period

For more information about SLIs, performance goals, and compliance periods, see Concepts in service monitoring.

For Anthos Service Mesh, Istio on Google Kubernetes Engine, and App Engine services, the SLI type is the basic SLI.

For other services, you have to create a request-based SLI or a windows-based SLI. See Creating a service-level indicator for some techniques.

Example

After you have the SLI, you can build the SLO. The following example defines an SLO for a service that uses a basic SLI. You might have several SLOs on a single SLI, for example, one for 95% availability and one for 99% availability. The following example is an SLO for 95% availability over a calendar week:

{
  "serviceLevelIndicator": {
    "basicSli": {
      "availability": {},
      "location": [
        "us-central1-c"
      ]
    }
  },
  "goal": 0.95,
  "calendarPeriod": "WEEK",
  "displayName": "95% Availability in Calendar Week"
}

This example specifies an SLO for 75% availability over a rolling 3-day period:

{
  "serviceLevelIndicator": {
    "basicSli": {
      "availability": {},
      "location": [
        "us-central1-c"
      ]
    }
  },
  "goal": 0.75,
  "rollingPeriod": "259200s",
  "displayName": "75% Availability in Rolling 3 Days"
}

Protocol

To create an SLO by using curl, send a POST message to the https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/SERVICE_ID/serviceLevelObjectives endpoint:

  1. Create a variable for the service ID:

    SERVICE_ID=custom:my-test-service
    
  2. Create a variable to hold the request body, an instance of the ServiceLevelObjective object. This example uses one of the SLOs described previously:

    CREATE_SLO_POST_BODY=$(cat <<EOF
    {
      "serviceLevelIndicator": {
        "basicSli": {
          "availability": {},
          "location": [
            "us-central1-c"
          ]
        }
      },
      "goal": 0.75,
      "rollingPeriod": "259200s",
      "displayName": "75% Availability in Rolling 3 Days"
    }
    EOF
    )
    
  3. Post the request body to the endpoint:

    curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" --header "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d "${CREATE_SLO_POST_BODY}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}/serviceLevelObjectives
    

    Optionally, you can also specify a desired ID for the SLO as the value of the service_level_objective_id query parameter:

    SLO_ID=test-slo-id
    
    curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" --header "Content-Type: application/json" -X POST -d "${CREATE_SLO_POST_BODY}" https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}/serviceLevelObjectives?service_level_objective_id=${SLO_ID}
    

Deleting an SLO

To delete an SLO, invoke the services.serviceLevelObjectives.delete method and specify the ID of the SLO in your project:

Protocol

To delete an SLO by using curl, send a DELETE request to the https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/[PROJECT_ID]/services/SERVICE_ID/serviceLevelObjectives/SLO_ID endpoint:

curl  --http1.1 --header "Authorization: Bearer ${ACCESS_TOKEN}" -X DELETE https://monitoring.googleapis.com/v3/projects/${PROJECT_ID}/services/${SERVICE_ID}/serviceLevelObjectives/${SLO_ID}

Accessing SLO time series

SLO data is stored in time series, so you can use the timeSeries.list method to retrieve it. However, this data isn't stored in standard metric types, so you can't use the standard mechanism of specifying a metric-type filter to the timeSeries.list method.

Instead, SLO time series are retrieved by specifying another type of filter, a time-series selector, to the timeSeries.list method in the filter parameter. See Retrieving SLO data for information on using these selectors.

You also use time-series selectors to set up alerting policies programmatically. See Alerting on your burn rate for more information.