Configuring Statsd¶
It’s easy to configure and use Statsd at runtime, but there are also two shortcuts available.
Runtime¶
If you are running the statsd server locally and on the default port, it’s extremely easy:
from statsd import StatsClient
statsd = StatsClient()
statsd.incr('foo')
There are three arguments to configure your StatsClient
instance.
They, and their defaults, are:
from statsd import StatsClient
statsd = StatsClient(host='localhost',
port=8125,
prefix=None,
maxudpsize=512)
host
is the host running the statsd server. It will support any kind
of name or IP address you might use.
port
is the statsd server port. The default for both server and
client is 8125
.
prefix
helps distinguish multiple applications or environments using
the same statsd server. It will be prepended to all stats,
automatically. For example:
from statsd import StatsClient
foo_stats = StatsClient(prefix='foo')
bar_stats = StatsClient(prefix='bar')
foo_stats.incr('baz')
bar_stats.incr('baz')
will produce two different stats, foo.baz
and bar.baz
. Without
the prefix
argument, or with the same prefix
, two
StatsClient
instances will update the same stats.
New in version 2.0.3.
maxudpsize
specifies the maximum packet size statsd will use. This is
an advanced options and should not be changed unless you know what you are
doing. Larger values then the default of 512 are generally deemed unsafe for use
on the internet. On a controlled local network or when the statsd server is
running on 127.0.0.1 larger values can decrease the number of UDP packets when
pipelining many metrics. Use with care!
In Django¶
If you are using Statsd in a Django application, you can configure a
default StatsClient
in the Django settings. All of these settings
are optional.
Here are the settings and their defaults:
STATSD_HOST = 'localhost'
STATSD_PORT = 8125
STATSD_PREFIX = None
STATSD_MAXUDPSIZE = 512
You can use the default StatsClient
simply:
from statsd.defaults.django import statsd
statsd.incr('foo')
From the Environment¶
Statsd isn’t only useful in Django or on the web. A default instance can also be configured via environment variables.
Here are the environment variables and their defaults:
STATSD_HOST=localhost
STATSD_PORT=8125
STATSD_PREFIX=None
STATSD_MAXUDPSIZE=512
and then in your Python application, you can simply do:
from statsd.defaults.env import statsd
statsd.incr('foo')
Note
As of version 3.0, this default instance is always available, configured with the default values, unless overridden by the environment.