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Bonita Runtime Monitoring

Discover how to monitor a runtime environment running Bonita

In Community edition, monitoring metrics can be published via 2 channels: JMX and / or Logging file.
In Subscription editions, monitoring metrics can be published via 3 channels: JMX and / or Logging file and / or a Prometheus endpoint.

Why monitoring ?

Monitoring a Production environment is crucial to ensure the runtime is correctly sized and tuned.

Bonita provides a series of technical and Bonita-related metrics to monitor the health of Bonita runtime environment.
Some metrics are enabled by default and cannot be disabled. Some others are optional and can be enabled according to your needs.

Glossary

Work: a unit piece of code that executes parts of process instances, tasks, BPM elements…​ and allows the processes to execute forwards. It executes in a Java thread.

Connector work: a unit piece of code that specifically executes Bonita connectors.

Work queue: a queue storing pending works before they are taken by threads for execution.

Metric: an indicator (generally a numeric value) giving information on the system. They can be technical (number of running threads on the JVM), or more Bonita-oriented (total number of connectors executed).

Metric Publisher: a publisher is responsible for exposing the activated metrics. It is a channel on which metrics are published. Provided metric publishers are JMX (all editions), Log files (all editions), Prometheus (Subscription editions only).

Which metrics are available?

Bonita-related metrics are enabled by default and cannot be disabled. Here are the provided metrics:

  • The number of currently running works, under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.work.running

  • The number of currently pending works, waiting in the work queue to be treated, under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.work.pending

  • The total number of executed works (since the last start of Bonita runtime), under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.work.executed

  • The number of currently running connector works, under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.connector.running

  • The number of currently pending connector works, waiting in the connector work queue to be treated, under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.connector.pending

  • The total number of executed connector works (since the last start of Bonita runtime), under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.connector.executed

  • The total number of BPMN message couples executed (since the last start of Bonita runtime), under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.message.executed

  • The total number of BPMN message couples potentially matched (since the last start of Bonita runtime), under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.message.potential (starting from 7.10.3)

  • The total number of BPMN message matching tasks retriggered (since the last start of Bonita runtime), under the logical key name bonita.bpmengine.message.retriggered_tasks (starting from 7.10.3)

Technical metrics

The following available metrics are disabled by default and can be enabled.

  • Several metrics related to JVM memory, under the logical key names *jvm.memory. and *jvm.buffer.

  • Several metrics related to JVM threads, under the logical key name jvm.threads.*

  • Several metrics related to JVM garbage collection, under the logical key name jvm.gc.*

  • Several metrics related to Worker / Connector thread pools, under the logical key name executor.*

  • Several metrics related to Hibernate statistics, under the logical key name hibernate.*

  • Several metrics related to Tomcat, under the logical key name tomcat.*

Activating specific monitoring metrics

Retrieve current configuration by running:

./setup/setup.sh pull

Activating Metrics Publishers

Edit file ./setup/platform_conf/current/platform_engine/bonita-platform-community-custom.properties
You will see, in the # MONITORING section, a series of properties with their default value:

## MONITORING
## PUBLISHERS = where to publish?
## publish metrics to JMX:
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.publisher.jmx.enable=true
## periodically print metrics to logs (bonita-related metrics only):
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.publisher.logging.enable=false
## print to logs every minute by default (in the ISO-8601 duration format):
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.publisher.logging.step=PT1M

These are the metric publishers that can be activated.
In Community edition, 2 metric publishers are provided:

  • JMX (enabled by default), that allows to use any JMX console to monitor your favorite metrics (except JVM metrics, as they are already published by the JVM itself by default)

  • Logging (disabled by default), that regularly prints to standard Bonita log file the Bonita-related metrics. Print interval can be changed (property org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.logging.step).

To change any value, uncomment the line by removing the # character, and change the true / false value.
Then push your configuration changes to database:

./setup/setup.sh push

Then restart the Tomcat server for the changes to take effect.

Activating specific metric indicators

Edit the same file ./setup/platform_conf/current/platform_engine/bonita-platform-community-custom.properties

## METRICS = what to publish?
##
## Note: Bonita-related metrics are automatically published.
## They are active by default and cannot be disabled.
##
## publish technical metrics related to Worker / Connector thread pools:
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.metrics.executors.enable=false
## publish technical metrics related to HIBERNATE statistics
## To activate, simply set property (a few lines above) 'bonita.platform.persistence.generate_statistics=true'

These are the metrics (counters) that can be exposed.
All configurable metrics are disabled by default and can be enabled separately.
They provide information about:

  • Worker / Connector thread pools

  • Hibernate statistics

Each of these metrics provides many different counters to finely understand what is going on.

To change any value, uncomment the line by removing the # character, and change the true / false value.
Then push your configuration changes to database:

./setup/setup.sh push

Then restart the Tomcat server for the changes to take effect.

Subscription-only monitoring

Additional metrics

Thanks to additional publisher, additional metrics can be published

These metrics provide information about:

  • the running JVM memory

  • JVM threads

  • Garbage collection usage

  • Tomcat counters on sessions, threads, requests, connections…​

They can be activated by editing file ./setup/platform_conf/current/platform_engine/bonita-platform-sp-custom.properties

## METRICS = what to publish?
##
## publish metrics related to JVM memory:
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.metrics.jvm.memory.enable=false
## publish metrics related to JVM Threads:
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.metrics.jvm.threads.enable=false
## publish metrics related to JVM garbage collection:
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.metrics.jvm.gc.enable=false
## publish technical metrics related to Tomcat (if in a Tomcat context):
#org.bonitasoft.engine.monitoring.metrics.tomcat.enable=false

Prometheus publisher

For Enterprise, Performance, Efficiency, and Teamwork editions only.

Prometheus

In addition to these metric publishers, Bonita Subscription editions can also publish to a REST endpoint in the Prometheus format, that can easily be consumed by Prometheus and then displayed by graphical tools like Grafana, etc.

To activate Prometheus endpoint in Bonita, simply edit file ./setup/platform_conf/current/platform_engine/bonita-platform-sp-custom.properties and change:

# publish metrics to Prometheus
# com.bonitasoft.engine.plugin.monitoring.publisher.prometheus.enable=false

to

# publish metrics to Prometheus
com.bonitasoft.engine.plugin.monitoring.publisher.prometheus.enable=true
./setup/setup.sh push

Then restart the Tomcat server for the changes to take effect.

This exposes all activated metrics (see activating-specific-metric-indicators, above) at endpoint:

http://<SERVER_URL>/bonita/metrics

Use this URL to configure your installed Prometheus configuration in order to record and display the metrics.

Sample extract of exposed Prometheus data:

# HELP jvm_buffer_memory_used_bytes An estimate of the memory that the Java virtual machine is using for this buffer pool
# TYPE jvm_buffer_memory_used_bytes gauge
jvm_buffer_memory_used_bytes{id="direct",} 565248.0
jvm_buffer_memory_used_bytes{id="mapped",} 0.0
# HELP bonita_bpmengine_connector_pending
# TYPE bonita_bpmengine_connector_pending gauge
bonita_bpmengine_connector_pending{tenant="1",} 0.0
# HELP bonita_bpmengine_connector_executed_total
# TYPE bonita_bpmengine_connector_executed_total counter
bonita_bpmengine_connector_executed_total{tenant="1",} 0.0
# HELP bonita_bpmengine_work_running
# TYPE bonita_bpmengine_work_running gauge
bonita_bpmengine_work_running{tenant="1",} 0.0
# HELP jvm_gc_max_data_size_bytes Max size of old generation memory pool
# TYPE jvm_gc_max_data_size_bytes gauge
jvm_gc_max_data_size_bytes 7.16177408E8
# HELP bonita_bpmengine_work_pending
# TYPE bonita_bpmengine_work_pending gauge
bonita_bpmengine_work_pending{tenant="1",} 0.0
# HELP tomcat_servlet_request_max_seconds
# TYPE tomcat_servlet_request_max_seconds gauge
tomcat_servlet_request_max_seconds{name="default",} 0.0
tomcat_servlet_request_max_seconds{name="dispatcherServlet",} 0.104
# HELP tomcat_threads_config_max_threads
# TYPE tomcat_threads_config_max_threads gauge
tomcat_threads_config_max_threads{name="http-nio-8080",} 200.0
# HELP tomcat_sessions_expired_sessions_total
# TYPE tomcat_sessions_expired_sessions_total counter
tomcat_sessions_expired_sessions_total 0.0
# HELP tomcat_sessions_active_max_sessions
# TYPE tomcat_sessions_active_max_sessions gauge
tomcat_sessions_active_max_sessions 0.0
...