This package exposes Amazon CloudWatch as a data source for Google Chart Tools. With it, you can quickly generate graphs like this:
Cloudviz is proudly sponsored by Bizo. For details on the cloudviz's origin, see this blog post.
If you're looking for easiest way to start graphing CloudWatch data, check out Cloudgrapher. Cloudgrapher is a free CloudWatch dashboard, and is effectively a hosted, batteries-included extension of cloudviz.
- Familiarize yourself with:
- Download and install:
- Set **AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID **and **AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY **in
settings.py- You also have the alternative to use boto config system
- Make
cloudviz.pyweb-accessible using your favorite HTTP server
cloudviz expects the following query parameters as a JSON-encoded string passed to a qs parameter. Default values for each parameter may be set in settings.py:
namespace(str) - CloudWatch namespace (e.g., "AWS/ELB")metric(str) - CloudWatch metric (e.g., "Latency")unit(str) - CloudWatch unit (e.g., "Seconds")statistics(list of str) - CloudWatch statistics (e.g., ["Average","Maximum"])dimensions(dict of str) - CloudWatch dimensions (e.g., {"LoadBalancerName": "example-lb"})end_time(date) - end time for queried interval (e.g., new Date)start_time(date) - start time for queried interval (e.g., start_time.setDate(end_time.getDate-3))range(int) - desired time range, in hours, for queried interval (e.g., 24). Note:rangemay be substituted forstart_time,end_time, or both:- if
rangeandend_timeare specified,start_timeis calculated as (end_time-range) - if
rangeandstart_timeare specified,end_timeis calculated as (start_time+range) - if only
rangeis specified,end_timeis set to the current time andstart_timeis calculated as ( current time -range)
- if
period(int) - (optional) CloudWatch period (e.g., 120). Notes: must be a multiple of 60; ifperiodis not specified, it will be automatically calculated as the smallest valid value (resulting in the most data points being returned) for the queried interval.region(str) - (optional) AWS region (e.g., "us-west-1"; default is "us-east-1")calc_rate(bool) - (optional) when set to True andstatisticsincludes "Sum", cloudviz converts Sum values to per-second Rate values by dividing Sum by seconds inperiod(e.g., for RequestCount, 150 Requests per period / 60 seconds per period = 2.5 Requests per second)cloudwatch_queries(list of dict) - encapsulates each CloudWatch query, allowing for multiple queries to be graphed in a single chart. Minimally,cloudwatch_queriesmust contain one dict with prefix defined. Optionally, any of the above parameters may also be defined inside one or morecloudwatch_queriesprefix(str) - text identifier for data returned by a single CloudWatch query. This is prepended to the chart label of each data series (e.g., "My LB ")
Here's a JavaScript snippet for building a URL to pass to cloudviz. See examples/host-cpu.html for the rest of the code. Note that **start_time **and **end_time **are set in settings.py.
var qa = {
"namespace": "AWS/EC2", // CloudWatch namespace (string
"metric": "CPUUtilization", // CloudWatch metric (string)
"unit": "Percent", // CloudWatch unit (string)
"statistics": ["Average","Maximum"], // CloudWatch statistics (list of strings)
"period": 600, // CloudWatch period (int)
"cloudwatch_queries": // (list of dictionaries)
[
{
"prefix": "Instance 1 CPU ", // label prefix for associated data sets (string)
"dimensions": { "InstanceId": "i-bd14d3d5"} // CloudWatch dimensions (dictionary)
},
{
"prefix": "Instance 2 CPU "
"dimensions": { "InstanceId": "i-c514d3ad"}
}
]
};
var qs = JSON.stringify(qa);
var url = 'http://' + window.location.host + '/cloudviz?qs=' + qs; // assumes cloudviz.py is called at /data
The resulting URL should look something like this: http://localhost:8080/cloudviz?qs={%22namespace%22:%22AWS/EC2%22,%22metric%22:%22CPUUtilization%22,%22unit%22:%22Percent%22,%22statistics%22:[%22Average%22,%22Maximum%22],%22period%22:600,%22cloudwatch_queries%22:[{%22prefix%22:%22Instance%201%20CPU%20%22,%22dimensions%22:{%22InstanceId%22:%22i-bd14d3d5%22}},{%22prefix%22:%22Instance%202%20CPU%20%22,%22dimensions%22:{%22InstanceId%22:%22i-c514d3ad%22}}]}&tqx=reqId%3A0
And the graph, when passed through Google's Visualization API:
Additional examples can be found in examples/, and are written to act as plug-and-play templates.
Copyright 2010 Bizo, Inc. (Mike Babineau <[email protected]>)
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License"); you may not use this file except in compliance with the License. You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS, WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied. See the License for the specific language governing permissions and limitations under the License.

