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CloudWatch RDS OS Metrics

There are quite a few things going on under the hood of Aurora, some of which might be consuming extra resources without much explanation.

For each Aurora Postgres instance, there are RDS processes, Aurora Storage Daemon, rsdadmin background processes, aurora runtimes and OS processes. You can see a glimpse of them in the RDS dashboard, under Monitoring -> OS Process List.

After spending months tracking down unexplained CPU utilization, I discovered that the RDS processes consumes a majority of the CPU when query logging is enabled. After several months of uptime, the CPU utilization increases even more.

This Lambda script pulls metrics from the CloudWatch RDSOSMetrics logs, parses the CPU and memory utilization for each PID, aggregates, categorizes and then publishes custom CloudWatch metrics for a given RDS instance.

OS Metrics CPU Utilization

OS Metrics CPU Utilization

OS Metrics Memory Utilization

OS Metrics Memory Utilization

It also pulls the overall CPU metrics like user CPU, system, IRQ, nice, etc and publishes them as a separate metric.

CPU Metrics

Inspiration for this project was taken from the rds top script.

While this was written for Aurora Postgres, it could be tailored for MySQL as well.

First Local Test

If you have Ruby installed, you can run a quick test without doing all of the deployment work below, try this out:

$ bundle install
$ export AWS_ACCESS_KEY_ID=...
$ export AWS_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY=...
$ export AWS_DEFAULT_REGION=...
$ bundle exec ruby runner.rb my-instance-name

Wait a few minutes, and then check out your CloudWatch custom metrics.

There should be RDS_OS_Metrics and RDS_CPU_Metrics custom namespaces with everything fun in it.

First Deployment

Install Docker for the CI build process

$ ./script/ci_build
$ ./script/create_function --profile me --region us-east-1 --name rdsosmetrics

Note: You only need one function deployed. EventBridge Rules can execute the same function for many instance names.

Create an EventBridge Rule

Create a Rule

Given that your database instance name is called prod-writer:

  • Name: prod-writer_RDS_OS_Metrics
  • Description: Publish RDS metrics to CloudWatch for prod-writer
  • Rule type: Schedule (click Next)
  • A schedule that runs at a regular rate: 1 minute (click Next)
  • AWS Service -> Lambda function -> rdsosmetrics
  • Additional settings -> Configure target input -> Constant (JSON text)
  • Paste in parameters to call the function with:
{ 
  "instance_id": "prod-writer", 
  "interval": "1 minute"
}
  • instance_id: The instance name of the RDS Aurora instance to publish metrics for

  • interval: Human readable duration that this script runs. Aggregates stats over this time frame for publishing to CloudWatch metrics. Default: "1 minute"

  • Set Maximum age to 1 minute, retry attempts to 0. If the script fails, you don't want re-runs to build up.

Create a new rule for each Aurora instance you want to monitor.

Create a CloudWatch Widget

Use this as a JSON source. I'm interested in RDS Processes and regular Postgres user CPU activity. Everything else I group into an Other category.

{
  "metrics": [
    [ "RDS_OS_Metrics", "CPU", "service", "postgres", "rds_instance", "prod-writer", { "id": "m1" } ],
    [ "...", "rds-processes", ".", ".", { "id": "m2" } ],
    [ "...", "postgres-aurora", ".", ".", { "id": "m3", "visible": false } ],
    [ "...", "aurora-storage", ".", ".", { "id": "m4", "visible": false } ],
    [ "...", "postgres-background", ".", ".", { "id": "m5", "visible": false } ],
    [ "...", "os-processes", ".", ".", { "id": "m6", "visible": false } ],
    [ { "expression": "m3 + m4 + m5 + m6", "label": "Other", "id": "e1" } ]
  ],
  "view": "timeSeries",
  "stacked": false,
  "region": "us-east-1",
  "stat": "Average",
  "period": 60
}

Note: The metrics have minimum, maximum, sum and count published. Average is derived in CloudWatch. Since it's hard to catch bursty CPU activity over a whole minute, try using stat=Maximum or Sum to see what looks better.

And one for memory, although this isn't as interesting:

{
  "metrics": [
    [ "RDS_OS_Metrics", "Memory", "service", "postgres", "rds_instance", "prod-writer", { "id": "m1" } ],
    [ "...", "rds-processes", ".", ".", { "id": "m2" } ],
    [ "...", "postgres-aurora", ".", ".", { "id": "m3", "visible": false } ],
    [ "...", "aurora-storage", ".", ".", { "id": "m4", "visible": false } ],
    [ "...", "postgres-background", ".", ".", { "id": "m5", "visible": false } ],
    [ "...", "os-processes", ".", ".", { "id": "m6", "visible": false } ],
    [ { "expression": "m3 + m4 + m5 + m6", "label": "Other", "id": "e1" } ]
  ],
  "view": "timeSeries",
  "stacked": false,
  "region": "us-east-1",
  "stat": "Average",
  "period": 60
}

Switching to overall CPU metrics, create something like:

{
  "metrics": [
    [ "RDS_CPU_Metrics", "nice", "rds_instance", "prod-writer" ],
    [ ".", "irq", ".", "." ],
    [ ".", "guest", ".", "." ],
    [ ".", "idle", ".", ".", { "visible": false } ],
    [ ".", "steal", ".", "." ],
    [ ".", "user", ".", "." ],
    [ ".", "wait", ".", "." ],
    [ ".", "total", ".", "." ],
    [ ".", "system", ".", "." ]
  ],
  "view": "timeSeries",
  "stacked": false,
  "region": "us-east-1",
  "stat": "Average",
  "period": 60
}

Updating New Code

$ ./script/ci_build
$ ./script/update_function --profile me --region us-east-1 --name rdsosmetrics

Wishlist Items

If anyone would like to add features to this script, here are a few things that would be great to have:

  • The option to publish per-second granularity metrics for each RDSOSMetrics record. This would allow CloudWatch to offer better statistics like percentiles, IQM, WM, PR, etc.
  • Option to publish more metrics like uptime, disk IO, network IO, load average. Although most of these are available in some other form, they're a little more annoying to work with. (EX: Load average comes from Logs Insights, which is annoying to run stats and aggregations with)
  • Option to monitor mysql instances. Categorize the various mysqld processes.

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Advanced CloudWatch metrics for RDS

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