Documentation

Prometheus output data format

Use the prometheus output data format (serializer) to convert Telegraf metrics into the Prometheus text exposition format.

When used with the prometheus input plugin, set metric_version = 2 in the input to properly round-trip metrics.

Configuration

[[outputs.file]]
  files = ["stdout"]
  data_format = "prometheus"

  ## Optional: Enable batch serialization for improved efficiency.
  ## This is an output plugin option that affects how the serializer
  ## receives metrics.
  # use_batch_format = false

  ## Serializer options (prometheus-specific)
  # prometheus_export_timestamp = false
  # prometheus_sort_metrics = false
  # prometheus_string_as_label = false
  # prometheus_compact_encoding = false

Serializer options

OptionTypeDefaultDescription
prometheus_export_timestampbooleanfalseInclude timestamp on each sample
prometheus_sort_metricsbooleanfalseSort metric families and samples (useful for debugging)
prometheus_string_as_labelbooleanfalseConvert string fields to labels
prometheus_compact_encodingbooleanfalseOmit HELP metadata to reduce payload size

Metric type mappings

Use prometheus_metric_types to explicitly set metric types, overriding Telegraf’s automatic type detection. Supports glob patterns.

[[outputs.file]]
  files = ["stdout"]
  data_format = "prometheus"

  [outputs.file.prometheus_metric_types]
    counter = ["*_total", "*_count"]
    gauge = ["*_current", "*_ratio"]

Metric naming

Prometheus metric names are created by joining the measurement name with the field key.

Special case: When the measurement name is prometheus, it is not included in the final metric name.

Labels

Prometheus labels are created from Telegraf tags. String fields are ignored by default and do not produce Prometheus metrics. Set prometheus_string_as_label = true to convert string fields to labels. Set log_level = "trace" to see serialization issues.

Histograms and summaries

Histogram and summary metrics require special consideration. These metric types accumulate state across observations:

  • Histograms count observations in configurable buckets
  • Summaries calculate quantiles over a sliding time window

Use prometheus_client for histograms and summaries

Serializers process metrics in batches and have no memory of previous batches. When histogram or summary data arrives across multiple batches, the serializer cannot combine them correctly.

For example, a histogram with 10 buckets might arrive as:

  • Batch 1: buckets 1-5
  • Batch 2: buckets 6-10

The serializer outputs each batch independently, producing two incomplete histograms instead of one complete histogram.

The prometheus_client output plugin maintains metric state in memory and produces correct output regardless of batch boundaries.

# Recommended for histogram/summary metrics
[[outputs.prometheus_client]]
  listen = ":9273"

Use the serializer for counters and gauges

For counters and gauges, the prometheus serializer works well. Enable use_batch_format = true in your output plugin for more efficient output.

[[outputs.file]]
  files = ["stdout"]
  data_format = "prometheus"
  use_batch_format = true

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InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0: API tokens are hashed by default

Stronger token security in InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0 — tokens are hashed on disk by default. Existing tokens are hashed on first startup and can’t be recovered afterward. Capture any plaintext tokens you still need before you upgrade.

View InfluxDB OSS 2.9.0 release notes

Hashed tokens authenticate exactly like unhashed tokens — clients and integrations keep working.

Also new in 2.9.0:

  • Configurable backup compression
  • Restore support for backups containing hashed tokens
  • Tighter Edge Data Replication queue validation
  • Flux upgrade
  • Compaction reliability improvements

Key enhancements in Explorer 1.8

Explorer 1.8 is now available with streaming data subscriptions (beta), line protocol preview, and query history & saved queries.

View Explorer 1.8 release notes

Explorer 1.8 includes new features and improvements that make it easier to ingest, explore, and manage data.

Highlights:

  • Streaming data subscriptions (beta): Stream data into Explorer from MQTT, Kafka, and AMQP sources.
  • Line protocol preview: Preview line protocol, schema, and parse errors before data is written.
  • Custom sample data: Generate custom sample datasets with line protocol and schema preview.
  • Query history and saved queries: Browse query history and save/re-run named queries.
  • Retention period management: Set, update, or clear retention periods on databases and tables.

For more details, see Explorer 1.8 release notes

InfluxDB 3.10 is now available

InfluxDB 3 Core 3.10 adds an automatic catalog format upgrade, a configurable query-concurrency limit, and processing engine improvements.

Key updates in InfluxDB 3 Core 3.10:

  • Catalog format upgrade: the on-disk catalog automatically upgrades from format v2 to v3 on first 3.10 startup. Migration is one-way—back up your catalog before upgrading.
  • --max-concurrent-queries: limit concurrent queries (adjustable at runtime).
  • GET /ready endpoint for readiness probes.
  • Processing engine: cross-database queries and trigger lockdown flags.

For more information, see the InfluxDB 3 Core release notes.

InfluxDB 3.10 is now available

InfluxDB 3 Enterprise 3.10 adds automated backup and restore, row-level deletions, and user management, with an automatic catalog format upgrade and performance preview improvements.

Key updates in InfluxDB 3 Enterprise 3.10:

  • Catalog format upgrade: the on-disk catalog automatically upgrades from format v2 to v3 on first 3.10 startup. Migration is one-way—back up your catalog before upgrading.
  • Automated backup and restore (beta)
  • Row-level deletions
  • User management (authentication and RBAC) — preview
  • Performance preview improvements

Backup and restore, row-level deletions, and the performance preview require the Enterprise storage engine upgrade (opt-in beta). Beta and preview features are subject to breaking changes and aren’t recommended for production use.

For more information, see the InfluxDB 3 Enterprise release notes

Telegraf Enterprise now in public beta

Get early access to the Telegraf Controller and provide feedback to help shape the future of Telegraf Enterprise.

See the Blog Post

The upcoming Telegraf Enterprise offering is for organizations running Telegraf at scale and is comprised of two key components:

  • Telegraf Controller: A control plane (UI + API) that centralizes Telegraf configuration management and agent health visibility.
  • Telegraf Enterprise Support: Official support for Telegraf Controller and Telegraf plugins.

Join the Telegraf Enterprise beta to get early access to the Telegraf Controller and provide feedback to help shape the future of Telegraf Enterprise.

For more information:

Telegraf Controller v0.0.7-beta now available

Telegraf Controller v0.0.7-beta is now available with new features, improvements, bug fixes, and an important breaking change.

View the release notes
Download Telegraf Controller v0.0.7-beta

InfluxDB Docker latest tag changing to InfluxDB 3 Core

On September 15, 2026, the latest tag for InfluxDB Docker images will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments.

If using Docker to install and run InfluxDB, the latest tag will point to InfluxDB 3 Core. To avoid unexpected upgrades, use specific version tags in your Docker deployments. For example, if using Docker to run InfluxDB v2, replace the latest version tag with a specific version tag in your Docker pull command–for example:

docker pull influxdb:2