Python Client for Stackdriver Monitoring¶
Stackdriver Monitoring: collects metrics, events, and metadata from Google Cloud, Amazon Web Services (AWS), hosted uptime probes, and application instrumentation. Using the BindPlane service, you can also collect this data from over 150 common application components, on-premise systems, and hybrid cloud systems. Stackdriver ingests that data and generates insights via dashboards, charts, and alerts. BindPlane is included with your Google Cloud project at no additional cost.
Quick Start¶
In order to use this library, you first need to go through the following steps:
Installation¶
Install this library in a virtual environment using venv. venv is a tool that creates isolated Python environments. These isolated environments can have separate versions of Python packages, which allows you to isolate one project’s dependencies from the dependencies of other projects.
With venv, it’s possible to install this library without needing system install permissions, and without clashing with the installed system dependencies.
Code samples and snippets¶
Code samples and snippets live in the samples/ folder.
Supported Python Versions¶
Our client libraries are compatible with all current active and maintenance versions of Python.
Python >= 3.7
Unsupported Python Versions¶
Python <= 3.6
If you are using an end-of-life version of Python, we recommend that you update as soon as possible to an actively supported version.
Mac/Linux¶
python3 -m venv <your-env>
source <your-env>/bin/activate
pip install google-cloud-monitoring
Windows¶
py -m venv <your-env>
.\<your-env>\Scripts\activate
pip install google-cloud-monitoring
Next Steps¶
Read the Client Library Documentation for Stackdriver Monitoring to see other available methods on the client.
Read the Stackdriver Monitoring Product documentation to learn more about the product and see How-to Guides.
View this README to see the full list of Cloud APIs that we cover.
Note
Because this client uses grpc
library, it is safe to
share instances across threads. In multiprocessing scenarios, the best
practice is to create client instances after the invocation of
os.fork()
by multiprocessing.pool.Pool
or
multiprocessing.Process
.
API Reference¶
Changelog¶
For a list of all google-cloud-monitoring
releases:
- Changelog
- 2.23.1 (2024-11-11)
- 2.23.0 (2024-10-24)
- 2.22.2 (2024-07-30)
- 2.22.1 (2024-07-08)
- 2.22.0 (2024-06-24)
- 2.21.0 (2024-04-17)
- 2.20.0 (2024-04-16)
- 2.19.4 (2024-04-15)
- 2.19.3 (2024-03-05)
- 2.19.2 (2024-02-22)
- 2.19.1 (2024-02-06)
- 2.19.0 (2024-02-01)
- 2.18.0 (2023-12-12)
- 2.17.0 (2023-12-07)
- 2.16.0 (2023-10-09)
- 2.15.1 (2023-07-04)
- 2.15.0 (2023-05-25)
- 2.14.2 (2023-03-23)
- 2.14.1 (2023-01-20)
- 2.14.0 (2023-01-10)
- 2.13.0 (2023-01-09)
- 2.12.0 (2022-12-15)
- 2.11.3 (2022-10-07)
- 2.11.2 (2022-10-03)
- 2.11.1 (2022-08-12)
- 2.11.0 (2022-08-06)
- 2.10.1 (2022-07-14)
- 2.10.0 (2022-07-06)
- 2.9.2 (2022-06-06)
- 2.9.1 (2022-03-05)
- 2.9.0 (2022-02-26)
- 2.8.0 (2021-11-16)
- 2.7.0 (2021-11-09)
- 2.6.0 (2021-11-01)
- 2.6.0 (2021-10-07)
- 2.5.2 (2021-09-30)
- 2.5.1 (2021-09-24)
- 2.5.0 (2021-08-27)
- 2.4.2 (2021-07-28)
- 2.4.1 (2021-07-20)
- 2.4.0 (2021-07-01)
- 2.3.0 (2021-06-18)
- 2.2.1 (2021-03-29)
- 2.2.0 (2021-03-25)
- 2.1.0 (2021-03-12)
- 2.0.1 (2021-02-18)
- 2.0.0 (2020-10-06)
- 1.1.0 (2020-08-20)
- 1.0.0 (2020-06-03)
- 0.36.0 (2020-05-13)
- 0.35.0 (2020-04-21)
- 0.34.0
- 0.33.0
- 0.32.0
- 0.31.1
- 0.31.0
- 0.30.1
- 0.30.0
- 0.29.0
- 0.28.1
- 0.28.0