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Configure MQTT broker diagnostics settings

Important

This setting requires modifying the Broker resource and can only be configured at initial deployment time using the Azure CLI or Azure Portal. A new deployment is required if Broker configuration changes are needed. To learn more, see Customize default Broker.

Diagnostic settings allow you to configure metrics, logs, and self-check for the MQTT broker.

Metrics

Metrics provide information about the current and past health and status of the MQTT broker. These metrics are emitted in OpenTelemetry format (OTLP). They can be converted to Prometheus format using an OpenTelemetry Collector and routed to Azure Managed Grafana Dashboards using Azure Monitor Managed Service for Prometheus. To learn more, see Configure observability and monitoring.

For the full list of metrics available, see MQTT broker metrics.

Logs

Logs provide information about the operations performed by MQTT broker. These logs are available in the Kubernetes cluster as container logs. They can be configured to be sent to Azure Monitor Logs with Container Insights.

To learn more, see Configure observability and monitoring.

Self-check

The MQTT broker's self-check mechanism is enabled by default. It uses a diagnostics probe and OpenTelemetry (OTel) traces to monitor the broker. The probe sends test messages to check the system's behavior and timing.

The validation process checks if the system works correctly by comparing the test results with expected outcomes. These outcomes include:

  1. The paths messages take through the system.
  2. The system's timing behavior.

The diagnostics probe periodically executes MQTT operations (PING, CONNECT, PUBLISH, SUBSCRIBE, UNSUBSCRIBE) on the MQTT broker and monitors the corresponding ACKs and traces to check for latency, message loss, and correctness of the replication protocol.

Important

The self-check diagnostics probe publishes messages to the azedge/dmqtt/selftest topic. Don't publish or subscribe to diagnostic probe topics that start with azedge/dmqtt/selftest. Publishing or subscribing to these topics might affect the probe or self-test checks resulting in invalid results. Invalid results might be listed in diagnostic probe logs, metrics, or dashboards. For example, you might see the issue Path verification failed for probe event with operation type 'Publish' in the diagnostics-probe logs. For more information, see Known Issues.

Change diagnostics settings

In most scenarios, the default diagnostics settings are sufficient. To override default diagnostics settings for MQTT broker, edit the diagnostics section in the Broker resource. Currently, changing settings is only supported using the --broker-config-file flag when you deploy the Azure IoT Operations using the az iot ops create command.

To override, first prepare a Broker config file following the BrokerDiagnostics API reference. For example:

{
  "diagnostics": {
    "metrics": {
      "prometheusPort": 9600
    },
      "logs": {
        "level": "debug"
      },
    "traces": {
      "mode": "Enabled",
      "cacheSizeMegabytes": 16,
      "selfTracing": {
        "mode": "Enabled",
        "intervalSeconds": 30
      },
      "spanChannelCapacity": 1000
    },
    "selfCheck": {
      "mode": "Enabled",
      "intervalSeconds": 30,
      "timeoutSeconds": 15
    }
  }
}

Then, deploy Azure IoT Operations using the az iot ops create command with the --broker-config-file flag, like the following command (other parameters omitted for brevity):

az iot ops create ... --broker-config-file <FILE>.json

To learn more, see Azure CLI support for advanced MQTT broker configuration and Broker examples.

Next steps