forecast-operational-metrics
À propos
Cette compétence prévoit les métriques d'infrastructure et d'application, telles que l'utilisation du CPU et de la mémoire, en utilisant Prophet ou statsmodels pour la planification de capacité et l'optimisation des coûts. Elle aide les développeurs à anticiper les besoins en ressources, à planifier les approvisionnements et à mettre en place des politiques de mise à l'échelle proactive. Les prévisions peuvent être visualisées dans Grafana avec des alertes en cas d'épuisement projeté des ressources.
Installation rapide
Claude Code
Recommandénpx skills add pjt222/agent-almanac -a claude-code/plugin add https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanacgit clone https://github.com/pjt222/agent-almanac.git ~/.claude/skills/forecast-operational-metricsCopiez et collez cette commande dans Claude Code pour installer cette compétence
Documentation
Forecast Operational Metrics
Predict future resource use and system metrics for capacity plan and cost tune.
See Extended Examples for full config files and templates.
When Use
- Need to forecast infra capacity needs (CPU, memory, disk, network)
- Planning hardware/cloud resource purchase for next quarter
- Want to predict cost trends and tune cloud spend
- Need to set up proactive scaling policies by predicted load
- Forecasting user traffic for event plan
- Predicting DB storage growth for backup plan
- Estimating API use for rate limit config
Inputs
- Required: Historical time series metrics (3-12 months min)
- Required: Metric type (CPU, memory, requests/sec, costs, etc.)
- Required: Forecast horizon (days, weeks, or months ahead)
- Optional: Known future events (deployments, marketing campaigns, holidays)
- Optional: Seasonality info (daily, weekly, yearly patterns)
- Optional: External regressors (e.g., marketing spend, user signups)
Steps
Step 1: Set Up Environment and Load Data
Install forecasting libs and prep time series data.
# Create virtual environment
python -m venv venv
source venv/bin/activate
# Install forecasting libraries
pip install prophet statsmodels pandas numpy
pip install plotly matplotlib seaborn
pip install prometheus-api-client influxdb-client
pip install grafana-api
Load and prep data with MetricsLoader:
# forecasting/data_loader.py (abbreviated)
import pandas as pd
from datetime import datetime, timedelta
class MetricsLoader:
def load_from_prometheus(self, query: str, lookback_days: int = 90, step: str = "1h"):
"""Load historical metrics from Prometheus."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md for complete code)
def resample_and_aggregate(self, df: pd.DataFrame, freq: str = "1H"):
"""Resample time series to regular intervals."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
# Example usage
loader = MetricsLoader(prometheus_url="http://prometheus:9090")
df = loader.load_from_prometheus(
query='avg(rate(container_cpu_usage_seconds_total[5m]))',
lookback_days=90,
)
df_daily = loader.resample_and_aggregate(df, freq="1D")
See EXAMPLES.md Step 1 for full MetricsLoader impl.
Got: Time series data loaded with regular intervals, missing values filled, ready for forecast.
If fail: Data gaps exist? Use forward-fill or interpolation, check lookback period has enough data (90+ days advised), check timestamp timezone consistency, look for outliers (>5 sigma) that may skew forecasts.
Step 2: Implement Prophet Forecasting
Use Facebook Prophet for auto seasonality detect and forecast.
# forecasting/prophet_forecaster.py (abbreviated)
from prophet import Prophet
class ProphetForecaster:
def __init__(self, growth: str = "linear", seasonality_mode: str = "multiplicative"):
self.growth = growth
self.prophet_params = {
"growth": growth,
"seasonality_mode": seasonality_mode,
# ... additional parameters (see EXAMPLES.md)
}
def fit(self, df: pd.DataFrame, regressors=None, holidays=None):
"""Train Prophet model on historical data."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
def forecast(self, periods: int, freq: str = "D"):
"""Generate forecast for future periods."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
# Example usage
forecaster = ProphetForecaster(growth="linear", seasonality_mode="multiplicative")
forecaster.fit(df_daily)
forecast = forecaster.forecast(periods=30, freq="D")
forecaster.plot_forecast(forecast, save_path="results/cpu_forecast.png")
See EXAMPLES.md Step 2 for full ProphetForecaster impl.
Got: Forecast made for 30+ days ahead with confidence intervals, seasonal patterns caught in components plot, cross-validation MAPE < 15%.
If fail: Forecast looks unreal? Try different growth model (linear vs logistic), if seasonality missing tune seasonality_mode, if accuracy poor (<70% MAPE) add more historical data or external regressors, check for data quality issues.
Step 3: Implement ARIMA/SARIMAX Forecasting (Alternative)
Use statsmodels for traditional time series forecasting.
# forecasting/arima_forecaster.py (abbreviated)
from statsmodels.tsa.statespace.sarimax import SARIMAX
class ARIMAForecaster:
def __init__(self, order: tuple = (1, 1, 1), seasonal_order: tuple = (1, 1, 1, 7)):
self.order = order
self.seasonal_order = seasonal_order
def fit(self, df: pd.DataFrame, exog=None):
"""Train SARIMAX model."""
series = df.set_index("timestamp")["value"]
self.model = SARIMAX(series, exog=exog, order=self.order, seasonal_order=self.seasonal_order)
self.fitted_model = self.model.fit(disp=False)
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
def forecast(self, steps: int, exog_future=None):
"""Generate forecast for future periods."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
# Auto-select parameters
best_order, best_seasonal = auto_arima(series, seasonal=True)
forecaster = ARIMAForecaster(order=best_order, seasonal_order=best_seasonal)
forecaster.fit(df_hourly)
forecast = forecaster.forecast(steps=168) # 7 days
See EXAMPLES.md Step 3 for full ARIMAForecaster impl and auto_arima function.
Got: ARIMA model fit with best params, forecast made with confidence intervals, diagnostic plots show white noise residuals.
If fail: Model not converge? Simplify params (drop p, q, P, Q), if forecast has wrong trend check differencing order (d, D), if residuals not white noise add more AR/MA terms, make sure series length >2x seasonal period.
Step 4: Identify Capacity Thresholds and Alerts
Check forecast to predict when resources will run out.
# forecasting/capacity_planning.py (abbreviated)
from datetime import datetime
class CapacityPlanner:
def __init__(self, capacity_limit: float, warning_threshold: float = 0.8):
self.capacity_limit = capacity_limit
self.warning_threshold = warning_threshold
def find_exhaustion_date(self, forecast: pd.DataFrame):
"""Find when forecast exceeds capacity limit."""
exceeded = forecast[forecast["yhat"] >= self.capacity_limit]
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
def generate_capacity_report(self, forecast: pd.DataFrame):
"""Generate comprehensive capacity planning report."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
# Example usage
planner = CapacityPlanner(capacity_limit=1000, warning_threshold=0.8)
report = planner.generate_capacity_report(forecast)
print(f"Warning Date: {report['warning_date']}")
print(f"Exhaustion Date: {report['exhaustion_date']}")
recommendation = planner.recommend_scaling_action(report)
See EXAMPLES.md Step 4 for full CapacityPlanner impl.
Got: Report shows when capacity limits will be hit, advice given with urgency levels, growth rates counted.
If fail: Exhaustion date unreal? Check capacity_limit is right, if growth rate too high look for outliers in historical data, think non-linear growth models for mature systems.
Step 5: Visualize Forecasts in Grafana
Push forecast data to Grafana for real-time watch.
# forecasting/grafana_integration.py (abbreviated)
import requests
class GrafanaForecaster:
def __init__(self, grafana_url: str, api_key: str, dashboard_uid: str = None):
self.grafana_url = grafana_url.rstrip("/")
self.api_key = api_key
self.dashboard_uid = dashboard_uid
def create_annotation(self, text: str, tags: list, time: datetime = None):
"""Create annotation in Grafana for forecast events."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
def create_capacity_alert_annotation(self, capacity_report: dict):
"""Create Grafana annotation for capacity warnings."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
# Export to CSV for Grafana datasource
def export_forecast_to_csv(forecast: pd.DataFrame, output_path: str):
"""Export forecast in format compatible with Grafana CSV datasource."""
# ... implementation (see EXAMPLES.md)
# Example usage
grafana = GrafanaForecaster(
grafana_url="http://grafana:3000",
api_key="YOUR_API_KEY",
dashboard_uid="your-dashboard-uid",
)
grafana.create_capacity_alert_annotation(report)
export_forecast_to_csv(forecast, "grafana/forecasts/cpu_forecast.csv")
See EXAMPLES.md Step 5 for full GrafanaForecaster impl.
Got: Forecast annotations show in Grafana dashboards, capacity warns visible as vertical markers, forecast data open via CSV datasource.
If fail: Check Grafana API key has right perms, check dashboard UID is right, ensure timestamps in milliseconds for annotations, test API with curl before tie in.
Step 6: Automate Forecast Generation
Set up scheduled jobs to make forecasts regular.
# forecasting/scheduler.py (abbreviated)
import schedule
import time
def generate_daily_forecast():
"""Generate forecast for all monitored metrics."""
logger.info("Starting daily forecast generation")
metrics_config = [
{"name": "cpu_usage", "query": "...", "capacity_limit": 0.8, "forecast_days": 30},
{"name": "memory_usage", "query": "...", "capacity_limit": 32, "forecast_days": 30},
{"name": "disk_usage", "query": "...", "capacity_limit": 500, "forecast_days": 90},
]
loader = MetricsLoader(prometheus_url="http://prometheus:9090")
for metric_config in metrics_config:
df = loader.load_from_prometheus(query=metric_config["query"], lookback_days=90)
forecaster = ProphetForecaster()
forecaster.fit(df)
forecast = forecaster.forecast(periods=metric_config["forecast_days"])
planner = CapacityPlanner(capacity_limit=metric_config["capacity_limit"])
report = planner.generate_capacity_report(forecast)
export_forecast_to_csv(forecast, f"grafana/forecasts/{metric_config['name']}_forecast.csv")
# ... (see EXAMPLES.md for complete implementation)
# Schedule daily at 2 AM
schedule.every().day.at("02:00").do(generate_daily_forecast)
while True:
schedule.run_pending()
time.sleep(60)
See EXAMPLES.md Step 6 for full scheduler impl.
Got: Forecasts made daily for all metrics, capacity reports logged, CSV files exported for Grafana, alerts sent for critical capacity warns.
If fail: Check scheduler process runs continuous (use systemd/supervisor), check Prometheus connectivity, ensure enough disk space for forecast exports, add retry logic for short-term failures, set up watch for scheduler itself.
Validation
- Historical data loaded with 90+ days of continuous metrics
- Prophet forecast catches daily/weekly seasonality in components plot
- Forecast confidence intervals hold 85-95% of actual values in check
- Capacity exhaustion dates counted right for known scenarios
- ARIMA model residuals show as white noise in diagnostic plots
- Grafana annotations show at predicted warn/exhaustion dates
- Auto forecast runs daily with no manual step
- Forecast accuracy (MAPE) < 15% on check set
Pitfalls
- Not enough historical data: Need 3-12 months for reliable seasonality detect; avoid forecasting with <60 days
- Ignore known events: Holidays, deployments, marketing campaigns skew forecasts; add as external regressors or holidays
- Over-confidence in long-term forecasts: Accuracy drops beyond 30-90 days; use as directional guide, not exact predictions
- Static capacity limits: Infra changes over time; update capacity_limit when adding resources
- Forecasting anomalies: Outliers in training data pass to forecast; clean data or use robust methods
- Not update models: Forecasts stale after system shifts; retrain weekly or after big arch changes
- Ignore confidence intervals: Point forecasts misleading; always use lower/upper bounds for plan
- Wrong seasonality period: Daily for hourly data, weekly for daily data; mismatch gives poor forecasts
See Also
detect-anomalies-aiops- Anomaly detect complement forecast for proactive watchplan-capacity- Infra capacity plan flowsbuild-grafana-dashboards- Visualize forecasts and capacity trends
Dépôt GitHub
Compétences associées
executing-plans
DesignUtilisez la compétence executing-plans lorsque vous disposez d'un plan de mise en œuvre complet à exécuter par lots contrôlés avec des points de contrôle de revue. Elle charge et examine le plan de manière critique, puis exécute les tâches par petits lots (3 tâches par défaut) tout en rapportant la progression entre chaque lot pour une revue par l'architecte. Cela garantit une mise en œuvre systématique avec des points de contrôle de qualité intégrés.
requesting-code-review
DesignCette compétence délègue un sous-agent réviseur de code pour analyser les modifications apportées au code par rapport aux exigences avant de poursuivre. Elle doit être utilisée après avoir terminé des tâches, implémenté des fonctionnalités majeures, ou avant une fusion vers la branche principale. La revue aide à détecter précocement les problèmes en comparant l'implémentation actuelle avec le plan initial.
connect-mcp-server
DesignCette compétence fournit un guide complet permettant aux développeurs de connecter des serveurs MCP à Claude Code via les transports HTTP, stdio ou SSE. Elle couvre l'installation, la configuration, l'authentification et la sécurité pour intégrer des services externes tels que GitHub, Notion et des API personnalisées. Utilisez-la lors de la configuration d'intégrations MCP, de la configuration d'outils externes ou du travail avec le Protocole de Contexte de Modèle de Claude.
web-cli-teleport
DesignCette compétence aide les développeurs à choisir entre les interfaces Web et CLI de Claude Code en fonction de l'analyse des tâches, puis permet une téléportation transparente des sessions entre ces environnements. Elle optimise le flux de travail en gérant l'état et le contexte de la session lors du passage entre le web, la CLI ou le mobile. Utilisez-la pour des projets complexes nécessitant différents outils à diverses étapes.
