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Published : Apr 26, 2023
NOT ON THE CURRENT EDITION
This blip is not on the current edition of the Radar. If it was on one of the last few editions, it is likely that it is still relevant. If the blip is older, it might no longer be relevant and our assessment might be different today. Unfortunately, we simply don't have the bandwidth to continuously review blips from previous editions of the Radar. Understand more
Apr 2023
Assess ? Worth exploring with the goal of understanding how it will affect your enterprise.

Measuring energy consumption is an important step for teams to reduce the carbon footprint of their software. Cloud Carbon Footprint (CCF) estimates energy based on billing and usage data retrieved from cloud APIs. Kepler — short for Kubernetes-based Efficient Power Level Exporter — goes one step further: it uses software counters via RAPL, ACPI and nvml to measure power consumption by hardware resources and employs an eBPF-based approach to attribute power consumption to processes, containers and Kubernetes pods. Power usage is then converted to energy estimates using a custom ML model and data from the SPEC Power benchmark. Finally, pod-level energy consumption reporting is made available as Prometheus metrics. In cases where Kubernetes is running on virtual machines, for example when not using bare metal instances, Kepler uses cgroups to estimate energy consumption. We've had significant experience with CCF and can attest to its usefulness, but we're intrigued by the Kepler project’s approach.

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