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Anomaly detection for Telemetry histograms

This repository implements a martingale approach to detect changes in Telemetry histograms. Some background on using martingales for testing exchangeability online can be found here.

How to use

There are two ways to execute the tool. The first is running it from an Anaconda terminal. This is the easiest way, as the Anaconda environment comes with all the required dependencies pre-installed.

python detector\main.py --from 20160920 --to 20161019 --datadir histograms --enable-plots

If running from a different environment, dependencies can be installed using setuptools by using the following command from the root project directory:

pip install .

And then the script can be executed as previously reported.

The following is the list of supported command line options for the current version:

  • --fromdate, the beginning of the dates range to consider for analysis, in YYYYMMDD format.
  • --todate, the end of the dates range to consider for analysis, in YYYYMMDD format.
  • --datadir, the directory that contains the histogram data.
  • --outdir, the directory that will contain the detections data. Defaults to detections.
  • --strangeness, the strangeness measure to use for detection. Supported values are cluster, hellinger, bhattacharyya and cosine (the default).
  • --enable-plots, enable plotting the discovered anomalies to the output directory.
  • --threshold, the threshold to use for the detection. Defaults to 20.

Fetching sample data

Fetching Telemetry histogram data can be done by using the export script from cerberus, the system Mozilla currently uses to perform anomaly detection on time-series of histogram data.

In order to do that, we start by fetching the histogram/measurement definition from the Firefox repository using wget:

wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/mozilla/gecko-dev/master/toolkit/components/telemetry/Histograms.json -O Histograms.json

Then we execute the script that fetches the time-series of histograms for the 3 most recent Firefox builds. Please note that the script must be run from the same directory as the Histogram.json file.

nodejs export.js

This will take a bit to run and will output the histogram data as JSON files under the histograms directory.

A sample archive for the histogram data aggregated in the period from the 20th of September 2016 to the 19th October 2016 can he downloaded from here. This is the same date we have used to test the system.

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A martingale approach to detect changes in Telemetry histograms

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