This is a health monitoring Rails mountable plug-in, which checks various services (db, cache, sidekiq, redis, etc.).
Mounting this gem will add a '/check' route to your application, which can be used for health monitoring the application and its various services. The method will return an appropriate HTTP status as well as an HTML/JSON/XML response representing the state of each provider.
You can filter which checks to run by passing a parameter called providers
.
>> curl -s http://localhost:3000/check.json | json_pp
{
"timestamp" : "2017-03-10 17:07:52 +0200",
"status" : "ok",
"results" : [
{
"name" : "Database",
"message" : "",
"status" : "OK"
},
{
"status" : "OK",
"message" : "",
"name" : "Cache"
},
{
"status" : "OK",
"message" : "",
"name" : "Redis"
},
{
"status" : "OK",
"message" : "",
"name" : "Sidekiq"
}
]
}
>> curl -s http://localhost:3000/check.json?providers[]=database&providers[]=redis | json_pp
{
"timestamp" : "2017-03-10 17:07:52 +0200",
"status" : "ok",
"results" : [
{
"name" : "Database",
"message" : "",
"status" : "OK"
},
{
"status" : "OK",
"message" : "",
"name" : "Redis"
},
]
}
>> curl -s http://localhost:3000/check.xml
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<hash>
<results type="array">
<result>
<name>Database</name>
<message></message>
<status>OK</status>
</result>
<result>
<name>Cache</name>
<message></message>
<status>OK</status>
</result>
<result>
<name>Redis</name>
<message></message>
<status>OK</status>
</result>
<result>
<name>Sidekiq</name>
<message></message>
<status>OK</status>
</result>
</results>
<status type="symbol">ok</status>
<timestamp>2017-03-10 17:08:50 +0200</timestamp>
</hash>
>> curl -s http://localhost:3000/check.xml?providers[]=database&providers[]=redis
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<hash>
<results type="array">
<result>
<name>Database</name>
<message></message>
<status>OK</status>
</result>
<result>
<name>Redis</name>
<message></message>
<status>OK</status>
</result>
</results>
<status type="symbol">ok</status>
<timestamp>2017-03-10 17:08:50 +0200</timestamp>
</hash>
If you are using bundler add health-monitor-rails to your Gemfile:
gem 'health-monitor-rails'
Then run:
bundle install
Otherwise, install the gem:
gem install health-monitor-rails
You can mount this inside your app routes by adding this to config/routes.rb:
mount HealthMonitor::Engine, at: '/'
The following services are currently supported:
- DB
- Cache
- Redis
- Sidekiq
- Resque
- Delayed Job
- Solr
By default, only the database check is enabled. You can add more service providers by explicitly enabling them via an initializer:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.cache
config.redis
config.sidekiq
config.delayed_job
end
We believe that having the database check enabled by default is very important, but if you still want to disable it
(e.g., if you use a database that isn't covered by the check) - you can do that by calling the no_database
method:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.no_database
end
All providers accept a general set of baseline configuration:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.[provider].configure do |provider_config|
provider_config.name = 'Redis'
provider_config.critical = true
end
end
- name: Custom name for the provider (Defaults to class name. Ex: 'Redis', 'Sidekiq')
- critical: Whether or not the provider is a critical dependency (Defaults to: true). If set to false, the monitor will report its status but ignore it when determining overall application health status
The critical option allows you to monitor for additional non-critical dependencies that are not fully required for your application to be operational, like a cache database for instance
Some of the providers can also accept additional configuration:
# Sidekiq
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.sidekiq.configure do |sidekiq_config|
sidekiq_config.latency = 3.hours
sidekiq_config.queue_size = 50
end
end
# Sidekiq with specific queues
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.sidekiq.configure do |sidekiq_config|
sidekiq_config.add_queue_configuration('critical', latency: 10.seconds, queue_size: 20)
end
end
# Redis with existing connection
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.redis.configure do |redis_config|
redis_config.connection = Redis.current # Use your custom redis connection
redis_config.max_used_memory = 200 # Megabytes
end
end
Additionally, you can configure an explicit URL:
# Redis with a URL configuration
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.redis.configure do |redis_config|
redis_config.url = 'redis://user:[email protected]:90210/'
redis_config.max_used_memory = 200
end
end
Or via a connection pool:
# Redis using Connection Pools
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.redis.configure do |redis_config|
redis_config.connection = ConnectionPool.new(size: 5) { Redis.new } # Use your custom connection pool
end
end
For providers that can be configured with its endpoits/urls you can also add multiple declarations to ensure you are reporting across all dependencies:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.redis.configure do |c|
c.name = 'Redis: Cache'
c.url = ENV.fetch('REDISCLOUD_URL', 'redis://localhost:6379/0')
end
config.redis.configure do |c|
c.name = 'Redis: Action Cable'
c.url = ENV.fetch('REDISCLOUD_URL', 'redis://localhost:6379/0')
end
config.redis.configure do |c|
c.name = 'Redis: Sidekiq'
c.url = ENV.fetch('REDISCLOUD_URL', 'redis://localhost:6379/1')
end
end
The currently supported settings are:
latency
: the latency (in seconds) of a queue (now - when the oldest job was enqueued) which is considered unhealthy (the default is 30 seconds, but larger processing queue should have a larger latency value).queue_size
: the size (maximum) of a queue which is considered unhealthy (the default is 100).default_queue
: the default queue to check.add_queue_configuration
: add specific configuration per queue.
url
: the URL used to connect to your Redis instance. Note, that this is an optional configuration and will use the default connection if not specified. You can also useurl
to explicitly configure authentication (e.g.,'redis://user:[email protected]:90210/'
).connection
: Use custom Redis connection (e.g.,Redis.current
).max_used_memory
: Set maximum expected memory usage of Redis in megabytes. Prevent memory leaks and keys over storing.
Please note that url
or connection
can't be used at the same time.
queue_size
: the size (maximum) of a queue which is considered unhealthy (the default is 100).
url
: the URL used to connect to your Solr instance - must be a string. You can also useurl
to explicitly configure authentication (e.g.,'https://user:[email protected]:8983/'
)collection
: An optional parameter used to connect to your specific Solr collection - must be a string. By setting this parameter the code will check the status of this individual collection in your Solr instance instead of just the status of the overall Solr instance
It's also possible to add custom health check providers suited for your needs (of course, it's highly appreciated and encouraged if you'd contribute useful providers to the project).
To add a custom provider, you'd need to:
- Implement the
HealthMonitor::Providers::Base
class and itscheck!
method (a check is considered as failed if it raises an exception):
class CustomProvider < HealthMonitor::Providers::Base
def check!
raise 'Oh oh!'
end
end
- Add its class to the configuration:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.add_custom_provider(CustomProvider)
end
If you need to perform any additional error handling (for example, for additional error reporting), you can configure a custom error callback:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.error_callback = proc do |e|
logger.error "Health check failed with: #{e.message}"
Raven.capture_exception(e)
end
end
By default, the /check
endpoint is not authenticated and is available to any user. You can authenticate using HTTP Basic Auth by providing authentication credentials:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.basic_auth_credentials = {
username: 'SECRET_NAME',
password: 'Shhhhh!!!'
}
end
By default, environment variables are nil
, so if you'd want to include additional parameters in the results JSON, all you need is to provide a Hash
with your custom environment variables:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.environment_variables = {
build_number: 'BUILD_NUMBER',
git_sha: 'GIT_SHA'
}
end
By default, the endpoint where the status page is served is /check
, but this can be customized:
HealthMonitor.configure do |config|
config.path = :status
end
This will make the page to be served in the /status
endpoint for instance (from where the engine was mounted).
A Nagios/Shinken/Icinga/Icinga2 plugin is available in extra
directory.
It takes one argument: -u
or --uri
nicolas@desktop:$ ./check_rails.rb
missing argument: uri
Usage: check_rails.rb -u uri
-u, --uri URI The URI to check (https://nagios:[email protected]/check.json)
Common options:
-v, --version Displays Version
-h, --help Displays Help
Also, it generates an output with the right status code for your monitoring system:
nicolas@desktop:$ ./check_rails.rb -u http://admin:admin@localhost:5000/check.json
Rails application : OK
Database : OK
Cache : OK
Redis : OK
Sidekiq : OK
nicolas@desktop:$ echo $?
0
nicolas@desktop:$ ./check_rails.rb -u http://admin:admin@localhost:5000/check.json
Rails application : ERROR
Database : OK
Cache : OK
Redis : ERROR (Error connecting to Redis on 127.0.0.1:6379 (Errno::ECONNREFUSED))
Sidekiq : ERROR (Error connecting to Redis on 127.0.0.1:6379 (Errno::ECONNREFUSED))
nicolas@desktop:$ echo $?
2
In order to work on development on the gem itself
Use the appraisal gem to install the bundles for different rails versions:
appraisal clean
appraisal generate
appraisal install
Use appraisal to run the tests using rake
appraisal rake
The MIT License (MIT)
Copyright (c) 2017
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