Giter Club home page Giter Club logo

healthchecks's Introduction

healthchecks

Build Status Coverage Status

Screenshot of Welcome page

Screenshot of My Checks page

Screenshot of Period/Grace dialog

Screenshot of Channels page

healthchecks is a watchdog for your cron jobs. It's a web server that listens for pings from your cron jobs, plus a web interface.

It is live here: http://healthchecks.io/

The building blocks are:

  • Python 2 or Python 3
  • Django 1.11
  • PostgreSQL or MySQL

Setting Up for Development

These are instructions for setting up HealthChecks Django app in development environment.

  • prepare directory for project code and virtualenv:

      $ mkdir -p ~/webapps
      $ cd ~/webapps
    
  • prepare virtual environment (with virtualenv you get pip, we'll use it soon to install requirements):

      $ virtualenv --python=python3 hc-venv
      $ source hc-venv/bin/activate
    
  • check out project code:

      $ git clone https://github.com/healthchecks/healthchecks.git
    
  • install requirements (Django, ...) into virtualenv:

      $ pip install -r healthchecks/requirements.txt
    
  • healthchecks is configured to use a SQLite database by default. To use PostgreSQL or MySQL database, create and edit hc/local_settings.py file. There is a template you can copy and edit as needed:

      $ cd ~/webapps/healthchecks
      $ cp hc/local_settings.py.example hc/local_settings.py
    
  • create database tables and the superuser account:

      $ cd ~/webapps/healthchecks
      $ ./manage.py migrate
      $ ./manage.py createsuperuser
    
  • run development server:

      $ ./manage.py runserver
    

The site should now be running at http://localhost:8080 To log into Django administration site as a super user, visit http://localhost:8080/admin

Configuration

Site configuration is kept in hc/settings.py. Additional configuration is loaded from hc/local_settings.py file, if it exists. You can create this file (should be right next to settings.py in the filesystem) and override settings as needed.

Some useful settings keys to override are:

SITE_ROOT is used to build fully qualified URLs for pings, and for use in emails and notifications. Example:

SITE_ROOT = "https://my-monitoring-project.com"

SITE_NAME has the default value of "healthchecks.io" and is used throughout the templates. Replace it with your own name to personalize your installation. Example:

SITE_NAME = "My Monitoring Project"

REGISTRATION_OPEN controls whether site visitors can create new accounts. Set it to False if you are setting up a private healthchecks instance, but it needs to be publicly accessible (so, for example, your cloud services can send pings).

If you close new user registration, you can still selectively invite users to your team account.

Database Configuration

Database configuration is stored in hc/settings.py and can be overriden in hc/local_settings.py. The default database engine is SQLite. To use PostgreSQL, create hc/local_settings.py if it does not exist, and put the following in it, changing it as neccessary:

DATABASES = {
    'default': {
        'ENGINE':   'django.db.backends.postgresql',
        'NAME':     'your-database-name-here',
        'USER':     'your-database-user-here',
        'PASSWORD': 'your-database-password-here',
        'TEST': {'CHARSET': 'UTF8'}
    }
}

For MySQL:

DATABASES = {
    'default': {
        'ENGINE':   'django.db.backends.mysql',
        'NAME':     'your-database-name-here',
        'USER':     'your-database-user-here',
        'PASSWORD': 'your-database-password-here',
        'TEST': {'CHARSET': 'UTF8'}
    }
}

You can also use hc/local_settings.py to read database configuration from environment variables like so:

import os

DATABASES = {
    'default': {
        'ENGINE':   os.environ['DB_ENGINE'],
        'NAME':     os.environ['DB_NAME'],
        'USER':     os.environ['DB_USER'],
        'PASSWORD': os.environ['DB_PASSWORD'],
        'TEST': {'CHARSET': 'UTF8'}
    }
}

Sending Emails

healthchecks must be able to send email messages, so it can send out login links and alerts to users. Put your SMTP server configuration in hc/local_settings.py like so:

EMAIL_HOST = "your-smtp-server-here.com"
EMAIL_PORT = 587
EMAIL_HOST_USER = "username"
EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD = "password"
EMAIL_USE_TLS = True

For more information, have a look at Django documentation, Sending Email section.

Sending Status Notifications

healtchecks comes with a sendalerts management command, which continuously polls database for any checks changing state, and sends out notifications as needed. Within an activated virtualenv, you can manually run the sendalerts command like so:

$ ./manage.py sendalerts

In a production setup, you will want to run this command from a process manager like supervisor or systemd.

Database Cleanup

With time and use the healthchecks database will grow in size. You may decide to prune old data: inactive user accounts, old checks not assigned to users, records of outgoing email messages and records of received pings. There are separate Django management commands for each task:

  • Remove old records from api_ping table. For each check, keep 100 most recent pings:

    $ ./manage.py prunepings
    
  • Remove checks older than 2 hours that are not assigned to users. Such checks are by-products of random visitors and robots loading the welcome page and never setting up an account:

    $ ./manage.py prunechecks
    
  • Remove old records of sent notifications. For each check, remove notifications that are older than the oldest stored ping for same check.

    $ ./manage.py prunenotifications
    
  • Remove user accounts that match either of these conditions:

  • Account was created more than 6 months ago, and user has never logged in. These can happen when user enters invalid email address when signing up.

  • Last login was more than 6 months ago, and the account has no checks. Assume the user doesn't intend to use the account any more and would probably want it removed.

    $ ./manage.py pruneusers
    

When you first try these commands on your data, it is a good idea to test them on a copy of your database, not on the live database right away. In a production setup, you should also have regular, automated database backups set up.

Integrations

Pushover

To enable Pushover integration, you will need to:

  • register a new application on https://pushover.net/apps/build
  • enable subscriptions in your application and make sure to enable the URL subscription type
  • add the application token and subscription URL to hc/local_settings.py, as PUSHOVER_API_TOKEN and PUSHOVER_SUBSCRIPTION_URL

Telegram

  • Create a Telegram bot by talking to the BotFather. Set the bot's name, description, user picture, and add a "/start" command.
  • After creating the bot you will have the bot's name and token. Add them to your hc/local_settings.py file as TELEGRAM_BOT_NAME and TELEGRAM_TOKEN fields.
  • Now the tricky part: when a Telegram user talks to your bot, Telegram will use a webhook to forward received messages to your healthchecks instance. For this to work, your healthchecks instance needs to be publicly accessible over HTTPS. Using the setWebhook API call set the bot's webhook to https://yourdomain.com/integrations/telegram/bot/.

healthchecks's People

Contributors

cuu508 avatar diwu1989 avatar jamespanic avatar schnouki avatar zonito avatar mkelley82 avatar cdax avatar gmoigneu avatar mlanner avatar mounirmesselmeni avatar iphoting avatar prgtw avatar

Watchers

Josh Wulf avatar  avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.