95 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
95 lines
3.4 KiB
Markdown
---
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layout: "intro"
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page_title: "Registering Health Checks"
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sidebar_current: "gettingstarted-checks"
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---
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# Health Checks
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We've now seen how simple it is to run Consul, add nodes and services, and
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query those nodes and services. In this section we will continue by adding
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health checks to both nodes and services, a critical component of service
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discovery that prevents using services that are unhealthy.
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This page will build upon the previous page and assumes you have a
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two node cluster running.
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## Defining Checks
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Similarly to a service, a check can be registered either by providing a
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[check definition](/docs/agent/checks.html)
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, or by making the appropriate calls to the
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[HTTP API](/docs/agent/http.html).
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We will use the check definition, because just like services, definitions
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are the most common way to setup checks.
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Create two definition files in the Consul configuration directory of
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the second node.
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The first file will add a host-level check, and the second will modify the web
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service definition to add a service-level check.
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```
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$ echo '{"check": {"name": "ping", "script": "ping -c1 google.com >/dev/null", "interval": "30s"}}' >/etc/consul.d/ping.json
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$ echo '{"service": {"name": "web", "tags": ["rails"], "port": 80,
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"check": {"script": "curl localhost:80 >/dev/null 2>&1", "interval": "10s"}}}' >/etc/consul.d/web.json
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```
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The first definition adds a host-level check named "ping". This check runs
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on a 30 second interval, invoking `ping -c1 google.com`. If the command
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exits with a non-zero exit code, then the node will be flagged unhealthy.
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The second command modifies the web service and adds a check that uses
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curl every 10 seconds to verify that the web server is running.
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Restart the second agent, or send a `SIGHUP` to it. We should now see the
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following log lines:
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```
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==> Starting Consul agent...
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...
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[INFO] agent: Synced service 'web'
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[INFO] agent: Synced check 'service:web'
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[INFO] agent: Synced check 'ping'
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[WARN] Check 'service:web' is now critical
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```
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The first few log lines indicate that the agent has synced the new
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definitions. The last line indicates that the check we added for
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the `web` service is critical. This is because we're not actually running
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a web server and the curl test is failing!
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## Checking Health Status
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Now that we've added some simple checks, we can use the HTTP API to check
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them. First, we can look for any failing checks. You can run this curl
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on either node:
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```
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$ curl http://localhost:8500/v1/health/state/critical
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[{"Node":"agent-two","CheckID":"service:web","Name":"Service 'web' check","Status":"critical","Notes":"","ServiceID":"web","ServiceName":"web"}]
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```
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We can see that there is only a single check in the `critical` state, which is
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our `web` service check.
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Additionally, we can attempt to query the web service using DNS. Consul
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will not return any results, since the service is unhealthy:
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```
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dig @127.0.0.1 -p 8600 web.service.consul
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...
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;; QUESTION SECTION:
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;web.service.consul. IN A
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```
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This section should have shown that checks can be easily added. Check definitions
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can be updated by changing configuration files and sending a `SIGHUP` to the agent.
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Alternatively the HTTP API can be used to add, remove and modify checks dynamically.
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The API allows allows for a "dead man's switch" or [TTL based check](/docs/agent/checks.html).
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TTL checks can be used to integrate an application more tightly with Consul, enabling
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business logic to be evaluated as part of passing a check.
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