155 lines
5.4 KiB
Org Mode
155 lines
5.4 KiB
Org Mode
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#+BEGIN_COMMENT
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.. title: Simple cron monitoring with HealthChecks
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.. date: 2020-02-09
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.. slug: simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks
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.. updated: 2020-02-09
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.. status: published
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.. tags: monitoring, healthchecks, cron
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.. category: monitoring
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.. authors: Elia el Lazkani
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.. description: Ever needed to monitor simple things ? Well, HealthChecks seems perfect for that.
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.. type: text
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#+END_COMMENT
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In a previous post entitled "{{% doc %}}automating-borg{{% /doc %}}", I showed you how you can automate your *borg* backups with *borgmatic*.
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After I started using *borgmatic* for my backups and hooked it to a /cron/ running every 2 hours, I got interested into knowing what's happening to my backups at all times.
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My experience comes handy in here, I know I need a monitoring system. I also know that traditional monitoring systems are too complex for my use case.
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I need something simple. I need something I can deploy myself.
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{{{TEASER_END}}}
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* Choosing a monitoring system
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I already know I don't want a traditional monitoring system like /nagios/ or /sensu/ or /prometheus/. It is not needed, it's an overkill.
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I went through the list of hooks that *borgmatic* offers out of the box and checked each project.
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I came across [[https://healthchecks.io/][HealthChecks]].
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* HealthChecks
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The [[https://healthchecks.io/][HealthChecks]] project works in a simple manner.
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It simply offers syou an endpoint which you need to ping within a certain period, otherwise you get paged.
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It has a lot of integrations from simple emails to other third party services that will call or message you or even trigger push notifications to your phone.
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In my case, a simple email is enough. After all, they are simply backups and if they failed now, they will work when cron runs again in 2 hours.
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* Deploy
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Let's create a docker-compose service configuration that looks like the
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following:
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#+BEGIN_SRC yaml
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healthchecks:
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container_name: healthchecks
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image: linuxserver/healthchecks:v1.12.0-ls48
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restart: unless-stopped
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ports:
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- "127.0.0.1:8000:8000"
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volumes:
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- "./healthchecks/data:/config"
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environment:
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PUID: "5000"
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PGID: "5000"
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SECRET_KEY: "super-secret-key"
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ALLOWED_HOSTS: '["*"]'
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DEBUG: "False"
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DEFAULT_FROM_EMAIL: "noreply@healthchecks.example.com"
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USE_PAYMENTS: "False"
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REGISTRATION_OPEN: "False"
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EMAIL_HOST: "smtp.example.com"
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EMAIL_PORT: "587"
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EMAIL_HOST_USER: "smtp@healthchecks.example.com"
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EMAIL_HOST_PASSWORD: "super-secret-password"
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EMAIL_USE_TLS: "True"
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SITE_ROOT: "https://healthchecks.example.com"
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SITE_NAME: "HealthChecks"
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MASTER_BADGE_LABEL: "HealthChecks"
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PING_ENDPOINT: "https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/"
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PING_EMAIL_DOMAIN: "healthchecks.example.com"
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TWILIO_ACCOUNT: "None"
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TWILIO_AUTH: "None"
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TWILIO_FROM: "None"
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PD_VENDOR_KEY: "None"
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TRELLO_APP_KEY: "None"
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#+END_SRC
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This will create a docker container exposing it locally on =127.0.0.1:8000=.
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Let's point nginx to it and expose it using something similar to the following.
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#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
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server {
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listen 443 ssl;
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server_name healthchecks.example.com;
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ssl_certificate /path/to/the/fullchain.pem;
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ssl_certificate_key /path/to/the/privkey.pem;
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location / {
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proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8000;
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add_header X-Frame-Options SAMEORIGIN;
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add_header X-XSS-Protection "1; mode=block";
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proxy_redirect off;
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proxy_buffering off;
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proxy_set_header Host $host;
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proxy_set_header X-Real-IP $remote_addr;
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proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
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proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Proto $scheme;
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proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Port $server_port;
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proxy_read_timeout 90;
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}
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}
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#+END_EXAMPLE
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This should do nicely.
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* Usage
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Now it's a simple matter of creating a checks.
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#+BEGIN_EXPORT html
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<a class="reference" href="/images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks.png" alt="HealthChecks monitoring for BorgBackup" algin="center">
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<img src="/images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks.thumbnail.png">
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#+END_EXPORT
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#+BEGIN_EXPORT html
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</a>
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#+END_EXPORT
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This will give you a link that looks like the following
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#+BEGIN_EXAMPLE
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https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219
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#+END_EXAMPLE
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Let's feed it to *borgmatic*.
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#+BEGIN_SRC yaml
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hooks:
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healthchecks: https://healthchecks.example.com/ping/84b2a834-02f5-524f-4c27-a2f24562b219
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#+END_SRC
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After you configure the *borgmatic* hook to keep /HealthChecks/ in the know of what's going on.
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We can take a look at the log to see what happened and when.
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#+BEGIN_EXPORT html
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<a class="reference" href="/images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks-logs.png" alt="HealthChecks monitoring log for BorgBackup" algin="center">
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<img src="/images/simple-cron-monitoring-with-healthchecks/borgbackup-healthchecks-logs.thumbnail.png">
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#+END_EXPORT
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#+BEGIN_EXPORT html
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</a>
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#+END_EXPORT
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* Conclusion
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As we saw in the blog post, now I am always in the know about my backups.
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If my backup fails, I get an email to notify me of a failure.
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I can also monitor how much time it takes my backups to run.
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This is a very important feature for me to have.
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The question of deploying one's own monitoring system is a personal choice.
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After all, one can use free third party services if they would like.
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The correct answer though is to always monitor.
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