b2c88e9876
Relates to #19334 Signed-off-by: Martin Bartoš <mabartos@redhat.com> Co-authored-by: Alexander Schwartz <aschwart@redhat.com> Co-authored-by: Václav Muzikář <vmuzikar@redhat.com>
103 lines
3.7 KiB
Text
103 lines
3.7 KiB
Text
<#import "/templates/guide.adoc" as tmpl>
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<#import "/templates/kc.adoc" as kc>
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<#import "/templates/options.adoc" as opts>
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<#import "/templates/links.adoc" as links>
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<@tmpl.guide
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title="Enabling {project_name} Health checks"
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summary="Learn how to enable and use {project_name} health checks"
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includedOptions="health-enabled">
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{project_name} has built in support for health checks. This {section} describes how to enable and use the {project_name} health checks.
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The {project_name} health checks are exposed on the management port `9000` by default. For more details, see <@links.server id="management-interface" />
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== {project_name} health check endpoints
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{project_name} exposes 4 health endpoints:
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* `/health/live`
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* `/health/ready`
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* `/health/started`
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* `/health`
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See the https://quarkus.io/guides/smallrye-health#running-the-health-check[Quarkus SmallRye Health docs] for information on the meaning of each endpoint.
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These endpoints respond with HTTP status `200 OK` on success or `503 Service Unavailable` on failure, and a JSON object like the following:
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.Successful response for endpoints without additional per-check information:
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[source, json]
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----
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{
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"status": "UP",
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"checks": []
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}
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----
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.Successful response for endpoints with information on the database connection:
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[source, json]
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----
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{
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"status": "UP",
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"checks": [
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{
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"name": "Keycloak database connections health check",
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"status": "UP"
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}
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]
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}
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----
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== Enabling the health checks
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It is possible to enable the health checks using the build time option `health-enabled`:
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<@kc.build parameters="--health-enabled=true"/>
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By default, no check is returned from the health endpoints.
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== Using the health checks
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It is recommended that the health endpoints be monitored by external HTTP requests. Due to security measures that remove `curl` and other packages from the {project_name} container image, local command-based monitoring will not function easily.
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If you are not using {project_name} in a container, use whatever you want to access the health check endpoints.
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=== curl
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You may use a simple HTTP HEAD request to determine the `+live+` or `+ready+` state of {project_name}. `+curl+` is a good HTTP client for this purpose.
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If {project_name} is deployed in a container, you must run this command from outside it due to the previously mentioned security measures. For example:
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[source, bash]
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----
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curl --head -fsS http://localhost:9000/health/ready
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----
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If the command returns with status 0, then {project_name} is `+live+` or `+ready+`, depending on which endpoint you called. Otherwise there is a problem.
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=== Kubernetes
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Define a https://kubernetes.io/docs/tasks/configure-pod-container/configure-liveness-readiness-startup-probes/#http-probes[HTTP Probe] so that Kubernetes may externally monitor the health endpoints. Do not use a liveness command.
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=== HEALTHCHECK
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The Dockerfile image `+HEALTHCHECK+` instruction defines a command that will be periodically executed inside the container as it runs. The {project_name} container does not have any CLI HTTP clients installed. Consider installing `+curl+` as an additional RPM, as detailed by the <@links.server id="containers" /> {section}. Note that your container may be less secure because of this.
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== Available Checks
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The table below shows the available checks.
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[%autowidth]
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|===
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|Check | Description | Requires Metrics
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|Database
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|Returns the status of the database connection pool.
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|Yes
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|===
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For some checks, you'll need to also enable metrics as indicated by the `Requires Metrics` column. To enable metrics
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use the `metrics-enabled` option as follows:
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<@kc.build parameters="--health-enabled=true --metrics-enabled=true"/>
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</@tmpl.guide>
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