# [minitor-go](https://git.iamthefij.com/iamthefij/minitor-go) A minimal monitoring system ## What does it do? Minitor accepts an HCL configuration file with a set of commands to run and a set of alerts to execute when those commands fail. Minitor has a narow feature set and instead follows a principle to outsource to other command line tools when possible. Thus, it relies on other command line tools to do checks and issue alerts. To make getting started a bit easier, Minitor includes a few scripts to help with common tasks. ## But why? I'm running a few small services and found Sensu, Consul, Nagios, etc. to all be far too complicated for my usecase. ## So how do I use it? ### Running Install and execute with: ```bash go install github.com/iamthefij/minitor-go@latest minitor ``` If locally developing you can use: ```bash make run ``` It will read the contents of `sample-config.hcl` and begin its loop. You could also run it directly and provide a new config file via the `-config` argument. #### Docker You can pull this repository directly from Docker: ```bash docker pull iamthefij/minitor-go:latest ``` The Docker image uses a default `config.hcl` copied from `sample-config.hcl`. This won't really do anything for you, so when you run the Docker image, you should supply your own `config.hcl` file: ```bash docker run -v $PWD/sample-config.hcl:/app/config.hcl iamthefij/minitor-go:latest ``` Images are provided for `amd64`, `arm`, and `arm64` architechtures. You can configure the timezone for the container by passing a `TZ` env variable. Eg. `TZ=America/Los_Angeles`. ## Configuring In this repo, you can explore the `sample-config.hcl` file for an example, but the general structure is as follows. It should be noted that environment variable interpolation happens on load of the HCL file. The global configurations are: |key|value| |---|---| |`check_interval`|Maximum frequency to run checks for each monitor as duration, eg. 1m2s.| |`default_alert_after`|A default value used as an `alert_after` value for a monitor if not specified or 0.| |`default_alert_every`|A default value used as an `alert_every` value for a monitor if not specified.| |`default_alert_down`|Default down alerts to used by a monitor in case none are provided.| |`default_alert_up`|Default up alerts to used by a monitor in case none are provided.| |`monitor`|block listing monitors. Detailed description below| |`alert`|List of all alerts. Detailed description below| ### Monitors Represent your monitors as blocks with a label indicating the name of the monitor. ```hcl monitor "example" { command = ["echo", "Hello, World!"] alert_down = ["log"] alert_up = ["log"] check_interval = "1m" alert_after = 1 alert_every = 0 } ``` Each monitor allows the following configuration: |key|value| |---|---| |`name`|Name of the monitor running. This will show up in messages and logs.| |`command`|A list of strings representing a command to be executed. This command's exit value will determine whether the check is successful. This value is mutually exclusive to `shell_command`| |`shell_command`|A single string that represents a shell command to be executed. This command's exit value will determine whether the check is successful. This value is mutually exclusive to `command`| |`alert_down`|A list of Alerts to be triggered when the monitor is in a "down" state| |`alert_up`|A list of Alerts to be triggered when the monitor moves to an "up" state| |`check_interval`|The interval at which this monitor should be checked. This must be greater than the global `check_interval` value| |`alert_after`|Allows specifying the number of failed checks before an alert should be triggered. A value of 1 will start sending alerts after the first failure.| |`alert_every`|Allows specifying how often an alert should be retriggered. There are a few magic numbers here. Defaults to `-1` for an exponential backoff. Setting to `0` disables re-alerting. Positive values will allow retriggering after the specified number of checks| ### Alerts Represent your alerts as blocks with a lable indicating the name of the alert. The name will be used in your monitor setup in `alert_down` and `alert_up`. ```hcl monitor "example" { command = ["false"] alert_down = ["log"] } alert "log" { shell_command = "echo '{{.MonitorName}} is down!'" } ``` Each alert allows the following configuration: |key|value| |---|---| |`command`|Specifies the command that should be executed in exec form. This is the command that will be run when the alert is executed. This can be templated with environment variables or the variables shown in the table below. This value is mutually exclusive to `shell_command`| |`shell_command`|Specifies a shell command as a single string. This is the command that will be run when the alert is executed. This can be templated with environment variables or the variables shown in the table below. This value is mutually exclusive to `command`| Also, when alerts are executed, they will be passed through Go's format function with arguments for some attributes of the Monitor. The following monitor specific variables can be referenced using Go formatting syntax: |token|value| |---|---| |`{{.AlertCount}}`|Number of times this monitor has alerted| |`{{.FailureCount}}`|The total number of sequential failed checks for this monitor| |`{{.LastCheckOutput}}`|The last returned value from the check command to either stderr or stdout| |`{{.LastSuccess}}`|The datetime of the last successful check as a go Time struct| |`{{.MonitorName}}`|The name of the monitor that failed and triggered the alert| |`{{.IsUp}}`|Indicates if the monitor that is alerting is up or not. Can be used in a conditional message template| To provide flexible formatting, the following non-standard functions are available in templates: |func|description| |---|---| |`ANSIC