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watchmen: a service monitor for node.js

Build Status

What is watchmen?

  • watchmen monitors health (outages, uptime, response time warnings, avg. response time, etc) for your servers.
  • ping types are pluggable through npm modules. At this time, http-head and http-contains are available. Read more about ping services and how to create one below.
  • watchmen provides custom actions through plugins (console outpug, email notifications, etc).
  • the code base aims to be simple and easy to understand and modify.

Screenshots

watchmen, service details

watchmen, service list

watchmen, add service

watchmen, list services

Installation

Requirements

Get redis from redis.io and install it.

Installing watchmen

Clone the repo by using

$ git clone [email protected]:iloire/watchmen.git

or

$ git clone https://github.com/iloire/watchmen.git

Then install the required dependencies using npm

$ cd watchmen
$ npm install

Running and stopping watchmen

Make sure you have redis-server in your PATH. Then you can run watchmen services:

$ redis-server redis.conf
$ node run-monitor-server.js
$ node run-web-server.js

Development workflow

Fetching bower dependencies and building static assets

$ npm run build

Dev build watch

$ npm run build:watch

Running tests

See below.

Managing your node processes with pm2

Install pm2:

$ npm install -g pm2

Configure env variables:

$ export WATCHMEN_WEB_PORT=8080

Run servers:

$ pm2 start run-monitor-server.js
$ pm2 start run-web-server.js

Server list:

$ pm2 list

List of pm2 services

Managing processes with node-foreman

node-foreman can be used to run the monitor and web server as an Upstart service. On Ubuntu systems, this allows the usage of service watchmen start.

Watchmen already include a Procfile so you can also manage with nf.

$ npm install -g foreman
$ nf start

To export as an Upstart script using the environment variables in a .env file:

$ PATH="/home/user/.nvm/versions/v5.1.0/bin:$PATH" nf export -o /etc/init -a watchmen

You can run this without the -o /etc/init flag and move the files to this directory (or the appropriate Upstart) directory yourself. Make sure you have the correct path to the node bin, you can find out with which node.

More documentation on node-foreman:

https://github.com/strongloop/node-foreman

Configuration

Config is set through env variables.

Have a look at the /config folder for more details, but the general parameters are:

export WATCHMEN_BASE_URL='http://watchmen.letsnode.com'
export WATCHMEN_WEB_PORT='8080'
export WATCHMEN_ADMINS='[email protected]'
export WATCHMEN_GOOGLE_ANALYTICS_ID='your-GA-ID'

Authorization settings (since 2.2.0)

Watchmen uses Google Auth through passportjs for authentication. If your google email is present in WATCHMEN_ADMINS env variable, you will be able to manage services.

Make sure you set the right hostname so the OAuth dance can be negociated correctly:

export WATCHMEN_BASE_URL='http://watchmen.letsnode.com/'

You will also need to set the Google client ID and secret using env variables accordingly. (Login into https://console.developers.google.com/ to create them first)

export WATCHMEN_GOOGLE_CLIENT_ID='<your key>'
export WATCHMEN_GOOGLE_CLIENT_SECRET='<your secret>'

Disabling authentication

If you want to disable authentication access and let anyone access and edit your services use:

export WATCHMEN_WEB_NO_AUTH='true'

Ping services

Embedded ping services

HTTP-HEAD

https://www.npmjs.com/package/watchmen-ping-http-head

HTTP-CONTAINS

https://www.npmjs.com/package/watchmen-ping-http-contains

Third party contributions

NightmareJS Plugin for Watchmen

Allows Nightmare scripts to be executed by a Watchmen instance https://www.npmjs.com/package/watchmen-ping-nightmare

Creating your own ping service

Ping services are npm modules with the 'watchmen-ping' prefix.

For example, if you want to create a smtp ping service:

a) create a watchmen-ping-smtp module and publish it. This is how a simple HTTP ping service looks like:

var request = require('request');

function PingService(){}

exports = module.exports = PingService;

PingService.prototype.ping = function(service, callback){
  var startTime = +new Date();
  request.get({ method: 'HEAD', uri: service.url }, function(error, response, body){
    callback(error, body, response, +new Date() - startTime);
  });
};

PingService.prototype.getDefaultOptions = function(){
  return {}; // there is not need for UI confi options for this ping service
}

b) npm install it in watchmen:

     npm install watchmen-ping-smtp

c) create a service that uses that ping service

Select ping service

Monitor plugins

AWS SES Notifications plugin (provided)

https://github.com/iloire/watchmen-plugin-aws-ses

Settings

export WATCHMEN_AWS_FROM='your@email'
export WATCHMEN_AWS_REGION='your AWS region'
export WATCHMEN_AWS_KEY='your AWS Key'
export WATCHMEN_AWS_SECRET='your AWS secret'

Nodemailer Notifications plugin (third party contribution)

https://www.npmjs.com/package/watchmen-plugin-nodemailer

Slack Notifications plugin (third party contribution)

https://www.npmjs.com/package/watchmen-plugin-slack

Console output plugin (provided)

https://github.com/iloire/watchmen-plugin-console

Creating your own custom plugin

A watchmen instance will be injected through your plugin constructor. Then you can subscribe to the desired events. Best is to show it through an example.

This what the console plugin looks like:

var colors = require('colors');
var moment = require('moment');

var eventHandlers = {

  /**
   * On a new outage
   * @param {Object} service
   * @param {Object} outage
   * @param {Object} outage.error check error
   * @param {number} outage.timestamp outage timestamp
   */

  onNewOutage: function (service, outage) {
    var errorMsg = service.name + ' down!'.red + '. Error: ' + JSON.stringify(outage.error).red;
    console.log(errorMsg);
  },

  /**
   * Failed ping on an existing outage
   * @param {Object} service
   * @param {Object} outage
   * @param {Object} outage.error check error
   * @param {number} outage.timestamp outage timestamp
   */

  onCurrentOutage: function (service, outage) {
    var errorMsg = service.name + ' is still down!'.red + '. Error: ' + JSON.stringify(outage.error).red;
    console.log(errorMsg);
  },

  /**
   * Failed check (it will be an outage or not according to service.failuresToBeOutage
   * @param {Object} service
   * @param {Object} data
   * @param {Object} data.error check error
   * @param {number} data.currentFailureCount number of consecutive check failures
   */

  onFailedCheck: function (service, data) {
    var errorMsg = service.name + ' check failed!'.red + '. Error: ' + JSON.stringify(data.error).red;
    console.log(errorMsg);
  },

  /**
   * Warning alert
   * @param {Object} service
   * @param {Object} data
   * @param {number} data.elapsedTime (ms)
   */

  onLatencyWarning: function (service, data) {
    var msg = service.name + ' latency warning'.yellow + '. Took: ' + (data.elapsedTime + ' ms.').yellow;
    console.log(msg);
  },

  /**
   * Service is back online
   * @param {Object} service
   * @param {Object} lastOutage
   * @param {Object} lastOutage.error
   * @param {number} lastOutage.timestamp (ms)
   */

  onServiceBack: function (service, lastOutage) {
    var duration = moment.duration(+new Date() - lastOutage.timestamp, 'seconds');
    console.log(service.name.white + ' is back'.green + '. Down for '.gray + duration.humanize().white);
  },

  /**
   * Service is responding correctly
   * @param {Object} service
   * @param {Object} data
   * @param {number} data.elapsedTime (ms)
   */

  onServiceOk: function (service, data) {
    var serviceOkMsg = service.name + ' responded ' + 'OK!'.green;
    var responseTimeMsg = data.elapsedTime + ' ms.';
    console.log(serviceOkMsg, responseTimeMsg.gray);
  }
};

function ConsolePlugin(watchmen) {
  watchmen.on('new-outage', eventHandlers.onNewOutage);
  watchmen.on('current-outage', eventHandlers.onCurrentOutage);
  watchmen.on('service-error', eventHandlers.onFailedCheck);

  watchmen.on('latency-warning', eventHandlers.onLatencyWarning);
  watchmen.on('service-back', eventHandlers.onServiceBack);
  watchmen.on('service-ok', eventHandlers.onServiceOk);
}

exports = module.exports = ConsolePlugin;

Storage providers

Redis

Data schema

service - set with service id's
service:latestOutages - latest outages for all services
service:<serviceId> - hashMap with service details
service:<serviceId>:outages:current - current outage for a service (if any)
service:<serviceId>:outages - sorted set with outages info
service:<serviceId>:latency - sorted set with latency info
service:<serviceId>:failurecount - number of consecutive pings failures (to determine if it is an outage)

Configuration

export WATCHMEN_REDIS_PORT_PRODUCTION=1216
export WATCHMEN_REDIS_DB_PRODUCTION=1

export WATCHMEN_REDIS_PORT_DEVELOPMENT=1216
export WATCHMEN_REDIS_DB_DEVELOPMENT=2

Using fake data for development

cd scripts
sh populate-dummy-data-120days.sh # will populate data for a 120 day period

or

sh populate-dummy-data-30days.sh

etc..

Running with docker

To run with docker, make sure you have docker-compose installed: https://docs.docker.com/compose/install/

Also, have a docker host running. A good way is using docker-machine with a local VM: https://docs.docker.com/machine/get-started/

Edit docker-compose.env and set up the configuration.

Then, to build and run Watchmen, run the following:

docker-compose build
docker-compose up

After this Watchmen webserver will be running and exposed in the port 3000 of the docker host.

To configure, please look docker-compose.yml and docker-compose.env.

Terraform scripts for digital-ocean

You can deploy watchmen in a Digital Ocean droplet in a matter of minutes.

  1. Install terraform from terraform.io.
  2. If you don't have one yet, create an account in Digital Ocean. Use this link to get an initial $10 credit so you can play around with it for free.
  3. Open a terminal in terraform/digital-ocean
  4. Fill up user-data.yml with your configuration. Don't forget to also setup DIGITALOCEAN_TOKEN and SSH_FINGERPRINT env variables (see apply.sh):
  5. Run sh apply.sh to create your droplet.

Terraform will create a droplet based on Ubuntu with the necessary packages, compile nodejs from source, install a redis server, install and configure an nginx in front of watchmen, and setup and run watchmen from the latest master using pm2.

watchmen droplet

Tests

$ npm test

Test coverage

$ npm run coverage

Then check the coverage reports:

$ open coverage/lcov-report/lib/index.html

watchmen test coverage

Debugging

watchmen uses debug

set DEBUG=*

Contributing

You can contribute by:

  • Addressing one if the items on the TODO list or one of the open issues.
  • Creating monitor plugins.
  • Creating ping services.
  • Reporting bugs.

Contributors

Style guide

Please use semantic commit messages

History

3.4.0

  • Add non authenticated access
  • Add redis-store for session persistence

3.3.1

  • Fixed redis sorted set member uniqueness (zadd). Thanks Adriano Emerick Cola!
  • Add terraform for digital ocean

3.3.0

  • Add docker-compose

3.2.0

  • Add collapsed nav-bar in mobile.
  • Mobile friendly admin buttons.
  • Move services menu to sidebar.
  • Add support for node foreman.
  • Request avatar with the current URL scheme.
  • Fix package.json loading when using node >= 5.x
  • Other minor fixes and optimisations.

3.1.0

  • Only notify on sustained outages in-progress (new service.failureThreshold property).
  • Introduce a new "service-error" event that gets triggered when a ping fails.

3.0.0

  • Watchmen monitor has been refactored. There is not backwards compatibility with previous watchmen databases.
  • Pluggable ping services as separate npm modules (http-head and http contains included).
  • Plugins for watchmen monitor as separate npm modules (console and AWS SES Notifications included).
  • Services are persisted in the database.
  • UI panel to add/edit/delete/reset services.
  • Store latency points. Latency charts.
  • Restricted services to users (by email). Login with Google Auth to access those.

2.5.0

  • Rewrite notification system (support for postmark and AWS-SES - it is easy to add new ones).
  • Add 'alwaysAlertTo' to notifications.
  • Refactor configuration files. IMPORTANT: Please update your configuration files if you are upgrading (host/service config is still the same)!
  • Use postmark module instead of custom code for talking to postmark service.
  • Add istanbul for test coverage.
  • Fix: Cancel timeout to avoid hammering the server when the controller gets called multiple times.
  • Add colors to server console output.

2.4.0

  • Frontend revamp using angularjs.
  • Client side pagination using ngTable.
  • Client dependencies now managed by bower.
  • Extract analytics ID to config.

2.3.0

  • Use passport-google-oauth2 as Google authentication strategy.

2.2.0

  • Added service/host authorization with passportjs and GoogleStrategy.

2.1.0

  • Fix issue #7. Make load_services async so eventually services can be fetched form a database or remote server.

2.0.0

  • Upgrade to Express 4 (requires Node 0.10 or later), hence bumping to 2.x.
  • Bump ejs
  • Remove dynamic helpers

1.1.1

  • Persist table sorting options in localStorage.
  • Improve styling and responsiveness.
  • General code cleanup.
  • Display date of oldest event stored in the database in details view.
  • Bump redis, moment and ejs.
  • Some other minor changes.

1.1.0

  • Delete events older than a certain threshold (configurable in a per-host basis)
  • Bump jQuery to 1.11.1
  • Bump Handlebars to 2.0.0
  • Bump bootstrap to 3.2.0
  • Responsive design based on bootstrap

1.0.alpha1 Major changes and improvements

  • Storages are now pluggable. redis storage is used by default but you can create your own : couchdb, mongodb, text file, etc (see lib/storage).
  • Ping services are also pluggable now. So far you can use http and smtp (smtp is just checking tcp connection right now). You can create your own or improve the existent ones easily.
  • Watchmen daemon now inherits from events.EventEmitter, so you can instanciate it and subscribe to the events of your choice (service_error, service_back, etc) to implement your custom logic (see server.js).
  • Knockout.js has been removed. Watchmen uses handlebars now instead. Faster, simpler code, and avoids some client side memory leacks.
  • Client side is using moment.js for rendering dates.
  • Express.js routes now are handled on /routes
  • Mocha is used for unit testing. Mocked storages and ping services are used.
  • Configuration is now spread in separate files, under the /config directory
  • Better reporting web interface. Uptime statistics. Outages count, warnings count.

0.9

  • Major refactor, improved performance.
  • Added tests and mocked objects for testing.
  • Separate files for request, utils and watchmen library.

0.8

  • Removed logging to file.
  • Bug fixing when storing event. Needed to add port to redis key to make it unique.
  • Added callback when sending email to registered problems in delivery.

0.7

  • Targets node 0.6.x
  • Added knockoutjs for view model binding.
  • Auto async refresh main page.
  • Filter by name in main page.
  • Added counter (hosts up and down).
  • UI Improvements.
  • Tablesorter sorts status and time tags.
  • Added Google Analytics.

0.6

  • Added current status info (site is up or down) to database.
  • Added icons to display status (disable, error or ok).
  • TableSorter jQuery plugin orders by status by default.

0.5

  • Added expiration time to event records.
  • Stores avg response time for each url.
  • Warns if response time > limit.
  • Multiple recipients in notifications.
  • Removed "retry_in" option. Watchmen works in a smarter way now.
  • REDIS backend.
  • Web UI to display reports (express.js app using REDIS backend).

0.4

  • Be able to disable entries in config file at url level
  • When site is back, displays and logs information about how long the site has been down.

0.3

  • Logs "site down" and "site back up" messages to a file (logs in a different file per host)
  • Fix bug when reading url_conf.attempts on site back.

0.2

  • Allow POST method (for testing forms).
  • Added Marak/colors.js to output success and error messages.
  • Displays request duration time.
  • Refactoring.

0.1

  • First release.

TODO

  • Use a beautiful template, like the Gentella Admin Bootstrap Theme.
  • Regular expressions support in the http-contains plugin.
  • Define a data expiration period (per service)
  • Handle auth in ping services.

Third party attribution

(see package.json and bower.json for a complete list of libraries and dependencies)

Donations

You can buy me a beer by sending BTC at 1DQRybRW7cQtRq65qCxkpGNLX9BVjmfJaY.

Yeah, it turns out researchers have uncovered that beer release endorphins in our brain that we use as a reward and motivation for coding on open source projects.

License

Copyright (c) 2012 - 2015 Iván Loire

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.