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authorDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2021-02-07 11:45:55 +0000
committerDaniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>2021-02-07 11:45:55 +0000
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Adding upstream version 1.29.0.upstream/1.29.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
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+<!--
+title: "Configure health alarms"
+description: "Netdata's health monitoring watchdog is incredibly adaptable to your infrastructure's unique needs, with configurable health alarms."
+custom_edit_url: https://github.com/netdata/netdata/edit/master/docs/monitor/configure-alarms.md
+-->
+
+# Configure health alarms
+
+Netdata's health watchdog is highly configurable, with support for dynamic thresholds, hysteresis, alarm templates, and
+more. You can tweak any of the existing alarms based on your infrastructure's topology or specific monitoring needs, or
+create new entities.
+
+You can use health alarms in conjunction with any of Netdata's [collectors](/docs/collect/how-collectors-work.md) (see
+the [supported collector list](/collectors/COLLECTORS.md)) to monitor the health of your systems, containers, and
+applications in real time.
+
+While you can see active alarms both on the local dashboard and Netdata Cloud, all health alarms are configured _per
+node_ via individual Netdata Agents. If you want to deploy a new alarm across your
+[infrastructure](/docs/quickstart/infrastructure.md), you must configure each node with the same health configuration
+files.
+
+## Edit health configuration files
+
+All of Netdata's [health configuration files](/health/REFERENCE.md#health-configuration-files) are in Netdata's config
+directory, inside the `health.d/` directory. Navigate to your [Netdata config directory](/docs/configure/nodes.md) and
+use `edit-config` to make changes to any of these files.
+
+For example, to edit the `cpu.conf` health configuration file, run:
+
+```bash
+sudo ./edit-config health.d/cpu.conf
+```
+
+Each health configuration file contains one or more health _entities_, which always begin with `alarm:` or `template:`.
+For example, here is the first health entity in `health.d/cpu.conf`:
+
+```yaml
+template: 10min_cpu_usage
+ on: system.cpu
+ os: linux
+ hosts: *
+ lookup: average -10m unaligned of user,system,softirq,irq,guest
+ units: %
+ every: 1m
+ warn: $this > (($status >= $WARNING) ? (75) : (85))
+ crit: $this > (($status == $CRITICAL) ? (85) : (95))
+ delay: down 15m multiplier 1.5 max 1h
+ info: average cpu utilization for the last 10 minutes (excluding iowait, nice and steal)
+ to: sysadmin
+```
+
+To tune this alarm to trigger warning and critical alarms at a lower CPU utilization, change the `warn` and `crit` lines
+to the values of your choosing. For example:
+
+```yaml
+ warn: $this > (($status >= $WARNING) ? (60) : (75))
+ crit: $this > (($status == $CRITICAL) ? (75) : (85))
+```
+
+Save the file and [reload Netdata's health configuration](#reload-health-configuration) to make your changes live.
+
+### Silence an individual alarm
+
+Instead of disabling an alarm altogether, or even disabling _all_ alarms, you can silence individual alarms by changing
+one line in a given health entity. To silence any single alarm, change the `to:` line in its entity to `silent`.
+
+```yaml
+ to: silent
+```
+
+## Write a new health entity
+
+While tuning existing alarms may work in some cases, you may need to write entirely new health entities based on how
+your systems, containers, and applications work.
+
+Read Netdata's [health reference](/health/REFERENCE.md#health-entity-reference) for a full listing of the format,
+syntax, and functionality of health entities.
+
+To write a new health entity into a new file, navigate to your [Netdata config directory](/docs/configure/nodes.md),
+then use `touch` to create a new file in the `health.d/` directory. Use `edit-config` to start editing the file.
+
+As an example, let's create a `ram-usage.conf` file.
+
+```bash
+sudo touch health.d/ram-usage.conf
+sudo ./edit-config health.d/ram-usage.conf
+```
+
+For example, here is a health entity that triggers a warning alarm when a node's RAM usage rises above 80%, and a
+critical alarm above 90%:
+
+```yaml
+ alarm: ram_usage
+ on: system.ram
+lookup: average -1m percentage of used
+ units: %
+ every: 1m
+ warn: $this > 80
+ crit: $this > 90
+ info: The percentage of RAM being used by the system.
+```
+
+Let's look into each of the lines to see how they create a working health entity.
+
+- `alarm`: The name for your new entity. The name needs to follow these requirements:
+ - Any alphabet letter or number.
+ - The symbols `.` and `_`.
+ - Cannot be `chart name`, `dimension name`, `family name`, or `chart variable names`.
+- `on`: Which chart the entity listens to.
+- `lookup`: Which metrics the alarm monitors, the duration of time to monitor, and how to process the metrics into a
+ usable format.
+ - `average`: Calculate the average of all the metrics collected.
+ - `-1m`: Use metrics from 1 minute ago until now to calculate that average.
+ - `percentage`: Clarify that we're calculating a percentage of RAM usage.
+ - `of used`: Specify which dimension (`used`) on the `system.ram` chart you want to monitor with this entity.
+- `units`: Use percentages rather than absolute units.
+- `every`: How often to perform the `lookup` calculation to decide whether or not to trigger this alarm.
+- `warn`/`crit`: The value at which Netdata should trigger a warning or critical alarm. This example uses simple
+ syntax, but most pre-configured health entities use
+ [hysteresis](/health/REFERENCE.md#special-usage-of-the-conditional-operator) to avoid superfluous notifications.
+- `info`: A description of the alarm, which will appear in the dashboard and notifications.
+
+In human-readable format:
+
+> This health entity, named **ram_usage**, watches the **system.ram** chart. It looks up the last **1 minute** of
+> metrics from the **used** dimension and calculates the **average** of all those metrics in a **percentage** format,
+> using a **% unit**. The entity performs this lookup **every minute**.
+>
+> If the average RAM usage percentage over the last 1 minute is **more than 80%**, the entity triggers a warning alarm.
+> If the usage is **more than 90%**, the entity triggers a critical alarm.
+
+When you finish writing this new health entity, [reload Netdata's health configuration](#reload-health-configuration) to
+see it live on the local dashboard or Netdata Cloud.
+
+## Reload health configuration
+
+To make any changes to your health configuration live, you must reload Netdata's health monitoring system. To do that
+without restarting all of Netdata, run `netdatacli reload-health` or `killall -USR2 netdata`.
+
+## What's next?
+
+With your health entities configured properly, it's time to [enable
+notifications](/docs/monitor/enable-notifications.md) to get notified whenever a node reaches a warning or critical
+state.
+
+To build complex, dynamic alarms, read our guide on [dimension templates](/docs/guides/monitor/dimension-templates.md).
+
+[![analytics](https://www.google-analytics.com/collect?v=1&aip=1&t=pageview&_s=1&ds=github&dr=https%3A%2F%2Fgithub.com%2Fnetdata%2Fnetdata&dl=https%3A%2F%2Fmy-netdata.io%2Fgithub%2Fdocs%2Fmonitor%2Fview-active-alarms&_u=MAC~&cid=5792dfd7-8dc4-476b-af31-da2fdb9f93d2&tid=UA-64295674-3)](<>)