summaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/health/REFERENCE.md
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
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
commita8220ab2d293bb7f4b014b79d16b2fb05090fa93 (patch)
tree77f0a30f016c0925cf7ee9292e644bba183c2774 /health/REFERENCE.md
parentAdding upstream version 1.19.0. (diff)
downloadnetdata-a8220ab2d293bb7f4b014b79d16b2fb05090fa93.tar.xz
netdata-a8220ab2d293bb7f4b014b79d16b2fb05090fa93.zip
Adding upstream version 1.29.0.upstream/1.29.0
Signed-off-by: Daniel Baumann <daniel.baumann@progress-linux.org>
Diffstat (limited to 'health/REFERENCE.md')
-rw-r--r--health/REFERENCE.md797
1 files changed, 797 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/health/REFERENCE.md b/health/REFERENCE.md
new file mode 100644
index 00000000..bc5f40cc
--- /dev/null
+++ b/health/REFERENCE.md
@@ -0,0 +1,797 @@
+<!--
+title: "Health configuration reference"
+custom_edit_url: https://github.com/netdata/netdata/edit/master/health/REFERENCE.md
+-->
+
+# Health configuration reference
+
+Welcome to the health configuration reference.
+
+This guide contains information about editing health configuration files to tweak existing alarms or create new health
+entities that are customized to the needs of your infrastructure.
+
+To learn the basics of locating and editing health configuration files, see the [health
+quickstart](/health/QUICKSTART.md).
+
+## Health configuration files
+
+You can configure the Agent's health watchdog service by editing files in two locations:
+
+- The `[health]` section in `netdata.conf`. By editing the daemon's behavior, you can disable health monitoring
+ altogether, run health checks more or less often, and more. See [daemon
+ configuration](/daemon/config/README.md#health-section-options) for a table of all the available settings, their
+ default values, and what they control.
+- The individual `.conf` files in `health.d/`. These health entity files are organized by the type of metric they are
+ performing calculations on or their associated collector. You should edit these files using the `edit-config`
+ script. For example: `sudo ./edit-config health.d/cpu.conf`.
+
+## Health entity reference
+
+The following reference contains information about the syntax and options of _health entities_, which Netdata attaches
+to charts in order to trigger alarms.
+
+### Entity types
+
+There are two entity types: **alarms** and **templates**. They have the same format and feature set—the only difference
+is their label.
+
+**Alarms** are attached to specific charts and use the `alarm` label.
+
+**Templates** define rules that apply to all charts of a specific context, and use the `template` label. Templates help
+you apply one entity to all disks, all network interfaces, all MySQL databases, and so on.
+
+Alarms have higher precedence and will override templates. If an alarm and template entity have the same name and attach
+to the same chart, Netdata will use the alarm.
+
+### Entity format
+
+Netdata parses the following lines. Beneath the table is an in-depth explanation of each line's purpose and syntax.
+
+- The `on` and `lookup` lines are **always required**.
+- Each entity **must** have one of the following lines: `calc`, `warn`, or `crit`.
+- The `alarm` or `template` line must be the first line of any entity.
+- A few lines use space-separated lists to define how the entity behaves. You can use `*` as a wildcard or prefix with
+ `!` for a negative match. Order is important, too! See our [simple patterns docs](../libnetdata/simple_pattern/) for
+ more examples.
+
+| line | required | functionality |
+| --------------------------------------------------- | --------------- | ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- |
+| [`alarm`/`template`](#alarm-line-alarm-or-template) | yes | Name of the alarm/template. |
+| [`on`](#alarm-line-on) | yes | The chart this alarm should attach to. |
+| [`os`](#alarm-line-os) | no | Which operating systems to run this chart. |
+| [`hosts`](#alarm-line-hosts) | no | Which hostnames will run this alarm. |
+| [`plugin`](#alarm-line-plugin) | no | Restrict an alarm or template to only a certain plugin. |
+| [`module`](#alarm-line-module) | no | Restrict an alarm or template to only a certain module. |
+| [`families`](#alarm-line-families) | no | Restrict a template to only certain families. |
+| [`lookup`](#alarm-line-lookup) | yes | The database lookup to find and process metrics for the chart specified through `on`. |
+| [`calc`](#alarm-line-calc) | yes (see above) | A calculation to apply to the value found via `lookup` or another variable. |
+| [`every`](#alarm-line-every) | no | The frequency of the alarm. |
+| [`green`/`red`](#alarm-lines-green-and-red) | no | Set the green and red thresholds of a chart. |
+| [`warn`/`crit`](#alarm-lines-warn-and-crit) | yes (see above) | Expressions evaluating to true or false, and when true, will trigger the alarm. |
+| [`to`](#alarm-line-to) | no | A list of roles to send notifications to. |
+| [`exec`](#alarm-line-exec) | no | The script to execute when the alarm changes status. |
+| [`delay`](#alarm-line-delay) | no | Optional hysteresis settings to prevent floods of notifications. |
+| [`repeat`](#alarm-line-repeat) | no | The interval for sending notifications when an alarm is in WARNING or CRITICAL mode. |
+| [`option`](#alarm-line-option) | no | Add an option to not clear alarms. |
+| [`host labels`](#alarm-line-host-labels) | no | List of labels present on a host. |
+
+The `alarm` or `template` line must be the first line of any entity.
+
+#### Alarm line `alarm` or `template`
+
+This line starts an alarm or template based on the [entity type](#entity-types) you're interested in creating.
+
+**Alarm:**
+
+```yaml
+alarm: NAME
+```
+
+**Template:**
+
+```yaml
+template: NAME
+```
+
+`NAME` can be any alpha character, with `.` (period) and `_` (underscore) as the only allowed symbols, but the names
+cannot be `chart name`, `dimension name`, `family name`, or `chart variables names`.
+
+#### Alarm line `on`
+
+This line defines the chart this alarm should attach to.
+
+**Alarms:**
+
+```yaml
+on: CHART
+```
+
+The value `CHART` should be the unique ID or name of the chart you're interested in, as shown on the dashboard. In the
+image below, the unique ID is `system.cpu`.
+
+![Finding the unique ID of a
+chart](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1153921/67443082-43b16e80-f5b8-11e9-8d33-d6ee052c6678.png)
+
+**Template:**
+
+```yaml
+on: CONTEXT
+```
+
+The value `CONTEXT` should be the context you want this template to attach to.
+
+Need to find the context? Hover over the date on any given chart and look at the tooltip. In the image below, which
+shows a disk I/O chart, the tooltip reads: `proc:/proc/diskstats, disk.io`.
+
+![Finding the context of a chart via the tooltip](https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/1153921/68882856-2b230880-06cd-11ea-923b-b28c4632d479.png)
+
+You're interested in what comes after the comma: `disk.io`. That's the name of the chart's context.
+
+If you create a template using the `disk.io` context, it will apply an alarm to every disk available on your system.
+
+#### Alarm line `os`
+
+The alarm or template will be used only if the operating system of the host matches this list specified in `os`. The
+value is a space-separated list.
+
+The following example enables the entity on Linux, FreeBSD, and macOS, but no other operating systems.
+
+```yaml
+os: linux freebsd macos
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `hosts`
+
+The alarm or template will be used only if the hostname of the host matches this space-separated list.
+
+The following example will load on systems with the hostnames `server` and `server2`, and any system with hostnames that
+begin with `database`. It _will not load_ on the host `redis3`, but will load on any _other_ systems with hostnames that
+begin with `redis`.
+
+```yaml
+hosts: server1 server2 database* !redis3 redis*
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `plugin`
+
+The `plugin` line filters which plugin within the context this alarm should apply to. The value is a space-separated
+list of [simple patterns](/libnetdata/simple_pattern/README.md). For example,
+you can create a filter for an alarm that applies specifically to `python.d.plugin`:
+
+```yaml
+plugin: python.d.plugin
+```
+
+The `plugin` line is best used with other options like `module`. When used alone, the `plugin` line creates a very
+inclusive filter that is unlikely to be of much use in production. See [`module`](#alarm-line-module) for a
+comprehensive example using both.
+
+#### Alarm line `module`
+
+The `module` line filters which module within the context this alarm should apply to. The value is a space-separated
+list of [simple patterns](/libnetdata/simple_pattern/README.md). For
+example, you can create an alarm that applies only on the `isc_dhcpd` module started by `python.d.plugin`:
+
+```yaml
+plugin: python.d.plugin
+module: isc_dhcpd
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `families`
+
+The `families` line, used only alongside templates, filters which families within the context this alarm should apply
+to. The value is a space-separated list.
+
+The value is a space-separate list of simple patterns. See our [simple patterns docs](../libnetdata/simple_pattern/) for
+some examples.
+
+For example, you can create a template on the `disk.io` context, but filter it to only the `sda` and `sdb` families:
+
+```yaml
+families: sda sdb
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `lookup`
+
+This line makes a database lookup to find a value. This result of this lookup is available as `$this`.
+
+The format is:
+
+```yaml
+lookup: METHOD AFTER [at BEFORE] [every DURATION] [OPTIONS] [of DIMENSIONS] [foreach DIMENSIONS]
+```
+
+Everything is the same with [badges](../web/api/badges/). In short:
+
+- `METHOD` is one of `average`, `min`, `max`, `sum`, `incremental-sum`.
+ This is required.
+
+- `AFTER` is a relative number of seconds, but it also accepts a single letter for changing
+ the units, like `-1s` = 1 second in the past, `-1m` = 1 minute in the past, `-1h` = 1 hour
+ in the past, `-1d` = 1 day in the past. You need a negative number (i.e. how far in the past
+ to look for the value). **This is required**.
+
+- `at BEFORE` is by default 0 and is not required. Using this you can define the end of the
+ lookup. So data will be evaluated between `AFTER` and `BEFORE`.
+
+- `every DURATION` sets the updated frequency of the lookup (supports single letter units as
+ above too).
+
+- `OPTIONS` is a space separated list of `percentage`, `absolute`, `min2max`, `unaligned`,
+ `match-ids`, `match-names`. Check the badges documentation for more info.
+
+- `of DIMENSIONS` is optional and has to be the last parameter. Dimensions have to be separated
+ by `,` or `|`. The space characters found in dimensions will be kept as-is (a few dimensions
+ have spaces in their names). This accepts Netdata simple patterns _(with `words` separated by
+ `,` or `|` instead of spaces)_ and the `match-ids` and `match-names` options affect the searches
+ for dimensions.
+
+- `foreach DIMENSIONS` is optional, will always be the last parameter, and uses the same `,`/`|`
+ rules as the `of` parameter. Each dimension you specify in `foreach` will use the same rule
+ to trigger an alarm. If you set both `of` and `foreach`, Netdata will ignore the `of` parameter
+ and replace it with one of the dimensions you gave to `foreach`.
+
+The result of the lookup will be available as `$this` and `$NAME` in expressions.
+The timestamps of the timeframe evaluated by the database lookup is available as variables
+`$after` and `$before` (both are unix timestamps).
+
+#### Alarm line `calc`
+
+A `calc` is designed to apply some calculation to the values or variables available to the entity. The result of the
+calculation will be made available at the `$this` variable, overwriting the value from your `lookup`, to use in warning
+and critical expressions.
+
+When paired with `lookup`, `calc` will perform the calculation just after `lookup` has retrieved a value from Netdata's
+database.
+
+You can use `calc` without `lookup` if you are using [other available variables](#variables).
+
+The `calc` line uses [expressions](#expressions) for its syntax.
+
+```yaml
+calc: EXPRESSION
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `every`
+
+Sets the update frequency of this alarm. This is the same to the `every DURATION` given
+in the `lookup` lines.
+
+Format:
+
+```yaml
+every: DURATION
+```
+
+`DURATION` accepts `s` for seconds, `m` is minutes, `h` for hours, `d` for days.
+
+#### Alarm lines `green` and `red`
+
+Set the green and red thresholds of a chart. Both are available as `$green` and `$red` in expressions. If multiple
+alarms define different thresholds, the ones defined by the first alarm will be used. These will eventually visualized
+on the dashboard, so only one set of them is allowed. If you need multiple sets of them in different alarms, use
+absolute numbers instead of `$red` and `$green`.
+
+Format:
+
+```yaml
+green: NUMBER
+red: NUMBER
+```
+
+#### Alarm lines `warn` and `crit`
+
+Define the expression that triggers either a warning or critical alarm. These are optional, and should evaluate to
+either true or false (or zero/non-zero).
+
+The format uses Netdata's [expressions syntax](#expressions).
+
+```yaml
+warn: EXPRESSION
+crit: EXPRESSION
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `to`
+
+This will be the first parameter of the script to be executed when the alarm switches status. Its meaning is left up to
+the `exec` script.
+
+The default `exec` script, `alarm-notify.sh`, uses this field as a space separated list of roles, which are then
+consulted to find the exact recipients per notification method.
+
+Format:
+
+```yaml
+to: ROLE1 ROLE2 ROLE3 ...
+```
+
+#### Alarm line `exec`
+
+The script that will be executed when the alarm changes status.
+
+Format:
+
+```yaml
+exec: SCRIPT
+```
+
+The default `SCRIPT` is Netdata's `alarm-notify.sh`, which supports all the notifications methods Netdata supports,
+including custom hooks.
+
+#### Alarm line `delay`
+
+This is used to provide optional hysteresis settings for the notifications, to defend against notification floods. These
+settings do not affect the actual alarm - only the time the `exec` script is executed.
+
+Format:
+
+```yaml
+delay: [[[up U] [down D] multiplier M] max X]
+```
+
+- `up U` defines the delay to be applied to a notification for an alarm that raised its status
+ (i.e. CLEAR to WARNING, CLEAR to CRITICAL, WARNING to CRITICAL). For example, `up 10s`, the
+ notification for this event will be sent 10 seconds after the actual event. This is used in
+ hope the alarm will get back to its previous state within the duration given. The default `U`
+ is zero.
+
+- `down D` defines the delay to be applied to a notification for an alarm that moves to lower
+ state (i.e. CRITICAL to WARNING, CRITICAL to CLEAR, WARNING to CLEAR). For example, `down 1m`
+ will delay the notification by 1 minute. This is used to prevent notifications for flapping
+ alarms. The default `D` is zero.
+
+- `multiplier M` multiplies `U` and `D` when an alarm changes state, while a notification is
+ delayed. The default multiplier is `1.0`.
+
+- `max X` defines the maximum absolute notification delay an alarm may get. The default `X`
+ is `max(U * M, D * M)` (i.e. the max duration of `U` or `D` multiplied once with `M`).
+
+ Example:
+
+ `delay: up 10s down 15m multiplier 2 max 1h`
+
+ The time is `00:00:00` and the status of the alarm is CLEAR.
+
+ | time of event | new status | delay | notification will be sent | why |
+ | ------------- | ---------- | --- | ------------------------- | --- |
+ | 00:00:01 | WARNING | `up 10s` | 00:00:11 | first state switch |
+ | 00:00:05 | CLEAR | `down 15m x2` | 00:30:05 | the alarm changes state while a notification is delayed, so it was multiplied |
+ | 00:00:06 | WARNING | `up 10s x2 x2` | 00:00:26 | multiplied twice |
+ | 00:00:07 | CLEAR | `down 15m x2 x2 x2` | 00:45:07 | multiplied 3 times. |
+
+ So:
+
+ - `U` and `D` are multiplied by `M` every time the alarm changes state (any state, not just
+ their matching one) and a delay is in place.
+ - All are reset to their defaults when the alarm switches state without a delay in place.
+
+#### Alarm line `repeat`
+
+Defines the interval between repeating notifications for the alarms in CRITICAL or WARNING mode. This will override the
+default interval settings inherited from health settings in `netdata.conf`. The default settings for repeating
+notifications are `default repeat warning = DURATION` and `default repeat critical = DURATION` which can be found in
+health stock configuration, when one of these interval is bigger than 0, Netdata will activate the repeat notification
+for `CRITICAL`, `CLEAR` and `WARNING` messages.
+
+Format:
+
+```yaml
+repeat: [off] [warning DURATION] [critical DURATION]
+```
+
+- `off`: Turns off the repeating feature for the current alarm. This is effective when the default repeat settings has
+ been enabled in health configuration.
+- `warning DURATION`: Defines the interval when the alarm is in WARNING state. Use `0s` to turn off the repeating
+ notification for WARNING mode.
+- `critical DURATION`: Defines the interval when the alarm is in CRITICAL state. Use `0s` to turn off the repeating
+ notification for CRITICAL mode.
+
+#### Alarm line `option`
+
+The only possible value for the `option` line is
+
+```yaml
+option: no-clear-notification
+```
+
+For some alarms we need compare two time-frames, to detect anomalies. For example, `health.d/httpcheck.conf` has an
+alarm template called `web_service_slow` that compares the average http call response time over the last 3 minutes,
+compared to the average over the last hour. It triggers a warning alarm when the average of the last 3 minutes is twice
+the average of the last hour. In such cases, it is easy to trigger the alarm, but difficult to tell when the alarm is
+cleared. As time passes, the newest window moves into the older, so the average response time of the last hour will keep
+increasing. Eventually, the comparison will find the averages in the two time-frames close enough to clear the alarm.
+However, the issue was not resolved, it's just a matter of the newer data "polluting" the old. For such alarms, it's a
+good idea to tell Netdata to not clear the notification, by using the `no-clear-notification` option.
+
+#### Alarm line `host labels`
+
+Defines the list of labels present on a host. See our [host labels guide](/docs/guides/using-host-labels.md) for
+an explanation of host labels and how to implement them.
+
+For example, let's suppose that `netdata.conf` is configured with the following labels:
+
+```yaml
+[host labels]
+ installed = 20191211
+ room = server
+```
+
+And more labels in `netdata.conf` for workstations:
+
+```yaml
+[host labels]
+ installed = 201705
+ room = workstation
+```
+
+By defining labels inside of `netdata.conf`, you can now apply labels to alarms. For example, you can add the following
+line to any alarms you'd like to apply to hosts that have the label `room = server`.
+
+```yaml
+host labels: room = server
+```
+
+The `host labels` is a space-separated list that accepts simple patterns. For example, you can create an alarm
+that will be applied to all hosts installed in the last decade with the following line:
+
+```yaml
+host labels: installed = 201*
+```
+
+See our [simple patterns docs](../libnetdata/simple_pattern/) for more examples.
+
+## Expressions
+
+Netdata has an internal [infix expression parser](../libnetdata/eval). This parses expressions and creates an internal
+structure that allows fast execution of them.
+
+These operators are supported `+`, `-`, `*`, `/`, `<`, `<=`, `<>`, `!=`, `>`, `>=`, `&&`, `||`, `!`, `AND`, `OR`, `NOT`.
+Boolean operators result in either `1` (true) or `0` (false).
+
+The conditional evaluation operator `?` is supported too. Using this operator IF-THEN-ELSE conditional statements can be
+specified. The format is: `(condition) ? (true expression) : (false expression)`. So, Netdata will first evaluate the
+`condition` and based on the result will either evaluate `true expression` or `false expression`.
+
+Example: `($this > 0) ? ($avail * 2) : ($used / 2)`.
+
+Nested such expressions are also supported (i.e. `true expression` and `false expression` can contain conditional
+evaluations).
+
+Expressions also support the `abs()` function.
+
+Expressions can have variables. Variables start with `$`. Check below for more information.
+
+There are two special values you can use:
+
+- `nan`, for example `$this != nan` will check if the variable `this` is available. A variable can be `nan` if the
+ database lookup failed. All calculations (i.e. addition, multiplication, etc) with a `nan` result in a `nan`.
+
+- `inf`, for example `$this != inf` will check if `this` is not infinite. A value or variable can be set to infinite
+ if divided by zero. All calculations (i.e. addition, multiplication, etc) with a `inf` result in a `inf`.
+
+### Special use of the conditional operator
+
+A common (but not necessarily obvious) use of the conditional evaluation operator is to provide
+[hysteresis](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hysteresis) around the critical or warning thresholds. This usage helps to
+avoid bogus messages resulting from small variations in the value when it is varying regularly but staying close to the
+threshold value, without needing to delay sending messages at all.
+
+An example of such usage from the default CPU usage alarms bundled with Netdata is:
+
+```yaml
+warn: $this > (($status >= $WARNING) ? (75) : (85))
+crit: $this > (($status == $CRITICAL) ? (85) : (95))
+```
+
+The above say:
+
+- If the alarm is currently a warning, then the threshold for being considered a warning is 75, otherwise it's 85.
+
+- If the alarm is currently critical, then the threshold for being considered critical is 85, otherwise it's 95.
+
+Which in turn, results in the following behavior:
+
+- While the value is rising, it will trigger a warning when it exceeds 85, and a critical alert when it exceeds 95.
+
+- While the value is falling, it will return to a warning state when it goes below 85, and a normal state when it goes
+ below 75.
+
+- If the value is constantly varying between 80 and 90, then it will trigger a warning the first time it goes above
+ 85, but will remain a warning until it goes below 75 (or goes above 85).
+
+- If the value is constantly varying between 90 and 100, then it will trigger a critical alert the first time it goes
+ above 95, but will remain a critical alert goes below 85 (at which point it will return to being a warning).
+
+## Variables
+
+You can find all the variables that can be used for a given chart, using
+`http://NODE:19999/api/v1/alarm_variables?chart=CHART_NAME`, replacing `NODE` with the IP address or hostname for your
+Agent dashboard. For example, [variables for the `system.cpu` chart of the
+registry](https://registry.my-netdata.io/api/v1/alarm_variables?chart=system.cpu).
+
+> If you don't know how to find the CHART_NAME, you can read about it [here](../web/README.md#charts).
+
+Netdata supports 3 internal indexes for variables that will be used in health monitoring.
+
+<details markdown="1"><summary>The variables below can be used in both chart alarms and context templates.</summary>
+
+Although the `alarm_variables` link shows you variables for a particular chart, the same variables can also be used in
+templates for charts belonging to a given [context](../web/README.md#contexts). The reason is that all charts of a given
+context are essentially identical, with the only difference being the [family](../web/README.md#families) that
+identifies a particular hardware or software instance. Charts and templates do not apply to specific families anyway,
+unless if you explicitly limit an alarm with the [alarm line `families`](#alarm-line-families).
+
+</details>
+
+- **chart local variables**. All the dimensions of the chart are exposed as local variables. The value of `$this` for
+ the other configured alarms of the chart also appears, under the name of each configured alarm.
+
+ Charts also define a few special variables:
+
+ - `$last_collected_t` is the unix timestamp of the last data collection
+ - `$collected_total_raw` is the sum of all the dimensions (their last collected values)
+ - `$update_every` is the update frequency of the chart
+ - `$green` and `$red` the threshold defined in alarms (these are per chart - the charts
+ inherits them from the the first alarm that defined them)
+
+ Chart dimensions define their last calculated (i.e. interpolated) value, exactly as
+ shown on the charts, but also a variable with their name and suffix `_raw` that resolves
+ to the last collected value - as collected and another with suffix `_last_collected_t`
+ that resolves to unix timestamp the dimension was last collected (there may be dimensions
+ that fail to be collected while others continue normally).
+
+- **family variables**. Families are used to group charts together. For example all `eth0`
+ charts, have `family = eth0`. This index includes all local variables, but if there are
+ overlapping variables, only the first are exposed.
+
+- **host variables**. All the dimensions of all charts, including all alarms, in fullname.
+ Fullname is `CHART.VARIABLE`, where `CHART` is either the chart id or the chart name (both
+ are supported).
+
+- **special variables\*** are:
+
+ - `$this`, which is resolved to the value of the current alarm.
+
+ - `$status`, which is resolved to the current status of the alarm (the current = the last
+ status, i.e. before the current database lookup and the evaluation of the `calc` line).
+ This values can be compared with `$REMOVED`, `$UNINITIALIZED`, `$UNDEFINED`, `$CLEAR`,
+ `$WARNING`, `$CRITICAL`. These values are incremental, ie. `$status > $CLEAR` works as
+ expected.
+
+ - `$now`, which is resolved to current unix timestamp.
+
+## Alarm statuses
+
+Alarms can have the following statuses:
+
+- `REMOVED` - the alarm has been deleted (this happens when a SIGUSR2 is sent to Netdata
+ to reload health configuration)
+
+- `UNINITIALIZED` - the alarm is not initialized yet
+
+- `UNDEFINED` - the alarm failed to be calculated (i.e. the database lookup failed,
+ a division by zero occurred, etc)
+
+- `CLEAR` - the alarm is not armed / raised (i.e. is OK)
+
+- `WARNING` - the warning expression resulted in true or non-zero
+
+- `CRITICAL` - the critical expression resulted in true or non-zero
+
+The external script will be called for all status changes.
+
+## Example alarms
+
+Check the `health/health.d/` directory for all alarms shipped with Netdata.
+
+Here are a few examples:
+
+### Example 1
+
+A simple check if an apache server is alive:
+
+```yaml
+template: apache_last_collected_secs
+ on: apache.requests
+ calc: $now - $last_collected_t
+ every: 10s
+ warn: $this > ( 5 * $update_every)
+ crit: $this > (10 * $update_every)
+```
+
+The above checks that Netdata is able to collect data from apache. In detail:
+
+```yaml
+template: apache_last_collected_secs
+```
+
+The above defines a **template** named `apache_last_collected_secs`.
+The name is important since `$apache_last_collected_secs` resolves to the `calc` line.
+So, try to give something descriptive.
+
+```yaml
+ on: apache.requests
+```
+
+The above applies the **template** to all charts that have `context = apache.requests`
+(i.e. all your apache servers).
+
+```yaml
+ calc: $now - $last_collected_t
+```
+
+- `$now` is a standard variable that resolves to the current timestamp.
+
+- `$last_collected_t` is the last data collection timestamp of the chart.
+ So this calculation gives the number of seconds passed since the last data collection.
+
+```yaml
+ every: 10s
+```
+
+The alarm will be evaluated every 10 seconds.
+
+```yaml
+ warn: $this > ( 5 * $update_every)
+ crit: $this > (10 * $update_every)
+```
+
+If these result in non-zero or true, they trigger the alarm.
+
+- `$this` refers to the value of this alarm (i.e. the result of the `calc` line.
+ We could also use `$apache_last_collected_secs`.
+
+`$update_every` is the update frequency of the chart, in seconds.
+
+So, the warning condition checks if we have not collected data from apache for 5
+iterations and the critical condition checks for 10 iterations.
+
+### Example 2
+
+Check if any of the disks is critically low on disk space:
+
+```yaml
+template: disk_full_percent
+ on: disk.space
+ calc: $used * 100 / ($avail + $used)
+ every: 1m
+ warn: $this > 80
+ crit: $this > 95
+ repeat: warning 120s critical 10s
+```
+
+`$used` and `$avail` are the `used` and `avail` chart dimensions as shown on the dashboard.
+
+So, the `calc` line finds the percentage of used space. `$this` resolves to this percentage.
+
+This is a repeating alarm and if the alarm becomes CRITICAL it repeats the notifications every 10 seconds. It also
+repeats notifications every 2 minutes if the alarm goes into WARNING mode.
+
+### Example 3
+
+Predict if any disk will run out of space in the near future.
+
+We do this in 2 steps:
+
+Calculate the disk fill rate:
+
+```yaml
+ template: disk_fill_rate
+ on: disk.space
+ lookup: max -1s at -30m unaligned of avail
+ calc: ($this - $avail) / (30 * 60)
+ every: 15s
+```
+
+In the `calc` line: `$this` is the result of the `lookup` line (i.e. the free space 30 minutes
+ago) and `$avail` is the current disk free space. So the `calc` line will either have a positive
+number of GB/second if the disk if filling up, or a negative number of GB/second if the disk is
+freeing up space.
+
+There is no `warn` or `crit` lines here. So, this template will just do the calculation and
+nothing more.
+
+Predict the hours after which the disk will run out of space:
+
+```yaml
+ template: disk_full_after_hours
+ on: disk.space
+ calc: $avail / $disk_fill_rate / 3600
+ every: 10s
+ warn: $this > 0 and $this < 48
+ crit: $this > 0 and $this < 24
+```
+
+The `calc` line estimates the time in hours, we will run out of disk space. Of course, only
+positive values are interesting for this check, so the warning and critical conditions check
+for positive values and that we have enough free space for 48 and 24 hours respectively.
+
+Once this alarm triggers we will receive an email like this:
+
+![image](https://cloud.githubusercontent.com/assets/2662304/17839993/87872b32-6802-11e6-8e08-b2e4afef93bb.png)
+
+### Example 4
+
+Check if any network interface is dropping packets:
+
+```yaml
+template: 30min_packet_drops
+ on: net.drops
+ lookup: sum -30m unaligned absolute
+ every: 10s
+ crit: $this > 0
+```
+
+The `lookup` line will calculate the sum of the all dropped packets in the last 30 minutes.
+
+The `crit` line will issue a critical alarm if even a single packet has been dropped.
+
+Note that the drops chart does not exist if a network interface has never dropped a single packet.
+When Netdata detects a dropped packet, it will add the chart and it will automatically attach this
+alarm to it.
+
+### Example 5
+
+Check if user or system dimension is using more than 50% of cpu:
+
+```yaml
+ alarm: dim_template
+ on: system.cpu
+ os: linux
+lookup: average -3s percentage foreach system,user
+ units: %
+ every: 10s
+ warn: $this > 50
+ crit: $this > 80
+```
+
+The `lookup` line will calculate the average CPU usage from system and user in the last 3 seconds. Because we have
+the foreach in the `lookup` line, Netdata will create two independent alarms called `dim_template_system`
+and `dim_template_user` that will have all the other parameters shared among them.
+
+### Example 6
+
+Check if all dimensions are using more than 50% of cpu:
+
+```yaml
+ alarm: dim_template
+ on: system.cpu
+ os: linux
+lookup: average -3s percentage foreach *
+ units: %
+ every: 10s
+ warn: $this > 50
+ crit: $this > 80
+```
+
+The `lookup` line will calculate the average of CPU usage from system and user in the last 3 seconds. In this case
+Netdata will create alarms for all dimensions of the chart.
+
+## Troubleshooting
+
+You can compile Netdata with [debugging](/daemon/README.md#debugging) and then set in `netdata.conf`:
+
+```yaml
+[global]
+ debug flags = 0x0000000000800000
+```
+
+Then check your `/var/log/netdata/debug.log`. It will show you how it works. Important: this will generate a lot of
+output in debug.log.
+
+You can find the context of charts by looking up the chart in either `http://NODE:19999/netdata.conf` or
+`http://NODE:19999/api/v1/charts`, replacing `NODE` with the IP address or hostname for your Agent dashboard.
+
+You can find how Netdata interpreted the expressions by examining the alarm at
+`http://NODE:19999/api/v1/alarms?all`. For each expression, Netdata will return the expression as given in its
+config file, and the same expression with additional parentheses added to indicate the evaluation flow of the
+expression.
+
+## Disabling health checks or silencing notifications at runtime
+
+It's currently not possible to schedule notifications from within the alarm template. For those scenarios where you need
+to temporary disable notifications (for instance when running backups triggers a disk alert) you can disable or silence
+notifications are runtime. The health checks can be controlled at runtime via the [health management
+api](/web/api/health/README.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%2Fhealth%2Freference%2F&_u=MAC~&cid=5792dfd7-8dc4-476b-af31-da2fdb9f93d2&tid=UA-64295674-3)](<>)