3.9 KiB
Health Check
Notes:
- Liveness and readiness probes were introduced in GitLab 9.1.
- The
health_check
endpoint was introduced in GitLab 8.8 and will be deprecated in GitLab 9.1. Read more in the old behavior section.
GitLab provides liveness and readiness probes to indicate service health and reachability to required services. These probes report on the status of the database connection, Redis connection, and access to the filesystem. These endpoints can be provided to schedulers like Kubernetes to hold traffic until the system is ready or restart the container as needed.
Access Token
An access token needs to be provided while accessing the probe endpoints. The current
accepted token can be found under the Admin area ➔ Monitoring ➔ Health check
(admin/health_check
) page of your GitLab instance.
The access token can be passed as a URL parameter:
https://gitlab.example.com/-/readiness?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
which will then provide a report of system health in JSON format:
{
"db_check": {
"status": "ok"
},
"redis_check": {
"status": "ok"
},
"fs_shards_check": {
"status": "ok",
"labels": {
"shard": "default"
}
}
}
Using the Endpoint
Once you have the access token, the probes can be accessed:
https://gitlab.example.com/-/readiness?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
https://gitlab.example.com/-/liveness?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
Status
On failure, the endpoint will return a 500
HTTP status code. On success, the endpoint
will return a valid successful HTTP status code, and a success
message.
Old behavior
Notes:
- Liveness and readiness probes were introduced in GitLab 9.1.
- The
health_check
endpoint was introduced in GitLab 8.8 and will be deprecated in GitLab 9.1. Read more in the old behavior section.
GitLab provides a health check endpoint for uptime monitoring on the health_check
web
endpoint. The health check reports on the overall system status based on the status of
the database connection, the state of the database migrations, and the ability to write
and access the cache. This endpoint can be provided to uptime monitoring services like
Pingdom, Nagios, and NewRelic.
Once you have the access token, health information can be
retrieved as plain text, JSON, or XML using the health_check
endpoint:
https://gitlab.example.com/health_check?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
https://gitlab.example.com/health_check.json?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
https://gitlab.example.com/health_check.xml?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
You can also ask for the status of specific services:
https://gitlab.example.com/health_check/cache.json?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
https://gitlab.example.com/health_check/database.json?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
https://gitlab.example.com/health_check/migrations.json?token=ACCESS_TOKEN
For example, the JSON output of the following health check:
curl --header "TOKEN: ACCESS_TOKEN" https://gitlab.example.com/health_check.json
would be like:
{"healthy":true,"message":"success"}
On failure, the endpoint will return a 500
HTTP status code. On success, the endpoint
will return a valid successful HTTP status code, and a success
message. Ideally your
uptime monitoring should look for the success message.