<dependency>
<groupId>org.wildfly.swarm</groupId>
<artifactId>monitor</artifactId>
</dependency>
Monitor
Configuration
To use the monitor fraction in your application, you need to add the following dependency:
Node Status
The monitoring fraction provides access to the runtime status on each node. The runtime information is exposed through a HTTP interface and gives access following information:
WebContext | Description | Content-Type |
---|---|---|
/node |
Node specific identifiers and overall runtime status (i.e. reload and suspend states) |
application/json |
{ "name" : "macbook-pro-2", "server-state" : "running", "suspend-state" : "RUNNING", "running-mode" : "NORMAL", "uuid" : "a8100296-573d-4b40-9648-e82bdb0041d9", "wfs-version" : "fixme" } |
||
/heap |
The JVM heap usage |
application/json |
{ "heap-memory-usage" : { "init" : 268435456, "used" : 56067784, "committed" : 356515840, "max" : 3817865216 }, "non-heap-memory-usage" : { "init" : 2555904, "used" : 52717328, "committed" : 57622528, "max" : -1 } } |
||
/threads |
The JVM thread usage |
application/json |
{ "thread-count" : 33, "peak-thread-count" : 47, "total-started-thread-count" : 49, "current-thread-cpu-time" : 66855000, "current-thread-user-time" : 64003000 } |
||
/health |
A list of available health endpoints |
application/json |
Health Check API
Health checks are implemented using regular JAX-RS API and exposing certain GET methods through the @Health
annotation.
Health check responses are expressed using the HealthStatus
and CompositeHealthStatus
API’s. Any health status response type will automatically converted to
an application/json
response content type and the HTTP status derived from the HealthStatus.<UP|DOWN>
states:
package org.wildfly.swarm.examples.jaxrs.health;
import java.io.File;
import javax.ws.rs.GET;
import javax.ws.rs.Path;
import org.wildfly.swarm.monitor.Health;
import org.wildfly.swarm.monitor.HealthStatus;
@Path("/app")
public class HealthCheckResource {
@GET
@Path("/diskSpace")
@Health
public HealthStatus checkDiskspace() {
File path = new File(".");
long freeBytes = path.getFreeSpace();
long threshold = 1024 * 1024 * 100; // 100mb
return freeBytes>threshold ? HealthStatus.up() : HealthStatus.down().withAttribute("freebytes", freeBytes);
}
@GET
@Path("/other")
@Health(inheritSecurity = false)
public HealthStatus checkSomethingElse() {
return HealthStatus.up();
}
}
Accessing the above endpoint will return a json encoded response like this:
curl --digest -u "<user>:<pass>" http://localhost:8080/health/app/diskSpace
{
"freebytes": "1234567890"
}
Health Check HTTP Endpoints
Health checks (i.e. to integrate with external service registries) can be added by implementing JAX-RS endpoints and declaring them as
a health endpoints through the use of the '@Health' annotation. Any GET method annotated with @Health will be accessible through /health/<subresource>
For instance if you provide an HTTP endpoint for /app/diskSpace
, then it will be listed under /health
and accessible through /health/app/diskSpace
curl http://localhost:8080/health
{
"links": [
"/health/app/diskSpace"
]
}
Secure access to @Health endpoints
In order to secure access to the HTTP endpoints you’ll need to include the 'management' fraction and configure a security realm. See Security Realms for further information.
Usually the security for the endpoints behind '/health' will be inherited.
(i.e. the security realm settings you configured)
But you can override this policy with @Health(inheritSecurity=false)
.
If security is inherited, then the JAX-RS endpoint annotated with @Health
will not be directly accessible directly anymore (yields HTTP 403).
If you don’t inherit the security, it’s up to your responsibility to secure the endpoint (or leave it unprotected) .
The combinations of using the @Health
annotations with regard to the possible HTTP requests
are outlined in the table below:
Request path | @Health Annotation | Outcome |
---|---|---|
/health |
irrelevant |
Any HTTP will require authentication, if the 'ManagementRealm' is configured. If you don’t configure a security realm this endpoint will not require authentication to access it. The @Health secure attribute is not relevant in this case. |
/foo/bar/health |
inheritSecurity=true |
Any direct HTTP request to this endpoint will receive a 403 response. |
/foo/bar/health |
inheritSecurity=false |
Any direct HTTP request to this endpoint will be passed through. Security for this endpoint is an obligation of the developer. |