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Example repository of using data/variable-driven Terraform to configure PagerDuty & Datadog

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ACME - PagerDuty & Datadog Terraform

Introduction

Please refer to the Introduction to Terraform, to the PagerDuty Provider and to the Datadog Provider documentation.

The Terraform is implemented in a single root module as part of the Proof of Value exercise; it is highly recommended that to operationalise this at scale ACME iterates further to develop Terraform modules for reusability and/or engages PagerDuty Professional Services for further development.

Usage

Variables

variables.tf defines the default values of the common input variables. These can be overridden in the standard Terraform manner, but it is highly suggested that only the credentials such as pagerduty_token are overridden and all other variable definitions are maintained and checked into source control.

The pagerduty_token variable is the API token used to authenticate with the PagerDuty account. A valid read-write API key is required. The pagerduty_service_region variable is used to configure the PagerDuty Service Region between us and eu. The datadog_api_key variable is the API token used to authenticate with the Datadog account. The datadog_app_key variable is the APP key used to authenticate with the Datadog account. The datadog_domain variable is used to configure the Datadog API URL (e.g. api.datadoghq.com or api.datadoghq.eu)

It is suggested that this is set in an environment variable, in a terraform.tfvars file (ignored by the .gitignore file) or passed using the -var command line argument for terraform to avoid it being accidentally committed into a Git repository.

An example terraform.tfvars.example file is provided. If this file is renamed to terraform.tfvars and the pagerduty_token line populated with a valid API token, it will be used for the authentication.

Users & Teams

Currently, users are being provisioned from the users.csv file via a pagerduty_user resource in pagerduty_teams.tf.

Teams and team membership are defined in teams.json; they are provisioned via pagerduty_team and pagerduty_team_membership resources in teams.tf.

Schedules, Escalation Policies and Response Plays

On-call rotation schedules and incident escalation policies have been defined in the escalation_*.tf files, one per team; they are provisioned via pagerduty_schedule and pagerduty_escalation_policy resources. Example schedules and escalation policies have been defined.

Technical Services

A PagerDuty (technical) service generally represents an application, microservice, or piece of infrastructure owned by a team. For example, a service can be a specialized component used by an application, like a user authentication service, or a piece of shared infrastructure like a database.

Technical services and their relationship to business services have been defined in the services_*.tf files, one per team; they are provisioned using pagerduty_service resources from a variable (e.g. acme_web_services) containing the details for each technical service for a team. Currently, only the name and description are stored in the variable; this could be extended to contain further service configuration settings and potentially using dynamic blocks for optional configuration.

Please refer to the Service Configuration Guide for recommended practices of Intuitive Service Configuration and pitfalls to avoid. It is highly recommended that standards/conventions be adopted; we provide the guide to ensure ease-of-use and purposeful setup.

Integrations, Event Rulesets and Service Event Rules

As a recommended practice, Event Rulesets have been used to integrate Datadog. Rulesets are used when integration event stream has more than one service destination; using event rules and a global Integration Key you can ingest and route your events to the right service based on their content.

It is highly recommended that when integrating with PagerDuty that attention is paid to Rate Limiting. PagerDuty's rate limits via the Events v2 API are (currently) approximately 120 events/minute per integration key. The limit is calculated over a 60 second window looking back from the current time.

It is also therefore highly recommended that multiple integration keys are used; it would not be recommended practice to use a single integration key for ingesting events from all Datadog monitors for all teams, for example. A typical practice is to create Event Rulesets per team/line of business/logical seperation, per integration source. It may also be appropriate to have seperate Event Rulesets per application or application team.

In this respository, a naming convention has been adopted of TEAMNAME_SOURCE e.g. cloud_datadog or cloud_guardduty.

Additionally, an example of setting up catch-all service and user for triaging events not matched by existing event ruleset rules.

Datadog

To integrate Datadog, the Datadog Integration Guide was used. Alternatively, it is possible to use a custom integration to PagerDuty from Datadog to customize the event payload.

An event ruleset and event rules have been created in the rulesets_cloud_datadog.tf file.

Datadog monitors have been tagged with a pdservice:SERVICEKEY tag (e.g. pdservice:ad) and the @pagerduty-ACMECloudRuleset @-mention. This will result in the Datadog events being sent to the Cloud Platform Datadog ruleset and routed to the services based on the pdservice tag.

An additional example of integrating Datadog using a service-level integration is provided in services_examples.tf

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Example repository of using data/variable-driven Terraform to configure PagerDuty & Datadog

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