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CHECK_CREATION.md

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Creating Your Own khcheck

Creating your own khcheck client is simple! :)

Using Go

If you are using Go, we have an easy to use client package: found here.

example code:

package main

import (
  "github.com/kuberhealthy/kuberhealthy/v2/pkg/checks/external/checkclient"
)

func main() {
  ok := doCheckStuff()
  if !ok {
    checkclient.ReportFailure([]string{"Test has failed!"})
    return
  }
  checkclient.ReportSuccess()
}

An example check with working Dockerfile is available to use as an example here.

Using JavaScript

Reference Sample:

If you would like to write a check in JavaScript, there is a sample client for checks found here.

Please see the example check under the same folder with a Dockerfile for reference.

NPM:

The kuberhealthy NPM package is conformant with the reference sample syntax but also supports async/await as well as arbitrary host and port.

example code:

const kh = require('kuberhealthy')

const report = async () => {
  let ok = await doCheckStuff()
  if (ok) {
    await kh.ReportSuccess()
  } else {
    await kh.ReportFailure()
  }
}

report()

NOTE: KH_REPORTING_URL must be set in your env. This is usually done automatically if running as 'khcheck' on kubernetes.

Using Another Language

Your check only needs to do a few things:

  • Read the KH_REPORTING_URL environment variable.
  • Send a POST to the KH_REPORTING_URL with the following JSON body:
  • Ensure that your check finishes before the unixtime deadline specified in the KH_CHECK_RUN_DEADLINE environment variable. If KH_CHECK_RUN_DEADLINE is not respected, your check may run into a 400 error when reporting its state to Kuberhealthy. This deadline is calculated by the timeout: setting in the khcheck resource.
{
  "Errors": [
    "Error 1 here",
    "Error 2 here"
  ],
  "OK": false
}

Never send "OK": true if Errors has values or you will be given a 400 return code.

Simply build your program into a container, docker push it to somewhere your cluster has access and craft a khcheck resource to enable it in your cluster where Kuberhealthy is installed.

Clients outside of Go can be found in the clients directory.

Injected Check Pod Environment Variables

The following environment variables are injected into every checker pod that Kuberhealthy runs. When writing your checker code, you can depend on these environment variables always being available to you, even if you do not specify them in your khcheck spec.

KH_REPORTING_URL: The Kuberhealthy URL to send POST requests to for check statuses.
KH_CHECK_RUN_DEADLINE: The Kuberhealthy deadline for checks as calculated by the check timeout given in Unix.
KH_RUN_UUID: The UUID of the check run.  This must be sent back as the header 'kh-run-uuid' when status is reported to KH_REPORTING_URL.  The Go checkClient package does this automatically.
KH_POD_NAMESPACE: The namespace of the checker pod.

Creating Your khcheck Resource

Every check needs a khcheck to enable and configure it. As soon as this resource is applied to the cluster, Kuberhealthy will begin running your check. Whenever you make a change, Kuberhealthy will automatically re-load the check and restart any checks currently in progress gracefully.

Here is a minimal khcheck resource to start hacking with:

apiVersion: comcast.github.io/v1
kind: KuberhealthyCheck
metadata:
  name: kh-test-check 
spec:
  runInterval: 30s # The interval that Kuberhealthy will run your check on 
  timeout: 2m # After this much time, Kuberhealthy will kill your check and consider it "failed"
  podSpec: # The exact pod spec that will run.  All normal pod spec is valid here.
    containers:
    - env: # Environment variables are optional but a recommended way to configure check behavior
        - name: MY_OPTION_ENV_VAR
          value: "option_setting_here"
      image: quay.io/comcast/test-check:latest # The image of the check you just pushed
      imagePullPolicy: Always # During check development, it helps to set this to 'Always' to prevent on-node image caching.
      name: main

That's it! As soon as this khcheck is applied, Kuberhealthy will begin running your check, serving prometheus metrics for it, and displaying status JSON on the status page.

Contribute Your Check

You can see a list of checks that others have written on the check registry. If you have a check that may be useful to others and want to contribute, consider adding it to the registry! Just fork this repository and send a PR. This is made easy by simply checking the Edit pencil on the check registry page.