KumuluzEE Health
KumuluzEE Health project provides consistent, unified way of performing microservice health checks and exposing health information.
KumuluzEE Health is a health check project for the KumuluzEE microservice framework. It provides easy, consistent and unified way of performing health checking on microservices and exposing health information to be used by monitoring and container orchestration environments such as Kubernetes. KumuluzEE Health is fully compliant with Kubernetes and has been extensively tested to work in Kubernetes.
KumuluzEE Health is compliant with the MicroProfile Service Health Checks specification 2.2.
KumuluzEE Health exposes /health/live
and /health/ready
endpoints (prefix customizable), which return the health
check status of the microservice.
Usage
You can enable the KumuluzEE Health module by adding the following dependencies:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.kumuluz.ee.health</groupId>
<artifactId>kumuluzee-health</artifactId>
<version>${kumuluzee-health.version}</version>
</dependency>
CDI and JAX-RS dependencies are a prerequisite. Please refer to KumuluzEE readme for more information.
Health checks
To check health of a microservice, you can use the provided health checks or you can define your own health checks.
Liveness and readiness
KumuluzEE Health differentiates between two health check types - liveness and readiness health check. In short - if a liveness check fails it means that the service is stuck and should be restarted. If a readiness check fails it means that the service is temporary unavailable and should not receive requests until all readiness checks succeed.
For more information on liveness and readiness see the following Kubernetes articles:
Built-in health checks
The following health checks are available out-of-the-box:
- DataSourceHealthCheck for checking the availability of the data source
- DiskSpaceHealthCheck for checking available disk space against a threshold
- ElasticSearchHealthCheck for checking the availability of Elasticsearch cluster
- EtcdHealthCheck for checking the availability of etcd instance
- HttpHealthCheck for checking the availability of HTTP resource
- MongoHealthCheck for checking the availability of Mongo database
- RabbitHealthCheck for checking the availability of RabbitMQ virtual host
- RedisHealthCheck for checking the availability of Redis store
- KafkaHealthCheck for checking the availability of Kafka cluster
More detailed descriptions of each health check are provided below. Additional built-in health check will be provided (contributions are welcome).
Implementing custom health checks
There are two ways how we can implement a custom health check.
- We can use the
@Liveness
and@Readiness
annotation to define health check classes. - We can implement health check classes and register them manually.
@Liveness and @Readiness annotation
To implement health checks using @Liveness
or @Readiness
annotation, we have to implement a CDI bean class which
implements the HealthCheck
interface. Such health checks are automatically discovered and registered to the HealthRegistry
.
Shown below is an example of a CDI bean health check using @Readiness
annotation:
import org.eclipse.microprofile.health.Readiness;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.health.HealthCheck;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.health.HealthCheckResponse;
import javax.enterprise.context.ApplicationScoped;
@Readiness
@ApplicationScoped
public class SuccessfulHealthCheckBean implements HealthCheck {
public HealthCheckResponse call() {
return HealthCheckResponse.up(SuccessfulHealthCheckBean.class.getSimpleName());
}
}
A health check can also be annotated with both @Liveness
and @Readiness
at the same time.
Health check implemented as class
To implement a health check with a custom class, the class has to implement the HealthCheck
interface. Such class has
to be manually registered with the HealthRegistry
.
Shown below is a custom health check implementation. It checks if the KumuluzEE GitHub page is accessible.
import org.eclipse.microprofile.health.HealthCheck;
import org.eclipse.microprofile.health.HealthCheckResponse;
import java.net.HttpURLConnection;
import java.net.URL;
import java.util.logging.Logger;
public class GithubHealthCheck implements HealthCheck {
private static final String url = "https://github.com/kumuluz/kumuluzee";
private static final Logger LOG = Logger.getLogger(GithubHealthCheck.class.getSimpleName());
@Override
public HealthCheckResponse call() {
try {
HttpURLConnection connection = (HttpURLConnection) new URL(url).openConnection();
connection.setRequestMethod("HEAD");
if (connection.getResponseCode() == 200) {
return HealthCheckResponse.up(GithubHealthCheck.class.getSimpleName());
}
} catch (Exception exception) {
LOG.severe(exception.getMessage());
}
return HealthCheckResponse.down(GithubHealthCheck.class.getSimpleName());
}
}
Registering custom health checks
To register a custom health check class we have to use the HealthRegistry
instance. We provide the health check unique
name, an instance of the health check class ant the health check type (liveness/readiness).
HealthRegistry.getInstance().register(GithubHealthCheck.class.getSimpleName(), new GithubHealthCheck(), HealthCheckType.LIVENESS);
Unregistering custom health checks
To unregister custom health checks we can use the HealthRegistry
instance and provide the health check unique name.
HealthRegistry.getInstance().unregister(GithubHealthCheck.class.getSimpleName());
Retrieving health check results
To invoke the health check and retrieve the result we can use the HealthRegistry
instance. The results will be
returned in a list of health check responses. The desired health check type must also be specified.
List<HealthCheckResponse> results = HealthRegistry.getInstance().getResults(HealthCheckType.BOTH);
/health/* endpoint output
The /health/live
and /health/ready
endpoints return:
- 200 with payload, when health checks are defined with positive status or are not defined
- 503 with payload, when health checks are defined, but at least one status is negative
- 500 without payload, when an exception occurred in the procedure of health checking
The health check is available on http://IP:PORT/health/live
and http://IP:PORT/health/ready
by default, payload
example is provided below:
{
"status" : "UP",
"checks" : [ {
"name" : "DataSourceHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP"
}, {
"name" : "DiskSpaceHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP"
}, {
"name" : "ElasticSearchHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP"
}, {
"name" : "EtcdHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP",
"data": {
"http://localhost:2379": "UP"
}
}, {
"name" : "HttpHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP",
"data": {
"https://github.com/kumuluz/kumuluzee-health": "UP"
}
}, {
"name" : "MongoHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP"
}, {
"name" : "RabbitHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP"
}, {
"name" : "RedisHealthCheck",
"status" : "UP"
} ]
}
The URL also accepts a query parameter pretty=false
(http://IP:PORT/health/ready?pretty=false) which results in a single
line response, payload example is provided below:
{"status":"UP","checks":[{"name":"DataSourceHealthCheck","status":"UP"},{"name":"DiskSpaceHealthCheck","status":"UP"},{"name":"ElasticSearchHealthCheck","status":"UP"},{"name":"EtcdHealthCheck","status":"UP","data":{"http://localhost:2379": "UP"}},{"name":"HttpHealthCheck","status":"UP","data":{"https://github.com/kumuluz/kumuluzee-health":"UP"}},{"name":"MongoHealthCheck","status":"UP"},{"name":"RabbitHealthCheck","status":"UP"},{"name":"RedisHealthCheck","status":"UP"}]}
Configuring health check endpoint prefix
Health check is provided via URL, the health servlet is registered automatically on path /health/*
. To configure the
health check endpoint prefix, you can specify the following configuration keys:
kumuluzee.health.servlet.mapping
: Health servlet path. Default value is/health/*
.kumuluzee.health.servlet.enabled
: Is JSON output enabled. Default value istrue
. If false only the status codes will be provided.
The JSON output will also be enabled if the DEBUG mode is enabled, by setting kumuluz.debug
to true.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
servlet:
mapping: /my-health
enabled: true
Enabling health check logging
Periodic logging of health check results is also available. To configure the health check results logging, you can specify the following configuration keys:
kumuluzee.health.logs.enabled
: Is logging enabled. Default value istrue
.kumuluzee.health.logs.type
: Type of health checks to be logged. Allowed values:both
,readiness
,liveness
. Default value isboth
.kumuluzee.health.logs.level
: The logging level. Default value isFINE
.kumuluzee.health.logs.period-s
: The logging period in seconds. Default value is60
.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
logs:
enabled: true
type: readiness
level: FINE
period-s: 60
Disabling health extension
Health extension can be disabled by setting the configuration property kumuluzee.health.enabled
to false
. This will
disable the /health
endpoint and disable health check logging.
Configuring built-in health checks
To configure built-in health checks, we can use the configuration parameters listed below for each built-in health check.
Every built-in health check supports a configuration key type
which specifies under which type the health check should
be registered. Allowed values are liveness
, readiness
and both
. Default value is readiness
. For example see the
below configuration of DataSourceHealthCheck.
DataSourceHealthCheck
To enable data source availability health check, we need to provide in the health check sections. Jndi-name
,
connection-url
, username
and password
need to be provided as part of the health check configuration. Note that
multiple data source health checks are supported.
Example configuration:
kumuluzee:
datasources:
- jndi-name: jdbc/CustomersDS
connection-url: jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5432/customers
username: postgres
password: postgres
pool:
max-size: 20
- jndi-name: jdbc/OrdersDS
connection-url: jdbc:postgresql://localhost:5433/orders
username: postgres
password: postgres
pool:
max-size: 20
health:
checks:
data-source-health-checks
- jndi-name: jdbc/CustomersDS
type: liveness
- jndi-name: jdbc/OrdersDS
type: liveness
Another example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
data-source-health-check:
connection-url: jdbc:db2://localhost:5021/customers
username: db2
password: db2
Another example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
data-source-health-check:
connection-url: jdbc:mysql://localhost:3306/customers?user=mysql&password=mysql
To enable data source availability health check, we also need to provide a database driver library in pom.xml.
Example configuration:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.postgresql</groupId>
<artifactId>postgresql</artifactId>
<version>42.0.0</version>
</dependency>
DiskSpaceHealthCheck
To enable disk space health check, we need to provide the health check config parameters, listed below. The default disk
space threshold is 100MB
, but can be overwritten by providing your own threshold.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
disk-space-health-check:
threshold: 100000000
ElasticSearchHealthCheck
To enable Elasticsearch cluster health check, we need to specify the connection-url
with cluster health check endpoint
as part of the health check configuration. The cluster health check endpoint is typically available on
http://HOST:IP/_cluster/health
. The response should resemble:
{
"cluster_name" : "testcluster",
"status" : "yellow",
"timed_out" : false,
"number_of_nodes" : 1,
"number_of_data_nodes" : 1,
"active_primary_shards" : 5,
"active_shards" : 5,
"relocating_shards" : 0,
"initializing_shards" : 0,
"unassigned_shards" : 5,
"delayed_unassigned_shards": 0,
"number_of_pending_tasks" : 0,
"number_of_in_flight_fetch": 0,
"task_max_waiting_in_queue_millis": 0,
"active_shards_percent_as_number": 50.0
}
ElasticSearchHealthCheck checks if the status of HTTP response is 200 and if status field is either green
or yellow
.
The default connection-url is http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health
.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
elastic-search-health-check:
connection-url: http://localhost:9200/_cluster/health?pretty
EtcdHealthCheck
To enable etcd health check, we need to specify the connection-url
or multiple connection-url
as part of the health
check configuration.
Example configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
etcd-health-check:
connection-url: http://localhost:2379/health
Another example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
etcd-health-check:
- connection-url: http://localhost:2379/health
- connection-url: http://192.168.99.100:2379/health
HttpHealthCheck
We can provide single or multiple urls for HTTP availability health check. To enable HTTP availability health check, we
need to specify the connection-url
or multiple connection-url
as part of the health check configuration. During the
http health check HEAD requests are made to all the connection-url
and status code is verified if its >=200 and <300.
Example configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
http-health-check:
connection-url: https://github.com/kumuluz/kumuluzee-health
Another example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
http-health-check:
- connection-url: https://github.com/kumuluz/kumuluzee-health
- connection-url: http://www.reddit.com
MongoHealthCheck
To enable the Mongo database health check, we need to provide the connection-url
config parameter with user, password,
database name and other options need to be provided as part of the health check configuration as described in the
mongo-java-driver-documentation.
The default connection-url is mongodb://localhost:27017/local?serverSelectionTimeoutMS=2000
.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
mongo-health-check:
connection-url: mongodb://user:password@localhost:27017/customers?serverSelectionTimeoutMS=2000
To enable the Mongo database health check, we also need to provide mongo-java-driver library in pom.xml.
Example configuration:
<dependency>
<groupId>org.mongodb</groupId>
<artifactId>mongo-java-driver</artifactId>
<version>3.9.1</version>
</dependency>
RabbitHealthCheck
To enable RabbitMQ health check, we need to specify the connection-url
with port, username, password and virtual host
as part of the health check configuration. The default connection-url is
amqp://guest:guest@localhost:5672?connection_timeout=2000
.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
rabbit-health-check:
connection-url: amqp://guest:guest@localhost:5672/virtualHost?connection_timeout=2000
To enable RabbitMQ health check, we also need to provide amqp-client library in pom.xml.
Example configuration:
<dependency>
<groupId>com.rabbitmq</groupId>
<artifactId>amqp-client</artifactId>
<version>5.6.0</version>
</dependency>
RedisHealthCheck
To enable Redis store health check, we need to specify the connection-url
with port, secret and database number as
part of the health check configuration. The default connection-url is redis://localhost:6379/0
.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
redis-health-check:
connection-url: redis://:secret@localhost:6379/0
To enable Redis store health check, we also need to provide jedis library in pom.xml.
Example configuration:
<dependency>
<groupId>redis.clients</groupId>
<artifactId>jedis</artifactId>
<version>3.0.1</version>
</dependency>
KafkaHealthCheck
To enable Kafka cluster health check provide the bootstrap-servers
urls as a comma separated list. The default value
is localhost:9092
.
You can supply the minimum-available-nodes
value (default is 1
). The value represents the minimum number of
available nodes in the cluster in order for the health check to be considered successful.
Example of the configuration:
kumuluzee:
health:
checks:
kafka-health-check:
bootstrap-servers: localhost:9095,localhost:9096,localhost:9097
minimum-available-nodes: 2
request-timeout-ms: 1000
Additionally, all properties defined in the subtree kumuluzee.health.checks.kafka-health-check
are forwarded to Kafka
client (see CONFGIGURATION). Note that dots (.
) are replaced
with minuses (-
), e.g. request.timeout.ms
becomes request-timeout-ms
.
The following dependency needs to be provided in order for the health check to function correctly
(when using kumuluzee-streaming
library the dependency is already provided):
<dependency>
<groupId>org.apache.kafka</groupId>
<artifactId>kafka-clients</artifactId>
<version>2.6.0</version>
</dependency>
Changelog
Recent changes can be viewed on Github on the Releases Page
NOTE FOR 1.x USERS: The /health
endpoint and the @Health
annotation are deprecated as of 2.0.0 release. They
still work as before but should not be used for any new services. Also note that property names of the JSON structure
were changed in the 2.0.0 release.
Contribute
See the contributing docs
When submitting an issue, please follow the guidelines.
When submitting a bugfix, write a test that exposes the bug and fails before applying your fix. Submit the test alongside the fix.
When submitting a new feature, add tests that cover the feature.
License
MIT