Rack middleware for Ruby web apps, providing a simple and extensible health check endpoint, with minimal configuration.
Electrocardiogram (ECG): A recording of the electrical activity of the heart.
- Start with a single line in your
config.ru
orconfig/application.rb
file. - reports git revision status
- reports ActiveRecord migration schema version
- reports errors if any check can't be executed for whatever reason
- JSON output
Rack::ECG
is extracted from production code in use at
Envato. However, it is undergoing early development, and
APIs and features are almost certain to be in flux.
Add this to your application's Gemfile
:
gem 'rack-ecg', '~> 0.3.0`
Then run bundle install
.
In Rails you can add Rack::ECG
to your config/application.rb
as a middleware:
# config/application.rb
# ...
config.middleware.use Rack::ECG
# ...
In Rack apps, you can add Rack::ECG
to your config.ru
:
# config.ru
require 'rack/ecg'
use Rack::ECG
run MyRackApp
You can now hit your app and get a basic health check response from Rack::ECG
$ curl http://localhost:9292/_ecg
{
"http": {
"status": "ok",
"value": "online"
}
}
/_ecg
will return a 200
HTTP status if all the checks are OK, or 500
status if any of the checks fail.
There are options that can be passed to use Rack::ECG
to customise how it works.
By default, Rack::ECG
indicates that the service is reponsive via a http
check. Additional checks are included in this gem, and can be enabled by passing their configuration to the checks
parameter. To enable a check, add its name, and optionally configuration, to the checks
array:
use Rack::ECG, checks: [
# no configuration required, or allowed
:http,
# passing configuration options
[:static, { name: "app", value: "my-cool-app" }],
# some checks can be used multiple times
[:static, { name: "env", value: Rails.env }],
]
Requires a configured ActiveRecord connection. Does not support configuration. Indicates whether the connection to the default database is currently open. On success, returns something in the following format:
{
"active_record": {
"status": "ok",
"value": true
}
}
Does not support configuration. Always returns the following:
{
"error": {
"status": "error",
"value": "PC LOAD ERROR"
}
}
Deprecated: will be removed in version 1.0.0. See the GitRevision Check Replacement example, which uses the static
check to memoize the value.
Requires the git
executable on path, and that the application's working directory is within a Git repository. Does not support configuration. On success, returns something in the following format:
{
"git_revision": {
"status": "ok",
"value": "dc840f9d5563e6e5a8b34da29c298764e3046039"
}
}
Automatically included, and does not support configuration. Always returns the following:
{
"http": {
"status": "ok",
"value": "online"
}
}
Requires a configured ActiveRecord connection, and that ActiveRecord migrations are in use. Does not support configuration. Queries the schema_versions
table on the default database to report the current migration version. On success, returns something in the following format:
{
"migration_version": {
"status": "ok",
"value": "20210506024055"
}
}
Requires the Redis gem. Requires configuration, an instance of a Redis client. Indicates whether the Redis client passed in is currently connected to the Redis database. On success, returns something in the following format:
{
"redis": {
"status": "ok",
"value": true
}
}
Requires the Sequel gem. Requires configuration, and can be configured multiple times. Indicates whether a (new) connection can be established to the configured Sequel database.
Given the following configuration:
{
connection: "sqlite://events.db",
name: "events", # must be unique per sequel check
}
Returns the something in the following format on success:
{
"sequel_events": {
"status": "ok",
"value": true
}
}
Returns the same value every time. Requires configuration, and can be configured multiple times.
Given the following configuration:
{
name: "image_build_url", # must be unique per static check
success: true, # default value
status: Rack::ECG::Check::Status::OK, # optional, overrides `success`
value: ENV["IMAGE_BUILD_URL"],
}
Returns the something in the following format:
{
"image_build_url": {
"status": "ok",
"value": "https://example.com/pipelines/my-cool-app/builds/1234"
}
}
By default Rack::ECG
is mapped to a URL of /_ecg
, you can set this to
a different path by setting the at
option. e.g.
use Rack::ECG, at: "/health_check"
The hook
option takes a Proc
or equivalent, and calls it after the checks
have run, but before the response is complete.
use Rack::ECG, hook: Proc.new { |success, _checks| puts "Is healthy? #{success}" }
success
: whether the response will indicate successchecks
: an array of the check names and values
By default, check failures result in a HTTP status code 500
(Internal Server
Error). You can change this code by setting the failure_status
option. e.g.
use Rack::ECG, checks: [:error], failure_status: 503
- Ruby >= 2.6
- Rack
- To use optional
git_revision
check, your deployed code needs to be in a git repo, andgit
command must be accessible on the server - To use optional
migration_version
check, you must be using ActiveRecord and migrations stored inschema_versions
table
Some configuration examples are provided in /examples.
- github project
- gitter chat room
- Bug reports and feature requests are via github issues
Rack::ECG
uses MIT license. See
LICENSE.txt
for
details.
We welcome contribution from everyone. Read more about it in
CODE_OF_CONDUCT.md
For bug fixes, documentation changes, and small features:
- Fork it ( https://github.com/[my-github-username]/rack-ecg/fork )
- Create your feature branch (git checkout -b my-new-feature)
- Commit your changes (git commit -am 'Add some feature')
- Push to the branch (git push origin my-new-feature)
- Create a new Pull Request
For larger new features: Do everything as above, but first also make contact with the project maintainers to be sure your change fits with the project direction and you won't be wasting effort going in the wrong direction.
This project is maintained by the Envato engineering team and funded by Envato.
Encouraging the use and creation of open source software is one of the ways we serve our community. See our other projects or come work with us where you'll find an incredibly diverse, intelligent and capable group of people who help make our company succeed and make our workplace fun, friendly and happy.