Send notifications when predefined conditions are met.
- Ready messages
- Unacknowledged messages
- Total queued messages
- Number of connected consumers
- Number of open connections
- Number of nodes running
- Memory used by each node in MBs
Currently the following are supported:
- E-mails
- Slack messages
- Telegram messages
Use the PIP
command, which should already exist in your Linux installation:
sudo pip install rabbitmq-alert
rabbitmq-alert
along using the provided options,
but first take a look at --help
to see whats availableExample:
sudo rabbitmq-alert \ --host=my-server --port=55672 --username=guest --password=guest \ --vhost=%2F --queue=my_queue1,my_queue2 --ready-queue-size=3 --check-rate=300 \ [email protected] [email protected] \ --email-subject="RabbitMQ alert at %s - %s" --email-server=localhost
Copy the example configuration file to the default path of the global configuration file:
sudo cp /etc/rabbitmq-alert/config.ini.example /etc/rabbitmq-alert/config.ini
rabbitmq-alert
sudo rabbitmq-alert
/etc/rabbitmq-alert/config.ini.example
file.Then execute rabbitmq-alert
with the configuration file option:
sudo rabbitmq-alert -c my_config.ini
For a detailed description of the available sections and options, view this wiki page.
[Conditions]
section for each queue. Example:[Conditions:my-queue] ... [Conditions:my-other-queue] ...
Note that queue names also have to be defined in the [Server]
section of the configuration file:
[Server] ... queues=my-queue,my-other-queue ...
systemd
script is created upon installation with PIP
.systemd
configurationrabbitmq-alert
as a daemon.sudo systemctl daemon-reload sudo systemctl start rabbitmq-alert
To have rabbitmq-alert
always started on boot:
sudo systemctl enable rabbitmq-alert
In case your system still uses init.d
, an init.d
script has been created
in /etc/init.d
upon PIP
installation. To start rabbitmq-alert
as a daemon:
sudo /etc/init.d/rabbitmq-alert start
To have rabbitmq-alert
always started on boot:
sudo update-rc.d rabbitmq-alert defaults
rabbitmq-alert
, which will then be copied into the container. Then you can runrabbitmq-alert
inside a container.docker run -d --name rabbitmq-alert -v config.ini:/etc/rabbitmq-alert/config.ini \ mylkoh/rabbitmq-alert:latest
For the configuration file, advise the config.ini.example
that exists in the project's repository.
rabbitmq-alert
to /var/log/rabbitmq-alert/
.rabbitmq-alert
is written in python2
.To start, you have to install the dev dependencies which are some required python packages:
make deps-dev
After writing your awesomeness, run the test suites to ensure that everything is still fine:
make test
Firstly, ensure that you have removed the rabbitmqalert package from your system. Otherwise you may find yourself running the tests on the installed package instead of the source code.
Do add tests yourself for the code you contribute to ensure the quality of the project.
Happy coding :-)
Create a network that all containers will belong to:
docker network create rabbitmq-alert
Run rabbitmq
into a container:
docker run -d --name some-rabbit --net rabbitmq-alert -p 15672:15672 rabbitmq:management
guest
.Create a fake SMTP server and check everything is okay with the email message functionality:
docker run -d --name fake-smtp --net rabbitmq-alert -p 25:25 munkyboy/fakesmtp
Now, run rabbitmq-alert
using the same network:
docker run -d --name rabbitmq-alert --net rabbitmq-alert \ -v config.ini:/etc/rabbitmq-alert/config.ini mylkoh/rabbitmq-alert:latest
For publishing the package and the container image, view this wiki page.