debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/operations/incident_management/integrations.md

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---
stage: Monitor
group: Health
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info: To determine the technical writer assigned to the Stage/Group associated with this page, see https://about.gitlab.com/handbook/engineering/ux/technical-writing/#assignments
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---
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# Integrations **(FREE)**
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> - [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/13203) in GitLab Ultimate 12.4.
> - [Moved](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/42640) to GitLab Free in 12.8.
GitLab can accept alerts from any source via a webhook receiver. This can be configured
generically or, in GitLab versions 13.1 and greater, you can configure
[External Prometheus instances](../metrics/alerts.md#external-prometheus-instances)
to use this endpoint.
## Integrations list
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/245331) in GitLab Free 13.5.
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With Maintainer or higher [permissions](../../user/permissions.md), you can view
the list of configured alerts integrations by navigating to
**Settings > Operations** in your project's sidebar menu, and expanding **Alerts** section.
The list displays the integration name, type, and status (enabled or disabled):
![Current Integrations](img/integrations_list_v13_5.png)
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## Configuration
GitLab can receive alerts via a HTTP endpoint that you configure,
or the [Prometheus integration](#external-prometheus-integration).
### Single HTTP Endpoint **(FREE)**
Enabling the HTTP Endpoint in a GitLab projects activates it to
receive alert payloads in JSON format. You can always
[customize the payload](#customize-the-alert-payload-outside-of-gitlab) to your liking.
1. Sign in to GitLab as a user with maintainer [permissions](../../user/permissions.md)
for a project.
1. Navigate to **Settings > Operations** in your project.
1. Expand the **Alerts** section, and in the **Integration** dropdown menu, select **Generic**.
1. Toggle the **Active** alert setting to display the **URL** and **Authorization Key**
for the webhook configuration.
### HTTP Endpoints **(PREMIUM)**
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4442) in GitLab Premium 13.6.
In [GitLab Premium](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/), you can create multiple
unique HTTP endpoints to receive alerts from any external source in JSON format,
and you can [customize the payload](#customize-the-alert-payload-outside-of-gitlab).
1. Sign in to GitLab as a user with maintainer [permissions](../../user/permissions.md)
for a project.
1. Navigate to **Settings > Operations** in your project.
1. Expand the **Alerts** section.
1. For each endpoint you want to create:
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1. Click the **Add new integration** button.
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1. In the **Integration** dropdown menu, select **HTTP Endpoint**.
1. Name the integration.
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1. Toggle the **Active** alert setting. The **URL** and **Authorization Key** for the webhook
configuration are available in the **View credentials** tab after you save the integration.
You must also input the URL and Authorization Key in your external service.
1. _(Optional)_ To map fields from your monitoring tool's alert to GitLab fields, enter a sample
payload and click **Parse payload for custom mapping**. Valid JSON is required. If you update
a sample payload, you must also remap the fields.
1. _(Optional)_ If you provided a valid sample payload, select each value in
**Payload alert key** to [map to a **GitLab alert key**](#map-fields-in-custom-alerts).
1. To save your integration, click **Save Integration**. If desired, you can send a test alert
from your integration's **Send test alert** tab after the integration is created.
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The new HTTP Endpoint displays in the [integrations list](#integrations-list).
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You can edit the integration by selecting the **{settings}** settings icon on the right
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side of the integrations list.
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#### Map fields in custom alerts
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/4443) in [GitLab Premium](https://about.gitlab.com/pricing/) 13.10.
You can integrate your monitoring tool's alert format with GitLab alerts. To show the
correct information in the [Alert list](alerts.md) and the
[Alert Details page](alerts.md#alert-details-page), map your alert's fields to
GitLab fields when you [create an HTTP endpoint](#http-endpoints):
![Alert Management List](img/custom_alert_mapping_v13_10.png)
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### External Prometheus integration
For GitLab versions 13.1 and greater, read
[External Prometheus Instances](../metrics/alerts.md#external-prometheus-instances)
to configure alerts for this integration.
## Customize the alert payload outside of GitLab
For all integration types, you can customize the payload by sending the following
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parameters. All fields are optional. If the incoming alert does not contain a value for the `Title` field, a default value of `New: Alert` will be applied.
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| Property | Type | Description |
| ------------------------- | --------------- | ----------- |
| `title` | String | The title of the incident. |
| `description` | String | A high-level summary of the problem. |
| `start_time` | DateTime | The time of the incident. If none is provided, a timestamp of the issue is used. |
| `end_time` | DateTime | For existing alerts only. When provided, the alert is resolved and the associated incident is closed. |
| `service` | String | The affected service. |
| `monitoring_tool` | String | The name of the associated monitoring tool. |
| `hosts` | String or Array | One or more hosts, as to where this incident occurred. |
| `severity` | String | The severity of the alert. Case-insensitive. Can be one of: `critical`, `high`, `medium`, `low`, `info`, `unknown`. Defaults to `critical` if missing or value is not in this list. |
| `fingerprint` | String or Array | The unique identifier of the alert. This can be used to group occurrences of the same alert. |
| `gitlab_environment_name` | String | The name of the associated GitLab [environment](../../ci/environments/index.md). Required to [display alerts on a dashboard](../../user/operations_dashboard/index.md#adding-a-project-to-the-dashboard). |
You can also add custom fields to the alert's payload. The values of extra
parameters aren't limited to primitive types (such as strings or numbers), but
can be a nested JSON object. For example:
```json
{ "foo": { "bar": { "baz": 42 } } }
```
NOTE:
Ensure your requests are smaller than the
[payload application limits](../../administration/instance_limits.md#generic-alert-json-payloads).
Example request:
```shell
curl --request POST \
--data '{"title": "Incident title"}' \
--header "Authorization: Bearer <authorization_key>" \
--header "Content-Type: application/json" \
<url>
```
The `<authorization_key>` and `<url>` values can be found when configuring an alert integration.
Example payload:
```json
{
"title": "Incident title",
"description": "Short description of the incident",
"start_time": "2019-09-12T06:00:55Z",
"service": "service affected",
"monitoring_tool": "value",
"hosts": "value",
"severity": "high",
"fingerprint": "d19381d4e8ebca87b55cda6e8eee7385",
"foo": {
"bar": {
"baz": 42
}
}
}
```
## Triggering test alerts
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/3066) in GitLab Free in 13.2.
After a [project maintainer or owner](../../user/permissions.md)
configures an integration, you can trigger a test
alert to confirm your integration works properly.
1. Sign in as a user with Developer or greater [permissions](../../user/permissions.md).
1. Navigate to **Settings > Operations** in your project.
1. Click **Alerts endpoint** to expand the section.
1. Enter a sample payload in **Alert test payload** (valid JSON is required).
1. Click **Test alert payload**.
GitLab displays an error or success message, depending on the outcome of your test.
## Automatic grouping of identical alerts **(PREMIUM)**
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/214557) in GitLab Premium 13.2.
In GitLab versions 13.2 and greater, GitLab groups alerts based on their
payload. When an incoming alert contains the same payload as another alert
(excluding the `start_time` and `hosts` attributes), GitLab groups these alerts
together and displays a counter on the [Alert Management List](incidents.md)
and details pages.
If the existing alert is already `resolved`, GitLab creates a new alert instead.
![Alert Management List](img/alert_list_v13_1.png)
## Link to your Opsgenie Alerts
> [Introduced](https://gitlab.com/groups/gitlab-org/-/epics/3066) in GitLab Premium 13.2.
WARNING:
We are building deeper integration with Opsgenie and other alerting tools through
[HTTP endpoint integrations](#single-http-endpoint) so you can see alerts in
the GitLab interface. As a result, the previous direct link to Opsgenie Alerts from
the GitLab alerts list is deprecated in
GitLab versions [13.8 and later](https://gitlab.com/gitlab-org/gitlab/-/issues/273657).
You can monitor alerts using a GitLab integration with [Opsgenie](https://www.atlassian.com/software/opsgenie).
If you enable the Opsgenie integration, you can't have other GitLab alert
services
active at the same time.
To enable Opsgenie integration:
1. Sign in as a user with Maintainer or Owner [permissions](../../user/permissions.md).
1. Navigate to **Operations > Alerts**.
1. In the **Integrations** select box, select **Opsgenie**.
1. Select the **Active** toggle.
1. In the **API URL** field, enter the base URL for your Opsgenie integration,
such as `https://app.opsgenie.com/alert/list`.
1. Select **Save changes**.
After you enable the integration, navigate to the Alerts list page at
**Operations > Alerts**, and then select **View alerts in Opsgenie**.