debian-mirror-gitlab/doc/operations/incident_management/integrations.md
2021-12-11 22:18:48 +05:30

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Integrations (FREE)

  • Introduced in GitLab 12.4.
  • Moved from GitLab Ultimate 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 to use this endpoint.

Integrations list

Introduced in GitLab 13.5.

With at least the Maintainer role, you can view the list of configured alerts integrations by navigating to Settings > Monitor in your project's sidebar menu, and expanding the Alerts section. The list displays the integration name, type, and status (enabled or disabled):

Current Integrations

Configuration

GitLab can receive alerts via a HTTP endpoint that you configure, or the Prometheus integration.

Single HTTP Endpoint

Enabling the HTTP Endpoint in a GitLab projects activates it to receive alert payloads in JSON format. You can always customize the payload to your liking.

  1. Sign in to GitLab as a user with the Maintainer role for a project.
  2. Navigate to Settings > Monitor in your project.
  3. Expand the Alerts section, and in the Select integration type dropdown menu, select HTTP Endpoint.
  4. 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.

HTTP Endpoints (PREMIUM)

Introduced in GitLab 13.6.

In GitLab Premium, you can create multiple unique HTTP endpoints to receive alerts from any external source in JSON format, and you can customize the payload.

  1. Sign in to GitLab as a user with the Maintainer role for a project.

  2. Navigate to Settings > Monitor in your project.

  3. Expand the Alerts section.

  4. For each endpoint you want to create:

    1. Click the Add new integration button.

    2. In the Select integration type dropdown menu, select HTTP Endpoint.

    3. Name the integration.

    4. 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.

    5. (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.

    6. (Optional) If you provided a valid sample payload, select each value in Payload alert key to map to a GitLab alert key.

    7. 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.

The new HTTP Endpoint displays in the integrations list. You can edit the integration by selecting the {settings} settings icon on the right side of the integrations list.

Map fields in custom alerts

Introduced in GitLab 13.10.

You can integrate your monitoring tool's alert format with GitLab alerts. To show the correct information in the Alert list and the Alert Details page, map your alert's fields to GitLab fields when you create an HTTP endpoint:

Alert Management List

External Prometheus integration

For GitLab versions 13.1 and greater, read External Prometheus Instances to configure alerts for this integration.

Customize the alert payload outside of GitLab

For HTTP Endpoints without custom mappings, you can customize the payload by sending the following 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.

Property Type Description
title String The title of the alert.
description String A high-level summary of the problem.
start_time DateTime The time of the alert. If none is provided, a current time is used.
end_time DateTime The resolution time of the alert. If provided, the alert is resolved.
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. Required to display alerts on a 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:

{ "foo": { "bar": { "baz": 42 } } }

NOTE: Ensure your requests are smaller than the payload application limits.

Example request body

Example payload:

{
  "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
    }
  }
}

Authorization

The following authorization methods are accepted:

  • Bearer authorization header
  • Basic authentication

The <authorization_key> and <url> values can be found when configuring an alert integration.

Bearer authorization header

The authorization key can be used as the Bearer token:

curl --request POST \
  --data '{"title": "Incident title"}' \
  --header "Authorization: Bearer <authorization_key>" \
  --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
  <url>

Basic authentication

The authorization key can be used as the password. The username is left blank:

  • username: <blank>
  • pasword: authorization_key
curl --request POST \
  --data '{"title": "Incident title"}' \
  --header "Authorization: Basic <base_64_encoded_credentials>" \
  --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
  <url>

Basic authentication can also be used with credentials directly in the URL:

curl --request POST \
  --data '{"title": "Incident title"}' \
  --header "Content-Type: application/json" \
  <username:password@url>

WARNING: Using your authorization key in the URL is insecure, as it's visible in server logs. We recommend using one of the above header options if your tooling supports it.

Response body

Introduced in GitLab 14.5.

The JSON response body contains a list of any alerts created within the request:

[
  {
    "iid": 1,
    "title": "Incident title"
  },
  {
    "iid": 2,
    "title": "Second Incident title"
  }
]

Successful responses return a 200 response code.

Triggering test alerts

Introduced in GitLab in 13.2.

After a project maintainer or owner configures an integration, you can trigger a test alert to confirm your integration works properly.

  1. Sign in as a user with at least the Developer role.
  2. Navigate to Settings > Monitor in your project.
  3. Click Alerts to expand the section.
  4. Click the {settings} settings icon on the right side of the integration in the list.
  5. Select the Send test alert tab to open it.
  6. Enter a test payload in the payload field (valid JSON is required).
  7. Click Send.

GitLab displays an error or success message, depending on the outcome of your test.

Automatic grouping of identical alerts (PREMIUM)

Introduced in GitLab 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 and details pages.

If the existing alert is already resolved, GitLab creates a new alert instead.

Alert Management List

Recovery alerts

Introduced in GitLab 13.4.

The alert in GitLab will be automatically resolved when an HTTP Endpoint receives a payload with the end time of the alert set. For HTTP Endpoints without custom mappings, the expected field is end_time. With custom mappings, you can select the expected field.

You can also configure the associated incident to be closed automatically when the alert resolves.

Introduced in GitLab 13.2.

WARNING: We are building deeper integration with Opsgenie and other alerting tools through HTTP endpoint integrations 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.

You can monitor alerts using a GitLab integration with 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 the Maintainer or Owner role.
  2. Navigate to Monitor > Alerts.
  3. In the Integrations select box, select Opsgenie.
  4. Select the Active toggle.
  5. In the API URL field, enter the base URL for your Opsgenie integration, such as https://app.opsgenie.com/alert/list.
  6. Select Save changes.

After you enable the integration, navigate to the Alerts list page at Monitor > Alerts, and then select View alerts in Opsgenie.