9. Alerts

Alerts may be configured to take some external action when a cluster event occurs (node failure, resource starting or stopping, etc.).

9.1. Alert Agents

As with resource agents, the cluster calls an external program (an alert agent) to handle alerts. The cluster passes information about the event to the agent via environment variables. Agents can do anything desired with this information (send an e-mail, log to a file, update a monitoring system, etc.).

Simple alert configuration

<configuration>
   <alerts>
      <alert id="my-alert" path="/path/to/my-script.sh" />
   </alerts>
</configuration>

In the example above, the cluster will call my-script.sh for each event.

Multiple alert agents may be configured; the cluster will call all of them for each event.

Alert agents will be called only on cluster nodes. They will be called for events involving Pacemaker Remote nodes, but they will never be called on those nodes.

For more information about sample alert agents provided by Pacemaker and about developing custom alert agents, see the Pacemaker Administration document.

9.2. Alert Recipients

Usually, alerts are directed towards a recipient. Thus, each alert may be additionally configured with one or more recipients. The cluster will call the agent separately for each recipient.

Alert configuration with recipient

<configuration>
   <alerts>
      <alert id="my-alert" path="/path/to/my-script.sh">
          <recipient id="my-alert-recipient" value="some-address"/>
      </alert>
   </alerts>
</configuration>

In the above example, the cluster will call my-script.sh for each event, passing the recipient some-address as an environment variable.

The recipient may be anything the alert agent can recognize – an IP address, an e-mail address, a file name, whatever the particular agent supports.

9.3. Alert Meta-Attributes

As with resources, meta-attributes can be configured for alerts to change whether and how Pacemaker calls them.

Meta-Attributes of an Alert
Meta-Attribute Default Description
enabled true

If false for an alert, the alert will not be used. If true for an alert and false for a particular recipient of that alert, that recipient will not be used. (since 2.1.6)

timestamp-format %H:%M:%S.%06N

Format the cluster will use when sending the event’s timestamp to the agent. This is a string as used with the date(1) command.

timeout 30s

If the alert agent does not complete within this amount of time, it will be terminated.

Meta-attributes can be configured per alert and/or per recipient.

Alert configuration with meta-attributes

<configuration>
   <alerts>
      <alert id="my-alert" path="/path/to/my-script.sh">
         <meta_attributes id="my-alert-attributes">
            <nvpair id="my-alert-attributes-timeout" name="timeout"
                    value="15s"/>
         </meta_attributes>
         <recipient id="my-alert-recipient1" value="someuser@example.com">
            <meta_attributes id="my-alert-recipient1-attributes">
               <nvpair id="my-alert-recipient1-timestamp-format"
                       name="timestamp-format" value="%D %H:%M"/>
            </meta_attributes>
         </recipient>
         <recipient id="my-alert-recipient2" value="otheruser@example.com">
            <meta_attributes id="my-alert-recipient2-attributes">
               <nvpair id="my-alert-recipient2-timestamp-format"
                       name="timestamp-format" value="%c"/>
            </meta_attributes>
         </recipient>
      </alert>
   </alerts>
</configuration>

In the above example, the my-script.sh will get called twice for each event, with each call using a 15-second timeout. One call will be passed the recipient someuser@example.com and a timestamp in the format %D %H:%M, while the other call will be passed the recipient otheruser@example.com and a timestamp in the format %c.

9.4. Alert Instance Attributes

As with resource agents, agent-specific configuration values may be configured as instance attributes. These will be passed to the agent as additional environment variables. The number, names and allowed values of these instance attributes are completely up to the particular agent.

Alert configuration with instance attributes

<configuration>
   <alerts>
      <alert id="my-alert" path="/path/to/my-script.sh">
         <meta_attributes id="my-alert-attributes">
            <nvpair id="my-alert-attributes-timeout" name="timeout"
                    value="15s"/>
         </meta_attributes>
         <instance_attributes id="my-alert-options">
             <nvpair id="my-alert-options-debug" name="debug"
                     value="false"/>
         </instance_attributes>
         <recipient id="my-alert-recipient1"
                    value="someuser@example.com"/>
      </alert>
   </alerts>
</configuration>

9.5. Alert Filters

By default, an alert agent will be called for node events, fencing events, and resource events. An agent may choose to ignore certain types of events, but there is still the overhead of calling it for those events. To eliminate that overhead, you may select which types of events the agent should receive.

Alert configuration to receive only node events and fencing events

<configuration>
   <alerts>
      <alert id="my-alert" path="/path/to/my-script.sh">
         <select>
            <select_nodes />
            <select_fencing />
         </select>
         <recipient id="my-alert-recipient1"
                    value="someuser@example.com"/>
      </alert>
   </alerts>
</configuration>

The possible options within <select> are <select_nodes>, <select_fencing>, <select_resources>, and <select_attributes>.

With <select_attributes> (the only event type not enabled by default), the agent will receive alerts when a node attribute changes. If you wish the agent to be called only when certain attributes change, you can configure that as well.

Alert configuration to be called when certain node attributes change

<configuration>
   <alerts>
      <alert id="my-alert" path="/path/to/my-script.sh">
         <select>
            <select_attributes>
               <attribute id="alert-standby" name="standby" />
               <attribute id="alert-shutdown" name="shutdown" />
            </select_attributes>
         </select>
         <recipient id="my-alert-recipient1" value="someuser@example.com"/>
      </alert>
   </alerts>
</configuration>

Node attribute alerts are currently considered experimental. Alerts may be limited to attributes set via attrd_updater, and agents may be called multiple times with the same attribute value.