Monitoring and Alerting

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Warning:
As of May 10, 2022, CockroachDB v20.2 is no longer supported. For more details, refer to the Release Support Policy.

Despite CockroachDB's various built-in safeguards against failure, it is critical to actively monitor the overall health and performance of a cluster running in production and to create alerting rules that promptly send notifications when there are events that require investigation or intervention.

This page explains available monitoring tools and critical events and metrics to alert on.

Monitoring tools

DB Console

The DB Console displays essential metrics about a cluster's health, such as node status, number of unavailable ranges, and queries per second and service latency across the cluster. This tool is designed to help you optimize cluster performance and troubleshoot issues.

The DB Console is accessible from every node at http://<host>:<http-port>, or http://<host>:8080 by default. For more information on accessing the DB Console, see DB Console access.

Warning:

Because the DB Console is built into CockroachDB, if a cluster becomes unavailable, most of the DB Console becomes unavailable as well. Therefore, it's essential to plan additional methods of monitoring cluster health as described below.

Prometheus endpoint

Every node of a CockroachDB cluster exports granular timeseries metrics at http://<host>:<http-port>/_status/vars. The metrics are formatted for easy integration with Prometheus, an open source tool for storing, aggregating, and querying timeseries data, but the format is easy-to-parse and can be massaged to work with other third-party monitoring systems (e.g., Sysdig and Stackdriver).

For a tutorial on using Prometheus, see Monitor CockroachDB with Prometheus.

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$ curl http://localhost:8080/_status/vars
# HELP gossip_infos_received Number of received gossip Info objects
# TYPE gossip_infos_received counter
gossip_infos_received 0
# HELP sys_cgocalls Total number of cgo calls
# TYPE sys_cgocalls gauge
sys_cgocalls 3501
# HELP sys_cpu_sys_percent Current system cpu percentage
# TYPE sys_cpu_sys_percent gauge
sys_cpu_sys_percent 1.098855319644276e-10
# HELP replicas_quiescent Number of quiesced replicas
# TYPE replicas_quiescent gauge
replicas_quiescent{store="1"} 20
...
Note:
In addition to using the exported timeseries data to monitor a cluster via an external system, you can write alerting rules against them to make sure you are promptly notified of critical events or issues that may require intervention or investigation. See Events to Alert On for more details.

Health endpoints

CockroachDB provides two HTTP endpoints for checking the health of individual nodes.

/health

If a node is down, the http://<host>:<http-port>/health endpoint returns a Connection refused error:

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$ curl http://localhost:8080/health
curl: (7) Failed to connect to localhost port 8080: Connection refused

Otherwise, it returns an HTTP 200 OK status response code with an empty body:

{

}

The /health endpoint no longer returns details about the node such as its private IP address. These details could be considered privileged information in some deployments. If you need to retrieve node details, you can use the /_status/details endpoint along with a valid authentication cookie.

/health?ready=1

The http://<node-host>:<http-port>/health?ready=1 endpoint returns an HTTP 503 Service Unavailable status response code with an error in the following scenarios:

  • The node is draining open SQL connections and rejecting new SQL connections because it is in the process of shutting down (e.g., after being decommissioned). This is especially useful for making sure load balancers do not direct traffic to nodes that are live but not "ready", which is a necessary check during rolling upgrades.

    Tip:

    If you find that your load balancer's health check is not always recognizing a node as unready before the node shuts down, you can increase the server.shutdown.drain_wait cluster setting to cause a node to return 503 Service Unavailable even before it has started shutting down.

    Prior to v20.1, decommissioning nodes would erroneously be considered unready and return 503 Service Unavailable. This is no longer the case. Although decommissioned nodes no longer store replicas, they can still function as gateways to route SQL connections to relevant data until they are shut down.

  • The node is unable to communicate with a majority of the other nodes in the cluster, likely because the cluster is unavailable due to too many nodes being down.

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$ curl http://localhost:8080/health?ready=1
{
  "error": "node is not ready",
  "code": 14
}

Otherwise, it returns an HTTP 200 OK status response code with an empty body:

{

}

Raw status endpoints

Several endpoints return raw status metrics in JSON at http://<host>:<http-port>/#/debug. Feel free to investigate and use these endpoints, but note that they are subject to change.

Raw Status Endpoints

Node status command

The cockroach node status command gives you metrics about the health and status of each node.

  • With the --ranges flag, you get granular range and replica details, including unavailability and under-replication.
  • With the --stats flag, you get granular disk usage details.
  • With the --decommission flag, you get details about the node decommissioning process.
  • With the --all flag, you get all of the above.

Events to alert on

Active monitoring helps you spot problems early, but it is also essential to create alerting rules that promptly send notifications when there are events that require investigation or intervention. This section identifies the most important events to create alerting rules for, with the Prometheus Endpoint metrics to use for detecting the events.

Tip:
If you use Prometheus for monitoring, you can also use our pre-defined alerting rules with Alertmanager. See Monitor CockroachDB with Prometheus for guidance.

Node is down

  • Rule: Send an alert when a node has been down for 5 minutes or more.

  • How to detect: If a node is down, its _status/vars endpoint will return a Connection refused error. Otherwise, the liveness_livenodes metric will be the total number of live nodes in the cluster.

Node is restarting too frequently

  • Rule: Send an alert if a node has restarted more than 5 times in 10 minutes.

  • How to detect: Calculate this using the number of times the sys_uptime metric in the node's _status/vars output was reset back to zero. The sys_uptime metric gives you the length of time, in seconds, that the cockroach process has been running.

Node is running low on disk space

  • Rule: Send an alert when a node has less than 15% of free space remaining.

  • How to detect: Divide the capacity metric by the capacity_available metric in the node's _status/vars output.

Node is not executing SQL

  • Rule: Send an alert when a node is not executing SQL despite having connections.

  • How to detect: The sql_conns metric in the node's _status/vars output will be greater than 0 while the sql_query_count metric will be 0. You can also break this down by statement type using sql_select_count, sql_insert_count, sql_update_count, and sql_delete_count.

CA certificate expires soon

  • Rule: Send an alert when the CA certificate on a node will expire in less than a year.

  • How to detect: Calculate this using the security_certificate_expiration_ca metric in the node's _status/vars output.

Node certificate expires soon

  • Rule: Send an alert when a node's certificate will expire in less than a year.

  • How to detect: Calculate this using the security_certificate_expiration_node metric in the node's _status/vars output.

Changefeed is experiencing high latency

  • Rule: Send an alert when the latency of any changefeed running on any node is higher than the set threshold, which depends on the gc.ttlseconds variable set in the cluster.

  • How to detect: Calculate this using a threshold, where the threshold is less than the value of the gc.ttlseconds variable. For example, changefeed.max_behind_nanos > [some threshold].

See also


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