Health Check Package
The purpose of this package is to surface a health-check endpoint on /health
which, when hit, returns the status of all the services and dependencies your project relies on, along with the overall health of your system. This is useful in both development and production for debugging issues with a faulty application.
This package also adds a /ping
endpoint. Just hit /ping
and receive pong
in response.
Installation
To install the package:
Run composer require ans-group/laravel-health-check
to add the package to your dependencies.
This will automatically install the package to your vendor folder.
Laravel
In Laravel applications, the service provider should be automatically registered, but you may register it manually in your config/app.php
file:
'providers' => [
// ...
UKFast\HealthCheck\HealthCheckServiceProvider::class,
];
Lumen
To have the package function in Lumen, you need to register the service provider. add the following to your bootstrap/app.php
file:
$app->register(\UKFast\HealthCheck\HealthCheckServiceProvider::class);
You can test that the package is working correctly by hitting the /health
endpoint.
Configuration
Laravel
Facade
We surface a HealthCheck
facade with the package. You can use the passes
, fails
, or all
methods, if you want to access the results of a check or the number of checks running from within your code.
if (HealthCheck::passes('env')) {
// check passed
}
if (HealthCheck::fails('http')) {
// check failed
}
$numberOfChecks = HealthCheck::all()->count();
If one of the checks provided cannot be resolved from the service container, we'll throw a CheckNotFoundException
with the name of the missing check.
Config
If you'd like to tweak the config file (helpful for configuring the EnvHealthCheck
, for example), you can publish it with:
php artisan vendor:publish --provider="UKFast\HealthCheck\HealthCheckServiceProvider" --tag="config"
Middleware
You can register custom middleware to run on requests to the /health
endpoint. You can add this to the middleware array in the config/healthcheck.php
config file created by the command above, as shown in the example below:
/**
* A list of middleware to run on the health-check route
* It's recommended that you have a middleware that only
* allows admin consumers to see the endpoint.
*
* See UKFast\HealthCheck\Middleware\BasicAuth for a one-size-fits all
* solution
*/
'middleware' => [
App\Http\Middleware\CustomMiddleware::class
],
Now your CustomMiddleware
middleware will be ran on every request to the /health
endpoint.
Lumen
Facade
We surface a HealthCheck
facade with the package. You can use the passes
, fails
, or all
methods, if you want to access the results of a check or the number of checks running from within your code.
if (HealthCheck::passes('env')) {
// check passed
}
if (HealthCheck::fails('http')) {
// check failed
}
$numberOfChecks = HealthCheck::all()->count();
If one of the checks provided cannot be resolved from the service container, we'll throw a CheckNotFoundException
with the name of the missing check.
Config
If you'd like to tweak the config file (helpful for configuring the EnvHealthCheck
, for example):
Manually copy the package config file (see example below) to config\healthcheck.php
(you may need to create the config directory if it does not already exist).
<?php
return [
/**
* Base path for the health check endpoints, by default will use /
*/
'base-path' => '',
/**
* List of health checks to run when determining the health
* of the service
*/
'checks' => [
UKFast\HealthCheck\Checks\LogHealthCheck::class,
UKFast\HealthCheck\Checks\DatabaseHealthCheck::class,
UKFast\HealthCheck\Checks\EnvHealthCheck::class
],
/**
* A list of middleware to run on the health-check route
* It's recommended that you have a middleware that only
* allows admin consumers to see the endpoint.
*
* See UKFast\HealthCheck\BasicAuth for a one-size-fits all
* solution
*/
'middleware' => [],
/**
* Used by the basic auth middleware
*/
'auth' => [
'user' => env('HEALTH_CHECK_USER'),
'password' => env('HEALTH_CHECK_PASSWORD'),
],
/**
* Can define a list of connection names to test. Names can be
* found in your config/database.php file. By default, we just
* check the 'default' connection
*/
'database' => [
'connections' => ['default'],
],
/**
* Can give an array of required environment values, for example
* 'REDIS_HOST'. If any don't exist, then it'll be surfaced in the
* context of the healthcheck
*/
'required-env' => [],
/**
* List of addresses and expected response codes to
* monitor when running the HTTP health check
*
* e.g. address => response code
*/
'addresses' => [],
/**
* Default response code for HTTP health check. Will be used
* when one isn't provided in the addresses config.
*/
'default-response-code' => 200,
/**
* Default timeout for cURL requests for HTTP health check.
*/
'default-curl-timeout' => 2.0,
/**
* An array of other services that use the health check package
* to hit. The URI should reference the endpoint specifically,
* for example: https://api.example.com/health
*/
'x-service-checks' => [],
/**
* A list of stores to be checked by the Cache health check
*/
'cache' => [
'stores' => [
'array'
]
],
/**
* A list of disks to be checked by the Storage health check
*/
'storage' => [
'disks' => [
'local',
]
],
/**
* Additional config can be put here. For example, a health check
* for your .env file needs to know which keys need to be present.
* You can pass this information by specifying a new key here then
* accessing it via config('healthcheck.env') in your healthcheck class
*/
];
Update your bootstrap/app.php
file to override the default package config:
$app->configure('healthcheck');
Middleware
You can register custom middleware to run on requests to the /health
endpoint. You can add this to the middleware array in the config/healthcheck.php
config file you created using the config above, as shown in the example below:
/**
* A list of middleware to run on the health-check route
* It's recommended that you have a middleware that only
* allows admin consumers to see the endpoint.
*
* See UKFast\HealthCheck\BasicAuth for a one-size-fits all
* solution
*/
'middleware' => [
App\Http\Middleware\CustomMiddleware::class
],
Now your CustomMiddleware
middleware will be ran on every request to the /health
endpoint.
Out of the box, the health check package provides:
- BasicAuth - Requires that basic auth credentials be sent in order to see full status
- AddHeaders - Adds X-check-status headers to the response, so you can avoid having to parse JSON
Checks
Scheduler Health Check
The scheduler health check works by using a time limited cache key on your project every minute. You will need to register the
CacheSchedulerRunning command to run every minute in your projects Kernel.php
.
You can customise the cache key and length of time in minutes before the scheduler not running will trigger an error.
$schedule->command(CacheSchedulerRunning::class)->everyMinute();
Creating your own health checks
It's very simple to create your own health checks.
In this example, we'll create a health check for Redis.
You first need to create your health-check class, you can put this inside App\HealthChecks
.
In this case, the class would be App\HealthChecks\RedisHealthCheck
Every health check needs to extend the base HealthCheck
class and implement a status()
method. You should also set the $name
property for display purposes.
<?php
namespace App\HealthChecks;
use UKFast\HealthCheck\HealthCheck;
class RedisHealthCheck extends HealthCheck
{
protected $name = 'my-fancy-redis-check';
public function status()
{
return $this->okay();
}
}
Now we've got our basic class setup, we can add it to the list of checks to run in our config/healthcheck.php
file.
Open up config/healthcheck.php
and go to the 'checks'
array. Add your class to the list of those checks:
'checks' => [
// ...
App\HealthChecks\RedisHealthCheck::class,
]
If you hit the /health
endpoint now, you'll see that there's a my-fancy-redis-check
property and it should return OK
for the status.
We can now go about actually implementing the check properly.
Go back to the status()
method in the RedisHealthCheck
class.
Add in the following code:
public function status()
{
try {
Redis::ping();
} catch (Exception $e) {
return $this->problem('Failed to connect to redis', [
'exception' => $this->exceptionContext($e),
]);
}
return $this->okay();
}
You'll need to import the following at the top as well
use Illuminate\Support\Facades\Redis;
use UKFast\HealthCheck\HealthCheck;
use Exception;
Finally, hit the /health
endpoint, depending on if your app can actually hit Redis, you'll see the status of Redis. If it's still returning OK
try changing REDIS_HOST
to something that doesn't exist to trip the error.
Contributing
We welcome contributions to this package that will be beneficial to the community.
You can reach out to our open-source team via [email protected] who will get back to you as soon as possible.
Please refer to our CONTRIBUTING file for more information.
Security
If you think you have identified a security vulnerability, please contact our team via [email protected] who will get back to you as soon as possible, rather than using the issue tracker.
Licence
This project is licenced under the MIT Licence (MIT). Please see the Licence file for more information.