cookbook 'sensu_spec', '= 0.9.1'
sensu_spec
(40) Versions
0.9.1
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Installs/Configures sensu_spec
cookbook 'sensu_spec', '= 0.9.1', :supermarket
knife supermarket install sensu_spec
knife supermarket download sensu_spec
sensu_spec cookbook
sensu_spec attempts to blur the line between TDD and monitoring.
One way to achieve this is to use something like serverspec to write test, then to send the results to Sensu. This is great, but seems to be a limited approach. I think you'd have to jump through a number of hoops to be able to reuse existing monitoring plugins, and getting metrics out would probably be a bit painful.
This cookbook is an experiment that starts with standard monitoring tools and attempts to turn them into specs.
A quick overview
If you want something basic, you can use the definitions that come with this cookbook. But first, you need to use the cookbook.
Edit metadata.rb in your cookbook and add
depends 'sensu_spec'
Then install using berkshelf
$ berks update
Now, lets say your cookbook is going to install and configure a logstash server. You'll probably want to start off by writing a recipe called spec.rb:
include_recipe 'sensu_spec'
describe 'logstash' do
describe 'java' do
it 'must have command java'
end
describe 'java version' do
it 'must match "1\.7.*(\n|.)*HotSpot" when I run "java -version"'
end
end
describe 'logstash agent' do
describe 'directory' do
it 'must have directory /opt/logstash/agent'
end
describe 'jar' do
it "must have readable file /opt/logstash/agent/lib/logstash-#{node.logstash.agent.version}.jar"
end
describe 'process' do
it 'must have 1 java process with args logstash/agent'
end
end
describe 'logstash server' do
describe 'directory' do
it 'must have directory /opt/logstash/server'
end
describe 'jar' do
it "must have readable file /opt/logstash/server/lib/logstash-#{node.logstash.server.version}.jar"
end
describe 'process' do
it 'must have 1 java process with args logstash/server'
end
end
That looks pretty straight forward. We're describing our requirements using something like natural language.
The magic happens because sensu_spec::default is including the definitions that come with this cookbook. For example:
define /must have (?\d+) (?.+?) process(?:es)? with args (?.*)/ do
command 'check-procs-args :::name::: :::count::: ":::args:::"'
code <<-EOF
#!/bin/bash
num_procs=$(ps --no-headers -f -C $1 | grep $3 | wc -l)
[[ $num_procs != $2 ]] && { echo "CRITICAL - $num_procs $1 process(es) with args $3 found. Expected $2"; exit 2; }
echo "OK - $2 $1 process(es) with args $3 found"; exit 0
EOF
end
The command should look familiar, it will be mapped to a Sensu check command. The code attribute is optional, but if provided it will create the command specified with that code. In this case we're using bash to write a little check to monitor processes.
When a specification matches a definition, some magic happens to combine the two to turn them into standalone checks that can be run during tests, and Sensu client and server configuration