Shell Scripts

You can easily add Cybernautic Health Checks monitoring to a shell script. All you have to do is make an HTTP request at an appropriate place in the script. curl and wget are two common command-line HTTP clients you can use.

# Sends an HTTP GET request with curl:
curl -m 10 --retry 5 https://healthchecks.labs.cybernautic.com/ping/your-uuid-here

# Silent version (no stdout/stderr output unless curl hits an error):
curl -fsS -m 10 --retry 5 -o /dev/null https://healthchecks.labs.cybernautic.com/ping/your-uuid-here

Here's what each curl parameter does:

-m <seconds>
Maximum time in seconds that you allow the HTTP request to take. If you use the --retry parameter, then the time counter is reset at the start of each retry.
--retry <num>
On transient errors, retry up to this many times. By default, curl uses an increasing delay between each retry (1s, 2s, 4s, 8s, ...). See also --retry-delay. Transient errors are: timeouts, HTTP status codes 408, 429, 500, 502, 503, 504.
-f, --fail
Makes curl treat non-200 responses as errors, and return error 22.
-s, --silent
Silent or quiet mode. Hides the progress meter, but also hides error messages.
-S, --show-error
Re-enables error messages when -s is used.
-o /dev/null
Redirects curl's stdout to /dev/null (error messages still go to stderr).

Signaling Failure from Shell Scripts

You can append /fail or /{exit-status} to any ping URL and use the resulting URL to actively signal a failure. The exit status should be a 0-255 integer. Cybernautic Health Checks will interpret exit status 0 as success and all non-zero values as failures.

The following example runs /usr/bin/certbot renew, and uses the $? variable to look up its exit status:

#!/bin/sh

# Payload here:
/usr/bin/certbot renew
# Ping Cybernautic Health Checks
curl -m 10 --retry 5 https://healthchecks.labs.cybernautic.com/ping/your-uuid-here/$?

Note on pipelines (command1 | command2 | command3) in Bash scripts: by default, a pipeline's exit status is the exit status of the rightmost command in the pipeline. Use set -o pipefail if you need the pipeline to return non-zero exit status if any part of the pipeline fails:

#!/bin/sh

set -o pipefail
pg_dump somedb | gpg --encrypt --recipient alice@example.org --output somedb.sql.gpg
# Without pipefail, if pg_dump command fails, but gpg succeeds, $? will be 0,
# and the script will report success.
# With pipefail, if pg_dump fails, the script will report the exit code returned by pg_dump.
curl -m 10 --retry 5 https://healthchecks.labs.cybernautic.com/ping/your-uuid-here/$?

Logging Command Output

When pinging with HTTP POST, you can put extra diagnostic information in the request body. If the request body looks like a valid UTF-8 string, Cybernautic Health Checks will accept and store the first 10 kB of the request body.

In the below example, certbot's output is captured and submitted via HTTP POST:

#!/bin/sh

m=$(/usr/bin/certbot renew 2>&1)
curl -fsS -m 10 --retry 5 --data-raw "$m" https://healthchecks.labs.cybernautic.com/ping/your-uuid-here

Auto Provisioning New Checks

This example uses Cybernautic Health Checks auto provisioning feature to create a check "on the fly" if it does not already exist. Using this technique, you can write services that automatically register with Cybernautic Health Checks the first time they run.

#!/bin/bash

PING_KEY=fixme-your-ping-key-here

# Use system's hostname as check's slug
SLUG=$(hostname)

# Construct a ping URL and append "?create=1" at the end:
URL=https://healthchecks.labs.cybernautic.com/ping/$PING_KEY/$SLUG?create=1

# Send a ping:
curl -m 10 --retry 5 $URL