Listen to Marathon's Event Bus and send selected event types to a Slack WebHook!
The only preparation that needs to be performed is to add a new WebHook for your Slack team. You can do this by adding an Incoming Webhook via the Add configuration
button on the Slack configuration page.
In the next step after clicking the button, you'll have to select the Slack channel to which you want to post the Marathon Event Bus messaged to. Either choose an existing one, or create a new channel like #marathon
.
After you did that, you'll be guided to an overview page for your new Slack Webhook. Please copy the Webhook URL
, because you'll need it in the next step. If you want, you can go back to the Incoming Webhooks
overview page and select the newly created Webhook again. Then, scroll down to the Integration settings
and customize the name and the icon for this integration if you want. To add a name and icon is not mandatory to be able to use marathon-slack
.
You can configure marathon-slack
via environment variables.
MARATHON_HOST
: The Marathon Host (hostname or ip address) where Marathon lives. Default ismaster.mesos
, so if you don't use Mesos DNS you'll have to specify this. If you want to use basic auth with Marathon, useuser:[email protected]
as value.MARATHON_PORT
: The port under which Marathon is running. Default is8080
.MARATHON_PROTOCOL
: The protocol to access the Marathon API with. Can be eitherhttp
orhttps
. Default ishttp
.SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL
: The Slack Webhook URL (mandatory).SLACK_CHANNEL
: The name of the Slack channel to send the messages to (must contain#
). Default is#marathon
.SLACK_BOT_NAME
: The name of the Slack bot to send the messages from. Default isMarathon Event Bot
.EVENT_TYPES
: The comma-separated list of event types you want to have sent to Slack. By default, all the below events are activated.TASK_STATUSES
: The comma-separated list of Mesos TaskStatuses that you want to have sent to Slack. By default, the below statuses are activated if the environment variablePUBLISH_TASK_STATUS_UPDATES
is set totrue
.PUBLISH_TASK_STATUS_UPDATES
: Can be set totrue
if the TaskStatus update message should be published. Default isfalse
.PORT
: The port number on which the API should listen on. Normally, this will be automatically provided by Marathon. Default is3000
.APP_ID_REGEXES
: A string regular expression to filter events by their Marathon App Id. For example to send a slack message for only apps with id"*-production"
. If you want multiple regular expressions, you can concatenate them with a comma.
Each of the following event types is pushed to Slack if not configured via the EVENT_TYPES
environment variables:
deployment_info
deployment_success
deployment_failed
deployment_step_success
deployment_step_failure
group_change_success
group_change_failed
failed_health_check_event
health_status_changed_event
unhealthy_task_kill_event
If PUBLISH_TASK_STATUS_UPDATES
is set to true
, the status_update_event
event is handled as well. Please be aware that this may cause a lot of messages to be delivered to the specified Slack channel! If activated, you can use the TASK_STATUSES
environment variable to specify the list of TaskStatuses you want to publish. If not, all the task status update messages will be published:
TASK_STAGING
TASK_STARTING
TASK_RUNNING
TASK_FINISHED
TASK_FAILED
TASK_KILLING
TASK_KILLED
TASK_LOST
An individual, formatted Slack message is currently only for these event types. If another event is received, it will be displayed with a default formatting of event type and timestamp.
Please also see the Marathon Event Bus docs.
Via CLI
You need to create an options.json
file locally, before you can install the package. This is because you have to add your individual Slack WebHook URL to the configuration.
An example:
{
"marathon-slack": {
"slack_webhook_url": "https://hooks.slack.com/services/...YOUR_WEBHOOK_URL..."
}
}
The above is the minimal configuration necessary to start the marathon-slack
package. You can also customize the Slack channel (property slack_channel
) or the list of event types to be published (property event_types
). For the full list of configuration options, see the marathon.json.mustache file.
Once you prepared the options.json
file, you can install the package with the following command:
dcos package install marathon-slack --options options.json
You should then see the service marathon-slack
running on the services tab in the DC/OS UI.
Via Universe
In the DC/OS Universe tab, either search for slack
, or scroll down the list of package until you find the marathon-slack
package. Then, click on the Install
button. Once the modal window pops up, click on Advanced Installation
. You can customize the settings for the package, the only thing you have to configure is the slack_webhook_url
. This has to fit to the Slack WebHook's URL you created before. Then click on Review and Install
, and if everything is ok, on Install
.
You should then see the service marathon-slack
running on the services tab in the DC/OS UI.
You can run this on Marathon like this:
{
"id": "/marathon-slack",
"cpus": 0.1,
"mem": 128,
"disk": 0,
"instances": 1,
"container": {
"type": "DOCKER",
"docker": {
"image": "tobilg/marathon-slack:0.4.5",
"network": "HOST",
"privileged": false,
"forcePullImage": true
}
},
"env": {
"SLACK_WEBHOOK_URL": "YOUR_WEBHOOK_URL"
},
"labels":{
"MARATHON_SINGLE_INSTANCE_APP": "true"
},
"upgradeStrategy":{
"minimumHealthCapacity": 0,
"maximumOverCapacity": 0
},
"portDefinitions": [
{
"port": 0,
"protocol": "tcp",
"name": "api"
}
],
"requirePorts": false,
"healthChecks": [
{
"protocol": "HTTP",
"portIndex": 0,
"path": "/health",
"gracePeriodSeconds": 5,
"intervalSeconds": 20,
"maxConsecutiveFailures": 3
}
]
}
Please replace YOUR_WEBHOOK_URL
with your real Webhook URL.
It's probably useful to limit the EVENT_TYPES
to not receive a huge amount of messages. For example, deployment_info,deployment_success,deployment_failed,failed_health_check_event,health_status_changed_event,unhealthy_task_kill_event
should cover the most important events, without adding too much details.