Code Monkey home page Code Monkey logo

newrelic's Introduction

Build Status

Description

This cookbook provides an easy way to install various New Relic agents and the New Relic server monitor.

More information?

Requirements

Chef version:

Make sure you run Chef >= 0.10.0.

Cookbooks:

This cookbook recommends on the following cookbooks:

  • curl (when making use of the deployment LWRP)

Platforms:

  • Debian
  • Ubuntu
  • RHEL
  • CentOS
  • Fedora
  • Scientific
  • Amazon
  • Windows
  • SmartOS

Attributes

default.rb:

BASIC

  • node['newrelic']['license'] - Your New Relic license key. Default is nil
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['license'] - Your New Relic license key for server monitoring purposes (defaults to value of node['newrelic']['license'])
  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['license'] - Your New Relic license key for application monitoring purposes (defaults to value of node['newrelic']['license'])

ADVANCED

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['logfile']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['loglevel']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['proxy']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['ssl']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['ssl_ca_bundle']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['ssl_ca_path']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['hostname']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['pidfile']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['collector_host']

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitoring']['timeout']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['enabled']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['logfile']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['logfile_path']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['loglevel']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['app_name']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['logfile']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['loglevel']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['port']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['max_threads']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['ssl']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['ssl_ca_path']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['ssl_ca_bundle']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['proxy']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['pidfile']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['location']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['collector_host']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['daemon']['dont_launch']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['capture_params']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['ignored_params']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['error_collector']['enable']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['error_collector']['record_database_errors']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['error_collector']['prioritize_api_errors']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['browser_monitoring']['auto_instrument']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['enable']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['threshold']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['detail']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['slow_sql']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['stack_trace_threshold']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['explain_threshold']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['record_sql']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['transaction_tracer']['custom']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['framework']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['webtransaction']['name']['remove_trailing_path']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['webtransaction']['name']['functions']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['webtransaction']['name']['files']

  • node['newrelic']['application_monitoring']['cross_application_tracer']['enable'] - Implemented for Java, PHP, Python and Ruby

repository.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['repository']['repository_key'] - The New Relic repository key, defaults to "548C16BF"

php_agent.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['php_agent']['install_silently'] - Determine whether to run the install in silent mode, defaults to false
  • node['newrelic']['php_agent']['startup_mode'] - The newrelic-daemon startup mode ("agent"/"external"), defaults to "agent"
  • node['newrelic']['php_agent']['web_server']['service_name'] - The web server service name, defaults to "apache2"
  • node['newrelic']['php_agent']['config_file'] - The New Relic php agent config file, depends on your php external configuration directory; eg. /etc/php5/conf.d/newrelic.ini

python_agent.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['python_agent']['python_version'] - Defaults to "latest". Version numbers can be found at http://download.newrelic.com/python_agent/release/
  • node['newrelic']['python_agent']['config_file'] - The New Relic python agent config file, defaults to "/etc/newrelic/newrelic.ini"

dotnet_agent.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['dotnet_agent']['https_download'] - The URL to download the MSI installer from New Relic. Default is to pull "latest"
  • node['newrelic']['dotnet_agent']['install_level'] - The install version of the .NET Agent. Default is '1' but can use '50' for a complete installation

server_monitor_agent.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['service_name'] - The New Relic server monitoring service name, defaults to "newrelic-sysmond"
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['service_notify_action'] - The New Relic server monitoring notify action, defaults to ":restart"
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['service_actions'] - The New Relic server monitoring service actions, defaults to "[:enable, :start]" (#starts the service if it's not running and enables it to start at system boot time)
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['config_path'] - The New Relic server monitoring config path, defaults to "/etc/newrelic"
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['config_file_group'] - The New Relic server monitoring config file group, defaults to "newrelic"
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['windows_version'] - the Windows version to install, defaults to "2.0.0.198"
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['windows64_checksum'] - checksum of the 64-bit Windows version, defaults to "5a8f3f5e8f15997463430401756d377c321c8899c2790ca85e5587a5b643651e"
  • node['newrelic']['server_monitor_agent']['windows32_checksum'] - checksum of the 32-bit Windows version, defaults to "ac2b65eecaad461fdd2e4386e3e4c9f96ea940b35bdf7a8c532c21dbd1c99ff0"

java_agent.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['https_download'] - The url to download the jar vor the New Relic Java agent
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['jar_file'] - The name of the newrelic jar file
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['install_dir'] - The directory to install the newrelic jar and config file
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['app_user'] - The user that runs the Java application that will use the New Relic Java agent
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['app_group'] - The group for the app_user
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['audit_mode'] - Boolean, log all data to and from New Relic in plain text
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['log_file_count'] - The number of log files to use
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['log_limit_in_kbytes'] - The maximum number of bytes to write to any one log file
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['log_daily'] - Override other log rolling configuration and roll the logs daily
  • node['newrelic']['java_agent']['execute_install'] - Execute install or not, defaults to true

nodejs_agent.rb

  • node['newrelic']['nodejs_agent']['apps'] - Array of Hash describing the apps to monitor

eg.

[
   { 'app_name' => 'My Application', 'app_path' => "/path/to/app/root" }
]

You then need to modify your application "main" file to add the following on the first line:

javascript
require('newrelic');

ruby_agent.rb:

  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['install_dir'] - The directory to for the config file
  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['app_user'] - The user that runs the Ruby application that will use the New Relic Ruby agent
  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['app_group'] - The group for the app_user
  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['audit_mode'] - Boolean, log all data to and from New Relic in plain text
  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['log_file_count'] - The number of log files to use
  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['log_limit_in_kbytes'] - The maximum number of bytes to write to any one log file
  • node['newrelic']['ruby_agent']['log_daily'] - Override other log rolling configuration and roll the logs daily

MeetMe plugin

To make sure the cookbook is focussed on getting New Relic server and application monitoring, no plugin logic is provided here. The New Relic MeetMe plugin-logic is still available, in a separate cookbook: (newrelic_meetme_plugin)[https://github.com/escapestudios-cookbooks/newrelic_meetme_plugin].

Resources / Providers

This cookbook includes an LWRP for notifying New Relic of a deployment

newrelic_deployment

Actions

  • :notify: Notify New Relic of a deployment

Attribute parameters

  • api_key: Your New Relic API key
  • app_name: The name of the application, found in the newrelic.yml file
  • app_id: The ID # of the application
  • description: Text annotation for the deployment (notes for you)
  • revision: The revision number from your source control system (SVN, git, etc.)
  • changelog: A list of changes for this deployment
  • user: The name of the user/process that triggered this deployment

Example(s)

newrelic_deployment "my-application" do
    api_key "abcdef"
    #app_name "my-application"
    app_id 1234567
    description "some description"
    revision "some revision"
    changelog "some changelog"
    user "chef-client"
    action :notify
end

This cookbook includes an LWRP for generating the newrelic.yml configuration file in a specific path, which can be used to generate multiple configurations when deploying multiple different applications

newrelic_yml

Actions

  • :generate - Generate the newrelic.yml config file (unique and default action)

Example usage - Java agent

  1. Install the Java Agent: add the newrelic::java_agent recipe to your run list. A newrelic.yml will be generated but not linked to anything.
  2. In your application cookbook, generate the newrelic.yml for this application:
newrelicyml="#{my_app_path}/newrelic.yml"
newrelic_yml newrelicyml do
  agent_type 'java'
  app_name 'my-super-duper-application'
end
  1. Configure your app for newrelic using your config file and newrelic.jar:
 java -Dnewrelic.config.file=#{newrelicyml}  -javaagent:#{node['newrelic']['install_dir']}/newrelic.jar [rest of your args]

Usage

  1. include recipe[newrelic] in a run list to implicly run recipe[newrelic::server_monitor_agent] --- OR --- include the bits and pieces explicitly in a run list:
`recipe[newrelic::repository]`
`recipe[newrelic::server_monitor_agent]`
`recipe[newrelic::dotnet_agent]`
`recipe[newrelic::java_agent]`
`recipe[newrelic::nodejs_agent]`
`recipe[newrelic::php_agent]`
`recipe[newrelic::python_agent]`
`recipe[newrelic::ruby_agent]`
  1. change the node['newrelic']['license'] attribute to your New Relic license keys --- OR --- override the attributes on a higher level (http://wiki.opscode.com/display/chef/Attributes#Attributes-AttributesPrecedence)

References

License and Authors

Author: David Joos [email protected] Author: Escape Studios Development [email protected] Copyright: 2012-2014, Escape Studios

Unless otherwise noted, all files are released under the MIT license, possible exceptions will contain licensing information in them.

Permission is hereby granted, free of charge, to any person obtaining a copy of this software and associated documentation files (the "Software"), to deal in the Software without restriction, including without limitation the rights to use, copy, modify, merge, publish, distribute, sublicense, and/or sell copies of the Software, and to permit persons to whom the Software is furnished to do so, subject to the following conditions:

The above copyright notice and this permission notice shall be included in all copies or substantial portions of the Software.

THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS", WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO THE WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY, FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE AND NONINFRINGEMENT. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR COPYRIGHT HOLDERS BE LIABLE FOR ANY CLAIM, DAMAGES OR OTHER LIABILITY, WHETHER IN AN ACTION OF CONTRACT, TORT OR OTHERWISE, ARISING FROM, OUT OF OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE SOFTWARE OR THE USE OR OTHER DEALINGS IN THE SOFTWARE.

newrelic's People

Contributors

djoos avatar bencaron avatar bai avatar ramonskie avatar rcolanero avatar sonnysideup avatar dje avatar josegonzalez avatar aaronjensen avatar cgriego avatar kesor avatar nathanielmichael avatar sethcall avatar arr-dev avatar toshipon avatar

Watchers

Peter Samaan avatar  avatar

Recommend Projects

  • React photo React

    A declarative, efficient, and flexible JavaScript library for building user interfaces.

  • Vue.js photo Vue.js

    ๐Ÿ–– Vue.js is a progressive, incrementally-adoptable JavaScript framework for building UI on the web.

  • Typescript photo Typescript

    TypeScript is a superset of JavaScript that compiles to clean JavaScript output.

  • TensorFlow photo TensorFlow

    An Open Source Machine Learning Framework for Everyone

  • Django photo Django

    The Web framework for perfectionists with deadlines.

  • D3 photo D3

    Bring data to life with SVG, Canvas and HTML. ๐Ÿ“Š๐Ÿ“ˆ๐ŸŽ‰

Recommend Topics

  • javascript

    JavaScript (JS) is a lightweight interpreted programming language with first-class functions.

  • web

    Some thing interesting about web. New door for the world.

  • server

    A server is a program made to process requests and deliver data to clients.

  • Machine learning

    Machine learning is a way of modeling and interpreting data that allows a piece of software to respond intelligently.

  • Game

    Some thing interesting about game, make everyone happy.

Recommend Org

  • Facebook photo Facebook

    We are working to build community through open source technology. NB: members must have two-factor auth.

  • Microsoft photo Microsoft

    Open source projects and samples from Microsoft.

  • Google photo Google

    Google โค๏ธ Open Source for everyone.

  • D3 photo D3

    Data-Driven Documents codes.