# Configuration options ## Config file By default karma will try to read configuration file named `karma.yaml` from current directory. Configuration file uses [YAML](http://yaml.org/) format and it needs to have `.yaml` extension. Custom filename and directory can be passed via command line flags or environment variables: - `--config.file` flag or `CONFIG_FILE` env variable - path to the config file Example with flags: ```shell karma --config.file docs/example.yaml ``` Example with environment variables: ```shell CONFIG_FILE="docs/example.yaml" ``` ### Authentication `authentication` sections allows enabling authentication support in karma. When set users will be required to authenticate when trying to access karma. There are currently two supported authentication methods: - [Basic HTTP Authentication](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/Authentication#Basic_authentication_scheme). Karma will be performing authentication using configured list of username & password pairs. This method is only recommended for testing. - External authentication via headers. Karma doesn't perform any authentication itself, it is done by a frontend service (SSO or nginx reverse proxy) that sets a header with username on every request. Only one method can be enabled in the config. Enabling authentication will also force silences to be created with usernames passed from credentials. Syntax: ```YAML authentication: header: name: string value_re: regex group_name: string group_value_re: regex group_value_separator: string basicAuth: users: - username: string password: string ``` - `authentication:users:header:name` - name of the header that will contain the username. If this header is missing from a request access will be forbidden. When set header authentication is used. - `authentication:users:header:value_re` - [regex](https://golang.org/s/re2syntax) used to extract the username from the request header value (when `authentication:users:header:name` is set). It must include one numbered capturing group, whatever is matched by that group will be used as the silence form author field. All regexes are anchored. This option must be set when `authentication:users:header:name` is set. - `authentication:users:header:group_name` - name of the header that will contain any groups the user has. - `authentication:users:header:group_value_re` - Similar to `authentication:users:header:value_re`, but for groups instead of usernames. Must be set when `authentication:users:header:group_name` is set. - `authentication:users:header:group_value_separator` - This will be used to split the group header to multiple group names. The split is done after evaluating the value regex. Default value is `" "`. - `authentication:users` - list of users (username & password) allowed to login. Passwords are stored plain without any encryption. When set HTTP basic authentication will be used. Defaults: ```YAML authentication: header: name: "" value_re: "" basicAuth: users: [] ``` Example where HTTP Basic Authentication will be used with a list of username and password pairs set in karma config file. ```YAML authentication: basicAuth: users: - username: alice password: secret - username: bob password: moreSecret ``` Example where the `X-Auth` header will be used for authentication, raw header value will be used as username. ```YAML authentication: header: name: X-Auth value_re: ^(.+)$ ``` Example where the `X-Auth-User` and `X-Auth-Groups` headers will be used to set username and list of groups. This assume that `X-Auth-Groups` value has `Groups: foo,bar` syntax, where `foo` and `bar` are two groups user belongs to. ```YAML authentication: header: name: X-Auth-User value_re: ^(.+)$ group_name: X-Auth-Groups group_value_re: 'Groups: (.+)' group_value_separator: ',' ``` ### Authorization `authorization` section allows to configure authorization groups used in silence ACL rules. Syntax: ```YAML authorization: acl: silences: string groups: - name: string members: list of strings ``` - `acl:silences` - path to silence ACL configuration file, see [ACLs](/docs/ACLs.md) for details - `groups` - list of group definitons, each group must have a `name` and `members` list. `name` will be used in silence ACL rules, `members` list should contain list of user names as passed from authentication layer. Example with two groups using basic auth users and silences ACL config: ```YAML authentication: basicAuth: users: - username: alice password: secret - username: bob password: secret - username: john password: secret authorization: acl: silences: /etc/karma/acls.yaml groups: - name: admins members: - alice - bob - name: users members: - john ``` ### Alertmanagers `alertmanager` section allows setting Alertmanager servers that should be queried for alerts. You can configure one or more Alertmanager servers, alerts with identical label set will be deduplicated and labeled with each Alertmanager server they were observed at. This allows using karma to collect alerts from a pair of Alertmanager instances running in [HA mode](https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/alertmanager/#high-availability). Syntax: ```YAML alertmanager: interval: duration servers: - name: string cluster: string uri: string external_uri: string timeout: duration proxy: bool readonly: bool tls: ca: string cert: string key: string insecureSkipVerify: bool proxy_url: string headers: any: string cors: credentials: string healthcheck: visible: bool filters: map (string: list of strings) ``` - `interval` - how often alerts should be refreshed, a string in [time.Duration](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) format. If set to `1m` karma will query every Alertmanager server once a minute. This is global setting applied to every Alertmanager server. All instances will be queried in parallel. Note that the maximum value for this option is `15m`. The UI has a watchdog that tracks the timestamp of the last pull. If the UI does not receive updates for more than 15 minutes it will print an error and reload the page. - `name` - name of this Alertmanager server, will be used as a label added to every alert in the UI and for filtering alerts using `@alertmanager=NAME` filter - `cluster` - this option can be set to give [Alertmanager clusters](https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/latest/alertmanager/#high-availability) custom names in the UI. If there are multiple alertmanager servers configured in karma config that are part of the same HA cluster then this option should be set to the same value for all of them. If `cluster` option isn't set a name will be generated for each detected cluster. - `uri` - base URI of this Alertmanager server. Supported URI schemes are `http://` and `https://`. If URI contains basic auth info (`https://user:password@alertmanager.example.com`) and you don't want it to be visible to users then ensure `proxy: true` is also set in order to avoid leaking auth information to the browser. Note: if URI contains username and password and proxy option is NOT enabled (see below), then the username & password information will be stripped from the URI and `Authorization` header using Basic Auth will be set for all in browser requests. - `external_uri` - this option allows to override base URI of this Alertmanager used for browser links and also silence requests (but only when proxy mode is not enabled). - `timeout` - timeout for requests send to this Alertmanager server, a string in [time.Duration](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) format. - `proxy` - if enabled requests from user browsers to this Alertmanager will be proxied via karma. This applies to requests made when managing silences via karma (creating or expiring silences). This option cannot be used when `readonly` is enabled. - `readonly` - set this Alertmanager upstream to a read only mode. This will disallow silence creation or editing. This option cannot be used when `proxy` is enabled. - `tls:ca` - path to CA certificate used to establish TLS connection to this Alertmanager instance (for URIs using `https://` scheme). If unset or empty string is set then Go will try to find system CA certificates using well known paths. - `tls:cert` - path to a TLS client certificate file to use when establishing TLS connections to this Alertmanager instance if it requires a TLS client authentication. Note that this option requires `tls:key` to be also set. - `tls:key` - path to a TLS client key file to use when establishing TLS connections to this Alertmanager instance if it requires a TLS client authentication. Note that this option requires `tls:cert` to be also set. - `tls:insecureSkipVerify` - disable server certificate validation, can be set to allow using self-signed certs, use at your own risk - `proxy_url` - sets a proxy for HTTP client used for making requests to the upstream server. This can be used to access servers available via SOCKS5 proxy. - `headers` - a map with a list of key: values which are header: value. These custom headers will be sent with every request to the alert manager instance. **NOTE**: these headers are only sent for alertmanager requests, they are NOT set on requests send to Prometheus server when querying alert history. Please see `history:rewrite` section below if you want to set headers for Prometheus requests. - `cors:credentials` - sets the [CORS](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS) credentials settings for browser requests, [see docs](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Request/credentials) for the list of possible values. By default credentials are included in all requests (`include`), set it to `omit` or `same-origin` if Alertmanager is configured to respond with `Access-Control-Allow-Origin: *`, [see docs](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/HTTP/CORS/Errors/CORSNotSupportingCredentials). - `healthcheck:visible` - enable this option if you want `healthcheck:filters` alerts to be visible in karma UI. An alternative to enabling this option is to route healcheck alerts to alertmanager receiver that isn't visible using default karma filters. - `healthcheck:filters` - define healtchecks using alert filters. When set karma will search for alerts matching defined filters and show an error if it doesn't match anything. This can be used with a [Dead man's switch](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dead_man%27s_switch) style alert to notify karma users that there's a problem with alerting pipeline. Syntax for this option is a map where key is the name of the filter set (used in the UI when showing errors) and the value is a list of filters. Example: - Setup always on alert in each Prometheus server (prom1 and prom2): ```YAML - alert: DeadMansSwitch expr: vector(1) ``` - Add healtcheck configuration to karma: ```YAML alertmanager: servers: - name: am uri: https://alertmanager.example.com healthcheck: filters: prom1: - alertname=DeadMansSwitch - instance=prom1 prom2: - alertname=DeadMansSwitch - instance=prom2 ``` If any of these alerts is missing from alertmanager karma will show a warning in the UI. Note: there are multiple supported combination of URI settings which result in a slightly different behavior. Settings that control it are: - `uri` - this option tells karma backend the URI that should be used to collect all alerts and silence data from given Alertmanager instance. This setting is required. - `proxy` - this option when set to true enables karma backend to proxy all silence management requests (creating, editing or deleting silences via karma UI), so when the user creates a silence via karma UI the browser makes a request to karma backend, the backend then forwards this request to the Alertmanager using the value of `uri` option as the URI. When this option is set to `false` all browser requests will use `uri` value. This setting is optional, default value for it is `false`. - `external_uri` - this option tells karma how the browser should connect to given Alertmanager instance, it can be used for silence management requests (creating, editing or deleting silences via karma UI) and how to generate links to silences in Alertmanager web UI. Behavior of this option depends on the value of `proxy` setting. When proxy mode is enabled: - silence management requests will use karma backend URI - silence links to Alertmanager web UI will use `external_uri` value as base URI When proxy mode is disabled: - silence management requests will use `external_uri` value as base URI - silence links to Alertmanager web UI will use `external_uri` value as base URI Breakdown of all combination of settings: 1. Only `uri` is set: ```YAML uri: http://localhost:123 ``` Karma would use those URIs for: | Backend | Silence management | Silence links | | ---------------------- | ---------------------- | ---------------------- | | `http://localhost:123` | `http://localhost:123` | `http://localhost:123` | 1. Proxy mode is enabled: ```YAML uri: http://localhost:123 proxy: true ``` Karma would use those URIs for: | Backend | Silence management | Silence links | | ---------------------- | ------------------ | ---------------------- | | `http://localhost:123` | Karma internal URI | `http://localhost:123` | 1. `external_uri` is set, but proxy mode is disabled: ```YAML uri: http://localhost:123 external_uri: http://example.com ``` Karma would use those URIs for: | Backend | Silence management | Silence links | | ---------------------- | -------------------- | -------------------- | | `http://localhost:123` | `http://example.com` | `http://example.com` | 1. Proxy mode is enabled and `external_uri` is set: ```YAML uri: http://localhost:123 proxy: true external_uri: http://example.com ``` Karma would use those URIs for: | Backend | Silence management | Silence links | | ---------------------- | ------------------ | -------------------- | | `http://localhost:123` | Karma internal URI | `http://example.com` | 1. ReadOnly mode is enabled: ```YAML uri: http://localhost:123 readonly: true ``` Karma would use those URIs for: | Backend | Silence management | Silence links | | ---------------------- | ------------------ | ---------------------- | | `http://localhost:123` | Disabled | `http://localhost:123` | Example with two production Alertmanager instances running in HA mode and a staging instance that is also proxied and requires a custom auth header: ```YAML alertmanager: interval: 1m servers: - name: production1 uri: https://alertmanager1.prod.example.com timeout: 20s proxy: false - name: production2 uri: https://alertmanager2.prod.example.com timeout: 20s proxy: false - name: staging uri: https://alertmanager.staging.example.com timeout: 30s proxy: true tls: ca: /etc/ssl/staging-ca.crt headers: X-Auth-Token: aValidToken - name: protected uri: https://alertmanager-auth.prod.example.com timeout: 20s tls: cert: /etc/ssl/client.pem key: /etc/ssl/client.key - name: self-signed uri: https://test.example.com tls: insecureSkipVerify: true - name: socks5 uri: https://internal.address proxy_url: socks5://proxy.local:5000 ``` Defaults: ```YAML alertmanager: interval: 1m servers: [] ``` There is no default for `alertmanager.servers` and it's a required option for setting multiple Alertmanager servers. For cases where only a single server needs to be configured without a config file see [Simplified Configuration](#simplified-configuration). ### Alert acknowledgement Prometheus Alertmanager allows alerts to be in 3 states: - `active` - when alert is firing - `suppressed` - when alert is either silenced by a [silence rule](https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/alertmanager/#silences) or inhibited by another alert using [inhibition rules](https://prometheus.io/docs/alerting/alertmanager/#inhibition) - `unprocessed` - initial state for new alerts before they are checked against all silence rules so Alertmanager doesn't yet know if the alert should be `active` or `suppressed` A silence rule can be used to mark an alert as acknowledged and being worked on. To simplify creating of such silences karma provides a one click button that will create a silence matching alert group it was clicked for. `alertAcknowledgement` allows to enable this feature and customize it's configuration. Syntax: ```YAML alertAcknowledgement: enabled: bool duration: duration author: string comment: string ``` - `enabled` - setting it to true will enable creation of short lived acknowledgement silences. - `duration` - duration for acknowledgement silences, value is a string in [time.Duration](https://golang.org/pkg/time/#ParseDuration) format. - `author` - default author for acknowledgement silences. If user set the author field on the silence form then that value will be used instead. - `comment` - custom comment used for acknowledgement silences (optional). If the comment contains `%NOW%` it will be replaced by current timestamp with UTC timezone, to use timestamp with local timezone use `%NOWLOC%`. Defaults: ```YAML alertAcknowledgement: enabled: false duration: 15m0s author: karma comment: ACK! This alert was acknowledged using karma on %NOW% ``` A common problem is setting a correct duration for the silence. If set for too short it can expire before the issue is resolved, and will require re-silencing all the alerts. If set for too long it mask the same problem reoccurring in the future. This requires user to expire the silence once the issue is resolved. [kthxbye](https://github.com/prymitive/kthxbye) is a tiny daemon that can help with managing short lived acknowledged silences. It will continuously extend short lived acknowledgement silences if there are alerts firing against those silences, which means that the user doesn't need to worry about setting proper duration for such silences. To use it run an instance of kthxbye with every alertmanager instance or cluster and configure it to use the same comment prefix in `comment`. With this setup when user clicks to acknowledge an alert karma will create a short lived silence and kthxbye will keep that silence in Alertmanager until there are no alerts matching it, meaning that the issue was resolved. ### Annotations `annotations` section allows configuring how alert annotation are displayed in the UI. Syntax: ```YAML annotations: default: hidden: bool hidden: list of strings visible: list of strings keep: list of strings strip: list of strings order: list of strings actions: list of strings enableInsecureHTML: bool ``` - `default:hidden` - bool, true if all annotations should be hidden by default. - `hidden` - list of annotations that should be hidden by default. - `visible` - list of annotations that should be visible by default when `default:hidden` is set to `true`. - `keep` - list of allowed annotations, if empty all annotations are allowed. - `strip` - list of ignored annotations. - `order` - custom order of annotation names. All annotations listed here will appear first in the order specified here. Remaining annotations will be sorted alphabetically and appended at the end. - `actions` - list of annotations that will be moved to alert dropdown menu. this only applies to annotations where value is a link. - `enableInsecureHTML` - by default all annotation values are escaped when rendered in users browser, to prevent any injection attacks. If this option is set to `true` escaping will be disabled which allows HTML tags to be used in annotations, but if someone manages to send alerts with annotations containing untrusted HTML/Javascript code to your alertmanager instances karma will allow it to be executed in your browser. **NOTE** Enable at your own risk. The difference between `hidden`/`visible` and `keep`/`strip` is that hidden annotations are still accessible, but they are shown in the UI collapsed by default (only name is visible, value is shown after clicking), while stripped annotations are removed entirely and never presented to the user. Example where all annotations except `summary` are hidden by default. If there are additional annotation keys user will need to click on the `+` icon to see them. `summary` annotation will always appear first in the UI, followed by `help` and all other annotations (sorted alphabetically). Any annotation with name `jira` and a value that is a URL will be moved to alerts dropdown menu. ```YAML annotations: default: hidden: true hidden: [] visible: - summary keep: [] strip: - help - verylong order: - summary - help actions: - jira ``` Example where all annotations except `details` are visible by default. If `details` annotation is present on any alert user will need to click on the `+` icon to see it. Additionally `secret` annotation is stripped and never shown in the UI. ```YAML annotations: default: hidden: false hidden: - details visible: [] keep: [] strip: - secret ``` Defaults: ```YAML annotations: default: hidden: false hidden: [] visible: [] keep: [] strip: [] order: [] actions: [] enableInsecureHTML: false ``` ### Filters `filters` section allows configuring default set of filters used in the UI. Syntax: ```YAML filters: default: list of strings ``` - `default` - list of filters to use by default when user navigates to karma web UI. Visit `/help` page in karma for details on available filters. Note that if a string starts with `@` YAML requires to wrap it in quotes. Example: ```YAML filters: default: - "@state=active" - severity=critical ``` Defaults: ```YAML filters: default: [] ``` ### Grid `grid` section allows customizing how alert grid is rendered in the UI. Sorting configuration can be overridden by each user via UI settings. Syntax: ```YAML grid: sorting: order: string reverse: bool label: string customValues: labels: dict auto: ignore: list of strings order: list of strings groupLimit: integer ``` - `sorting:order` - default sort order for alert grid, valid values are: - `disabled` - no sorting, alert groups are rendered in the order they are returned by the API - `startsAt` - sort by alert timestamps, most recent alert in each group will be used when comparing each group - `label` - sort by labels, if the label used for sorting is not shared by all alerts in a group then the first alert in the group will be queried for it - `sorting:reverse` - default value for reversed sort order - `sorting:label` - label name for sorting when `grid:sorting:order` is set to `label`. Labels can be assigned custom values used only by sorting via `sorting:customValues:labels`. - `sorting:customValues:labels` - when sorting using alert labels values are compared as strings, which work for labels like `cluster=A`, `cluster=B` & `cluster=C`, but not for `cluster=prod`, `cluster=staging` & `cluster=dev`. Alphabetic sort would order the second case as follows: `dev`, `prod`, `staging`. To allow for more natural sorting `sorting:valueMapping` can be used to map label values to integer values which will be used for sorting instead of original string values. Note: this option is not available via environment variables, you can only set it via the config file. - `auto:ignore` - list of label names that should never be selected as multi-grid source label when multi-grid is configured to `Automatic selection` in the UI or when `ui:multiGridLabel` is set to `@auto`. - `auto:order` - preferred order for selecting labels to be used as multi-grid source label when multi-grid is configured to `Automatic selection` in the UI or when `ui:multiGridLabel` is set to `@auto`. If a label name is not present in this list labels with equal weight will be picked in alphabetic order. - `groupLimit` - default number of alert groups to show in the UI, loading more will require user to click on `Load more` button. Defaults: ```YAML grid: sorting: order: startsAt reverse: true label: alertname customValues: labels: {} auto: ignore: [] order: [] groupLimit: 40 ``` Example with sorting using `severity` label and value mappings for it: ```YAML grid: sorting: order: label reverse: false label: severity customValues: labels: severity: critical: 1 warning: 2 info: 3 ``` ### Alert history `history` section allows to enable and configure alert history queries. When enabled karma will use `source` fields to try finding remote Prometheus servers sending alerts. If `source` is a link that points at a reachable Prometheus server then karma will query its metrics to estimate how many times did that alert fire in the last 24h. Syntax: ```YAML history: enabled: bool timeout: duration workers: integer rewrite: - source: regex uri: string proxy_url: string headers: any: string tls: ca: string cert: string key: string insecureSkipVerify: bool ``` - `enabled` - enable alert history UI and backend query support - `timeout` - timeout for HTTP requests send to remote Prometheus servers - `workers` - number of worker threads to start, each worker handles one outgoing HTTP request, more workers allows to handle more concurrent queries if you have a large number of Prometheus servers sending alerts - `rewrite` - list of source rewrite rules applied before any request is send to remote Prometheus. Rewrite rules can be used to modify URI or TLS settings used by karma when connecting to Prometheus API if `source` field in alert uses addresses not reachable from karma. All regexes are anchored, `${N}` syntax can be used for capture groups. You can rewrite uri to an empty string to disable connecting to that specific Prometheus instance. Defaults: ```YAML history: enabled: true timeout: 20s workers: 30 rewrite: [] ``` Example with rewrite rule that will replace `https://prometheus.example.com` with `http://localhost:9093`: ```YAML history: rewrite: - source: 'https://prometheus.example.com' uri: 'http://localhost:9093' ``` Example with rewrite rule that will replace `https://*.example.com` with `http://prometheus-*.internal` (`https://dev.example.com` becomes `http://prometheus-dev.example.com`): ```YAML history: rewrite: - source: 'https://(.+).example.com' uri: 'http://prometheus-$1.internal' ``` Example with rewrite rule that will disable sending any history queries to `http://prometheus.internal`: ```YAML history: rewrite: - source: 'http://prometheus.internal' uri: '' ``` Example with rewrite rule that configures TLS settings without modifying URI: ```YAML history: rewrite: - source: '(.*)' uri: '$1' tls: insecureSkipVerify: true ``` Example with rewrite rule that configures a proxy without modifying URI: ```YAML history: rewrite: - source: '(.*)' uri: '$1' proxy_url: socks5://proxy.local:5000 ``` Example with rewrite rule that will set an extra header for all history request send to Prometheus server `http://prometheus.example.com`: ```YAML history: rewrite: - source: 'http://prometheus.example.com' headers: X-Auth: secret X-Foo: bar ``` ### Karma `karma` section allows configuring miscellaneous internal options. Syntax: ```YAML karma: name: string ``` - `name` - name of given karma instance, this is currently used for the browser tab title. Defaults: ```YAML karma: name: karma ``` ### Labels `labels` section allows configuring how alert labels will be rendered in the UI. All labels will be parsed when collecting alerts from Alertmanager API and used when deduplicating alerts, but some labels aren't useful to users and so can be removed from the UI, this is controlled by `keep`, `keep_re`, `strip` and `strip_re` options. `colors` section allows configuring which labels should have colors applied to label background in the UI. Colors can help visually identify alerts with shared labels, for example coloring hostname label will allow to quickly spot all alerts for the same host. Syntax: ```YAML labels: color: static: list of strings unique: list of strings custom: foo: - value: string value_re: regex color: string order: list of strings keep: list of strings keep_re: list of regex strip: list of strings strip_re: list of regex valueOnly: list of strings valueOnly_re: list of regex ``` - `color:static` - list of label names that will all have the same color applied (different than the default label color). This allows to quickly spot a specific label that can have high range of values, but it's important when reading the dashboard. For example coloring the instance label allows to quickly learn which instance is affected by given alert. - `color:unique` - list of label names that should have unique colors generated in the UI. - `color:custom` - nested map of label names and value with colors - this allows to configure a set of labels with custom predefined colors applied to them rather than generated. Value is a mapping with `label name` -> `list of dicts`, each dict object allows setting: - `value` - the exact value of the label to match against - `value_re` - Go compatible [regular expression](https://golang.org/pkg/regexp/) to match against. All regexes will be automatically anchored. - `color`: color to apply if either `value` or `value_re` matches Either `value` or `value_re` is required, both can be set in which case `value` with be tested first. Entries are evaluated in the order they appear in the config file. Note: this option is not available via environment variables, you can only set it via the config file. - `order` - custom order of label names. All labels listed here will appear first in the order specified here. Remaining labels will be sorted alphabetically and appended at the end. - `keep` - list of allowed labels, if both `keep` and `keep_re` are empty all labels are allowed. - `keep_re` - list of Go compatible [regular expressions](https://golang.org/pkg/regexp/) to keep matching labels; all regexes will be automatically anchored; if both `keep` and `keep_re` are empty all labels are allowed. - `strip` - list of ignored labels. - `strip_re` - list of Go compatible [regular expressions](https://golang.org/pkg/regexp/) to ignore matching labels; all regexes will be automatically anchored. - `valueOnly` - list of label names for which only the value will be displayed in the UI. - `valueOnly_re` - list of JavaScript compatible [regular expressions](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Guide/Regular_Expressions/Cheatsheet) to display only the value for matching labels; all regexes will be automatically anchored. Example with static color for the `job` label (every `job` label will have the same color regardless of the value) and unique color for the `@receiver` label (every `@receiver` label will have color unique for each value). ```YAML labels: color: static: - job unique: - "@receiver" ``` Example where `task_id` label is ignored by karma: ```YAML labels: keep: [] strip: - task_id ``` Example where all but `instance` and `alertname` labels are allowed: ```YAML labels: keep: - alertname - instance strip: [] ``` Example where only labels with the prefix `custom_` are allowed: ```YAML labels: keep: [] keep_re: - 'custom_.*' ``` Example where `severity` label will have a red color for `critical`, yellow for `warning` and blue for `info`: ```YAML labels: color: custom: "@alertmanager": - value: prod color: "#e6e" severity: - value: info color: "#87c4e0" - value: warning color: "#ffae42" - value: critical color: "#ff220c" ``` Example with a regex value, `info`, `warning` and `critical` will get colors as below, but any value not matching those 3 values will use the color from `.*`: ```YAML labels: color: custom: severity: - value: info color: "#87c4e0" - value: warning color: "#ffae42" - value: critical color: "#ff220c" - value_re: ".*" color: "#736598" ``` Note: be sure to set fallback values at the end of the list, so they're only evaluated if there's no exact value match Defaults: ```YAML labels: color: static: [] unique: [] custom: {} keep: [] keep_re: [] strip: [] strip_re: [] valueOnly: [] valueOnly_re: [] ``` ### Listen `listen` section allows configuring karma web server behavior. Syntax: ```YAML listen: address: string port: integer timeout: read: duration write: duration prefix: string tls: cert: string key: string cors: allowedOrigins: list of strings ``` - `address` - Hostname or IP to listen on. - `port` - HTTP port to listen on. - `timeout:read` - HTTP server request read timeout - `timeout:write` - HTTP server response write timeout - `prefix` - URL root for karma, you can use to if you wish to serve it from location other than `/`. This option is mostly useful when using karma behind reverse proxy with other services on the same IP but different URL root. - `tls:cert` - path to a TLS certificate, enables listening on HTTPS instead of HTTP, - `tls:key` - path to a TLS key, required when `tls.cert` is set - `cors:allowedOrigins` - List of origins a cross-domain request can be executed from. An empty list means all origins are allowed. Example where karma would listen for HTTP requests on `http://1.2.3.4:80/karma/` ```YAML listen: address: 1.2.3.4 port: 80 prefix: /karma/ ``` Example where karma would listen for HTTPS requests on `https://1.2.3.4:443/` ```YAML listen: address: 1.2.3.4 port: 443 tls: cert: server.pem key: server.key ``` Defaults: ```YAML listen: address: "0.0.0.0" port: 8080 prefix: / tls: cert: "" key: "" cors: allowedOrigins: [] ``` ### Log `log` section allows configuring logging subsystem. Syntax: ```YAML log: config: bool level: string format: string requests: bool timestamp: bool ``` - `config` - if set to `true` karma will log used configuration on startup - `level` - log level to set for karma, possible values are `debug`, `info`, `warning`, `error`, `fatal` and `panic`. - `format` - controls how log messages are formatted, possible values are `text` and `json`. If set to `json` each log will be a JSON object - `requests` - if set to `true` karma will log all requests - `timestamp` - if set to `true` all log messages will include a timestamp Defaults: ```YAML log: config: false level: info format: text requests: false timestamp: false ``` ### Silences `silences` section allows specifying to configure silence post post-processing. Syntax: ```YAML silences: expired: duration comments: linkDetect: rules: list of link detection rules ``` - `expired` - controls how long expired silences are shown on active alerts. If `expired` is set to `5m` silences expired in the last 5 minutes will be shown. Set it to zero or a negative value to disable showing expired silences. - `comments:linkDetect:rules` - allows to specify a list of rules to detect links inside silence comments. It's intended to find ticket system ID strings and turn them into links. Each rule must specify: - `regex` - regular expression that matches ticket system IDs. Each regex must contain at least one capture group `(regex)`. All regexes will be automatically anchored. - `uriTemplate` - template string that will be used to generate a link. Each template must include `$1` which will be replaced with text matched by the `regex`. Examples where alerts that got unsilenced will show silences expired in the last 15 minutes: ```YAML silences: expired: 15m ``` Examples where alerts that got unsilenced will not show recently expired silences: ```YAML silences: expired: -1m ``` Example where a string `DEVOPS-123` inside a comment would be rendered as a link to a JIRA ticket `https://jira.example.com/browse/DEVOPS-123`. ```YAML silences: comments: linkDetect: rules: - regex: "(DEVOPS-[0-9]+)" uriTemplate: https://jira.example.com/browse/$1 ``` ### Receivers `receivers` section allows configuring how alerts from different receivers are handled by karma. If alerts are routed to multiple receivers they can be duplicated in the UI, each instance will have different value for `@receiver`. Syntax: ```YAML receivers: keep: list of strings keep_re: list of regex expressions strip: list of strings strip_re: list of regex expressions ``` - `keep` - list of receivers name that are allowed, if empty all receivers are allowed. - `keep_re` - same as `keep` but accepts regular expression instead of static strings. - `strip` - list of receiver names that will not be shown in the UI. - `strip_re` - same as `strip` but accepts regular expression instead of static strings. Example where alerts that are routed to the `alertmanage2es` receiver are ignored by karma. ```YAML receivers: strip: - alertmanage2es ``` ```YAML receivers: strip_re: - alertmanager.+ ``` Defaults: ```YAML receivers: keep: [] keep_re: [] strip: [] strip_re: [] ``` ## Silence form `silenceForm` section allows customizing silence form behavior. Syntax: ```YAML silenceForm: defaultAlertmanagers: list of strings strip: labels: list of strings ``` - `defaultAlertmanagers` - list of Alertmanager names that will be used as default when creating a new silence. If selected alertmanager is part of a cluster then the whole cluster will be used in the silence form. - `strip:labels` - list of labels to ignore when populating silence form from individual alerts or group of alerts. This allows to create silences matching only unique labels, like `instance` or `host`, ignoring any common labels like `job`. Example where `job` label won't be auto populated in the silence form. ```YAML silenceForm: strip: labels: - job ``` Example where alertmanagers `prod1` and `prod2` will be the default ones when creating a new silence ```YAML silenceForm: defaultAlertmanagers: - prod1 - prod2 ``` ## UI defaults `ui` section allows configuring default values for UI settings controled via the configuration modal. Those defaults can be overwritten by use via UI controls. Syntax: ```YAML ui: refresh: duration hideFiltersWhenIdle: bool colorTitlebar: bool theme: string animations: bool minimalGroupWidth: integer alertsPerGroup: integer collapseGroups: string multiGridLabel: string multiGridSortReverse: bool ``` - `refresh` - default refresh interval, this tells the UI how often karma API should be queried - `hideFiltersWhenIdle` - if enabled filter bar will be hidden after some user inactivity - `colorTitlebar` - if enabled alert group title bar color will be set to follow alerts in that group - `theme` - default theme, possible values: - `light` - bright theme - `dark` - dark theme - `auto` - follows browser preferences using [prefers-color-scheme](https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/@media/prefers-color-scheme) media queries Default value is `auto`. - `animations` - enables UI animations - `minimalGroupWidth` - minimal width (in pixels) for each alert group rendered on the grid. This value is used to calculate the number of columns rendered on the grid. - `alertsPerGroup` - default number of alerts to show for each group - `collapseGroups` - controls if alert groups will default to being rendered expanded or collapsed (only title bar is visible). Valid values: - expanded - groups are always expanded - collapsed - groups are always collapsed - collapsedOnMobile - groups are expanded on desktop and collapsed on mobile browsers - `multiGridLabel` - when set to a label name it enables multi-grid support. With multi-grid karma will have a dedicated grid for each value of this label, all alerts sharing that value will be placed on the same grid. There will be extra grid for alerts without that label. Grid sorting options will be used to sort the list of grids. This option accepts additional special values: - `@auto` - grid label will be selected automatically - `@alertmanager` - one grid per alertmanager configured in karma config - `@cluster` - one grid per alertmanager cluster - `@receiver` - one grid per alertmanager receiver - `multiGridSortReverse` - when multi-grid is enabled set to `true` the order in which grids are displayed. Defaults: ```YAML ui: refresh: 30s hideFiltersWhenIdle: true colorTitlebar: false theme: "auto" animations: true minimalGroupWidth: 420 alertsPerGroup: 5 collapseGroups: collapsedOnMobile multiGridLabel: "" multiGridSortReverse: false ``` ## Customizing karma In order to keep the core code simple karma doesn't support any way of extending provided functionality. There is however possibility to inject custom CSS & JavaScript code, which can be used to either override built in CSS styles or integrate with extra services. ```YAML custom: css: string js: string ``` - `css` - path to a CSS file - `js` - path to JavaScript file Example: ```YAML custom: css: /theme/custom.css js: /assets/custom.js ``` Use at your own risk and be aware that used CSS class names might change without warning. This feature is provided as is without any guarantees. ## Command line flags Config file options are mapped to command line flags, so `alertmanager:interval` config file key is accessible as `--alertmanager.interval` flag, run `karma --help` to see a full list. Exceptions for passing flags: - `jira` - this option is a list of maps and it's only available when using config file. There's no support for configuring multiple Alertmanager servers using flags, but it's possible to configure a single Alertmanager instance this way, see the [Simplified Configuration](#simplified-configuration) section. ## Environment variables Environment variables are mapped in a similar way as command line flags, `alertmanager:interval` is accessible as `ALERTMANAGER_INTERVAL` env. Exceptions for passing flags: - `HOST` - used by gin webserver, same effect as setting `listen:address` config option - `PORT` - used by gin webserver, same effect as setting `listen:port` config option There's no support for configuring multiple alertmanager servers using environment variables, but it's possible to configure a single Alertmanager instance this way, see the [Simplified Configuration](#simplified-configuration) section. ## Simplified Configuration To configure multiple Alertmanager instances karma requires a config file, but for a single Alertmanager instance cases it's possible to configure all Alertmanager server options that are set for `alertmanager.servers` config section using only flags or environment variables. ### Alertmanager URI To set the `uri` key from `alertmanager.servers` map `ALERTMANAGER_URI` env or `--alertmanager.uri` flag can be used. Examples: ```shell ALERTMANAGER_URI=https://alertmanager.example.com karma karma --alertmanager.uri https://alertmanager.example.com ``` ### Alertmanager external URI To set the `external_uri` key from `alertmanager.servers` map `ALERTMANAGER_EXTERNAL_URI` env or `--alertmanager.external_uri` flag can be used. Examples: ```shell ALERTMANAGER_EXTERNAL_URI=https://alertmanager.example.com karma karma --alertmanager.external_uri https://alertmanager.example.com ``` ### Alertmanager name To set the `name` key from `alertmanager.servers` map `ALERTMANAGER_NAME` env or `--alertmanager.name` flag can be used. Examples: ```shell ALERTMANAGER_NAME=single karma karma --alertmanager.name single ``` ### Alertmanager timeout To set the `timeout` key from `alertmanager.servers` map `ALERTMANAGER_TIMEOUT` env or `--alertmanager.timeout` flag can be used. Examples: ```shell ALERTMANAGER_TIMEOUT=10s karma karma --alertmanager.timeout 10s ``` ### Alertmanager request proxy To set the `proxy` key from `alertmanager.servers` map `ALERTMANAGER_PROXY` env or `--alertmanager.proxy` flag can be used. Examples: ```shell ALERTMANAGER_PROXY=true karma karma --alertmanager.proxy ```