Create a metrics threshold ruleedit

Based on the metrics that are listed on the Metrics Explorer page within the Metrics app, you can create a threshold rule to notify you when a metric has reached or exceeded a value for a specific time period.

Additionally, each rule can be defined using multiple conditions that combine metrics and thresholds to create precise notifications.

  1. To access this page, go to Observability > Metrics.
  2. On the Inventory page or the Metrics Explorer page, click Alerts > Metrics.
  3. Select Create threshold alert.

When you select Create threshold alert, the rule is automatically populated with the same parameters you’ve configured on the Metrics Explorer page. If you’ve chosen a graph per value, your rule is pre-configured to monitor and notify about each individual graph displayed on the page.

You can also create a rule based on a single graph. On the Metrics Explorer page, click Actions > Create alert. The condition and filter sections of the threshold rule are automatically populated.

Metric conditionsedit

Conditions for each rule can be applied to specific metrics that you select. You can select the aggregation type, the metric, and by including a warning threshold value, you can be alerted on multiple threshold values based on severity scores. To help you determine which thresholds are meaningful to you, the preview charts provide a visualization.

In this example, the conditions state that you will receive a critical alert for hosts with a CPU usage of 120% or above and a warning alert if CPU usage is 100% or above. Note that you will receive an alert only if memory usage is 20% or above, as per the second condition.

Inventory alert

When you select Alert me if there’s no data, the rule is triggered if the metrics don’t report any data over the expected time period, or if the rule fails to query Elasticsearch.

The Filters control the scope of the rule, and the Create alert per creates an instance of the alert for every unique value of the field added. For example, create a rule per host, or per every mount point of each host. You can also add multiple fields.

Action typesedit

You can extend your rules by connecting them to actions that use the following supported built-in integrations.

Action types

When configuring an action type, you can define precisely when the alert is triggered by selecting a specific threshold condition: Alert, Warning, or Recovered (a value that was once above a threshold has now dropped below it).

Configure when an rule is triggered

Action variablesedit

This section details the variables that metrics threshold rules will send to your actions.

Basic variablesedit
The default metrics threshold rule message detailing basic variables

The default message for a metrics threshold rule displays the basic variables you can use.

  • context.group: This variable resolves to the group that the rule conditions detected. For Inventory rules, this is the name of a monitored host, pod, container, and so on. For metric threshold rules, this is the value of the field specified in the Create alert per field or * if the rule is configured to aggregate your entire infrastructure.
  • context.alertState: Depending on why the action is triggered, this variable resolves to ALERT, NO DATA, or ERROR. ALERT means the rule condition is detected, NO DATA means that no data was returned for the time period that the rule queried, and ERROR indicates an error when querying the data.
  • context.reason: This variable describes why the rule is in its current state. For each of the rule conditions, it includes the detected value of the monitored metric, and a description of the threshold.
  • context.timestamp: This variable resolves to the timestamp of when the rule was evaluated.
Advanced variablesedit
The default metrics threshold rule message detailing advanced variables

Instead of using context.reason to provide all the information you need, there may be cases when you’d like to customize your action message. Metrics threshold rules provide advanced context variables that have a tree structure.

These variables must use the structure of {{context.[Variable Name].condition[Number]}}. For example, {{context.value.condition0}}, {{context.value.condition1}}, and so on. This is required even if your rule has only one condition (accessible with .condition0). Using just {{context.[Variable Name]}} evaluates to a blank line or [object Object] depending on the action type.

  • context.value.condition[X]: This variable resolves to the detected value of conditions 0, 1, 2, and so on.
  • context.value.threshold[X]: This variable resolves to the threshold values of conditions 0, 1, 2, and so on.
  • context.value.metric[X]: This variable resolves to the monitored metric of conditions 0, 1, 2, and so on.

Settingsedit

With metrics threshold rules, it’s not possible to set an explicit index pattern as part of the configuration. The index pattern is instead inferred from Metrics indices on the Settings page of the Metrics app.

With each execution of the rule check, the Metrics indices setting is checked, but it is not stored when the rule is created.

The Timestamp field that is set under Settings determines which field is used for timestamps in queries.