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README

Alertmanager [CircleCI][circleci]

[Docker Repository on Quay][quay] [Docker Pulls][hub]

The Alertmanager handles alerts sent by client applications such as the Prometheus server. It takes care of deduplicating, grouping, and routing them to the correct receiver integrations such as email, PagerDuty, OpsGenie, or many other mechanisms thanks to the webhook receiver. It also takes care of silencing and inhibition of alerts.

Install

There are various ways of installing Alertmanager.

Precompiled binaries

Precompiled binaries for released versions are available in the download section on prometheus.io. Using the latest production release binary is the recommended way of installing Alertmanager.

Docker images

Docker images are available on Quay.io or Docker Hub.

You can launch an Alertmanager container for trying it out with

$ docker run --name alertmanager -d -p 127.0.0.1:9093:9093 quay.io/prometheus/alertmanager

Alertmanager will now be reachable at http://localhost:9093/.

Compiling the binary

Building from source requires Go and Node.js (with npm). Clone the repository and build manually:

$ git clone https://github.com/prometheus/alertmanager.git
$ cd alertmanager
$ make build
$ ./alertmanager --config.file=<your_file>

You can also build just one of the binaries in this repo by passing a name to the build function:

$ make build BINARIES=amtool

Example

This is an example configuration that should cover most relevant aspects of the new YAML configuration format. The full documentation of the configuration can be found here.

global:
  # The smarthost and SMTP sender used for mail notifications.
  smtp_smarthost: 'localhost:25'
  smtp_from: 'alertmanager@example.org'

# The root route on which each incoming alert enters.
route:
  # The root route must not have any matchers as it is the entry point for
  # all alerts. It needs to have a receiver configured so alerts that do not
  # match any of the sub-routes are sent to someone.
  receiver: 'team-X-mails'

  # The labels by which incoming alerts are grouped together. For example,
  # multiple alerts coming in for cluster=A and alertname=LatencyHigh would
  # be batched into a single group.
  #
  # To aggregate by all possible labels use '...' as the sole label name.
  # This effectively disables aggregation entirely, passing through all
  # alerts as-is. This is unlikely to be what you want, unless you have
  # a very low alert volume or your upstream notification system performs
  # its own grouping. Example: group_by: [...]
  group_by: ['alertname', 'cluster']

  # When a new group of alerts is created by an incoming alert, wait at
  # least 'group_wait' to send the initial notification.
  # This way ensures that you get multiple alerts for the same group that start
  # firing shortly after another are batched together on the first
  # notification.
  group_wait: 30s

  # When the first notification was sent, wait 'group_interval' to send a batch
  # of new alerts that started firing for that group.
  group_interval: 5m

  # If an alert has successfully been sent, wait 'repeat_interval' to
  # resend them.
  repeat_interval: 3h

  # All the above attributes are inherited by all child routes and can
  # overwritten on each.

  # The child route trees.
  routes:
  # This route performs a regular expression match on alert labels to
  # catch alerts that are related to a list of services.
  - matchers:
    - service=~"^(foo1|foo2|baz)$"
    receiver: team-X-mails

    # The service has a sub-route for critical alerts, any alerts
    # that do not match, i.e. severity != critical, fall-back to the
    # parent node and are sent to 'team-X-mails'
    routes:
    - matchers:
      - severity="critical"
      receiver: team-X-pager

  - matchers:
    - service="files"
    receiver: team-Y-mails

    routes:
    - matchers:
      - severity="critical"
      receiver: team-Y-pager

  # This route handles all alerts coming from a database service. If there's
  # no team to handle it, it defaults to the DB team.
  - matchers:
    - service="database"

    receiver: team-DB-pager
    # Also group alerts by affected database.
    group_by: [alertname, cluster, database]

    routes:
    - matchers:
      - owner="team-X"
      receiver: team-X-pager

    - matchers:
      - owner="team-Y"
      receiver: team-Y-pager


# Inhibition rules allow to mute a set of alerts given that another alert is
# firing.
# We use this to mute any warning-level notifications if the same alert is
# already critical.
inhibit_rules:
- source_matchers:
    - severity="critical"
  target_matchers:
    - severity="warning"
  # Apply inhibition if the alertname is the same.
  # CAUTION: 
  #   If all label names listed in `equal` are missing 
  #   from both the source and target alerts,
  #   the inhibition rule will apply!
  equal: ['alertname']


receivers:
- name: 'team-X-mails'
  email_configs:
  - to: 'team-X+alerts@example.org, team-Y+alerts@example.org'

- name: 'team-X-pager'
  email_configs:
  - to: 'team-X+alerts-critical@example.org'
  pagerduty_configs:
  - routing_key: <team-X-key>

- name: 'team-Y-mails'
  email_configs:
  - to: 'team-Y+alerts@example.org'

- name: 'team-Y-pager'
  pagerduty_configs:
  - routing_key: <team-Y-key>

- name: 'team-DB-pager'
  pagerduty_configs:
  - routing_key: <team-DB-key>

API

The current Alertmanager API is version 2. This API is fully generated via the OpenAPI project and Go Swagger with the exception of the HTTP handlers themselves. The API specification can be found in api/v2/openapi.yaml. A HTML rendered version can be accessed here. Clients can be easily generated via any OpenAPI generator for all major languages.

APIv2 is accessed via the /api/v2 prefix. APIv1 was deprecated in 0.16.0 and is removed as of version 0.27.0. The v2 /status endpoint would be /api/v2/status. If --web.route-prefix is set then API routes are prefixed with that as well, so --web.route-prefix=/alertmanager/ would relate to /alertmanager/api/v2/status.

amtool

amtool is a cli tool for interacting with the Alertmanager API. It is bundled with all releases of Alertmanager.

Install

Alternatively you can install with:

$ go install github.com/prometheus/alertmanager/cmd/amtool@latest

Examples

View all currently firing alerts:

$ amtool alert
Alertname        Starts At                Summary
Test_Alert       2017-08-02 18:30:18 UTC  This is a testing alert!
Test_Alert       2017-08-02 18:30:18 UTC  This is a testing alert!
Check_Foo_Fails  2017-08-02 18:30:18 UTC  This is a testing alert!
Check_Foo_Fails  2017-08-02 18:30:18 UTC  This is a testing alert!

View all currently firing alerts with extended output:

$ amtool -o extended alert
Labels                                        Annotations                                                    Starts At                Ends At                  Generator URL
alertname="Test_Alert" instance="node0"       link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local
alertname="Test_Alert" instance="node1"       link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local
alertname="Check_Foo_Fails" instance="node0"  link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local
alertname="Check_Foo_Fails" instance="node1"  link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local

In addition to viewing alerts, you can use the rich query syntax provided by Alertmanager:

$ amtool -o extended alert query alertname="Test_Alert"
Labels                                   Annotations                                                    Starts At                Ends At                  Generator URL
alertname="Test_Alert" instance="node0"  link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local
alertname="Test_Alert" instance="node1"  link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local

$ amtool -o extended alert query instance=~".+1"
Labels                                        Annotations                                                    Starts At                Ends At                  Generator URL
alertname="Test_Alert" instance="node1"       link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local
alertname="Check_Foo_Fails" instance="node1"  link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local

$ amtool -o extended alert query alertname=~"Test.*" instance=~".+1"
Labels                                   Annotations                                                    Starts At                Ends At                  Generator URL
alertname="Test_Alert" instance="node1"  link="https://example.com" summary="This is a testing alert!"  2017-08-02 18:31:24 UTC  0001-01-01 00:00:00 UTC  http://my.testing.script.local

Silence an alert:

$ amtool silence add alertname=Test_Alert
b3ede22e-ca14-4aa0-932c-ca2f3445f926

$ amtool silence add alertname="Test_Alert" instance=~".+0"
e48cb58a-0b17-49ba-b734-3585139b1d25

View silences:

$ amtool silence query
ID                                    Matchers              Ends At                  Created By  Comment
b3ede22e-ca14-4aa0-932c-ca2f3445f926  alertname=Test_Alert  2017-08-02 19:54:50 UTC  kellel

$ amtool silence query instance=~".+0"
ID                                    Matchers                            Ends At                  Created By  Comment
e48cb58a-0b17-49ba-b734-3585139b1d25  alertname=Test_Alert instance=~.+0  2017-08-02 22:41:39 UTC  kellel

Expire a silence:

$ amtool silence expire b3ede22e-ca14-4aa0-932c-ca2f3445f926

Expire all silences matching a query:

$ amtool silence query instance=~".+0"
ID                                    Matchers                            Ends At                  Created By  Comment
e48cb58a-0b17-49ba-b734-3585139b1d25  alertname=Test_Alert instance=~.+0  2017-08-02 22:41:39 UTC  kellel

$ amtool silence expire $(amtool silence query -q instance=~".+0")

$ amtool silence query instance=~".+0"

Expire all silences:

$ amtool silence expire $(amtool silence query -q)

Try out how a template works. Let's say you have this in your configuration file:

templates:
  - '/foo/bar/*.tmpl'

Then you can test out how a template would look like with example by using this command:

amtool template render --template.glob='/foo/bar/*.tmpl' --template.text='{{ template "slack.default.markdown.v1" . }}'

Configuration

amtool allows a configuration file to specify some options for convenience. The default configuration file paths are $HOME/.config/amtool/config.yml or /etc/amtool/config.yml

An example configuration file might look like the following:

# Define the path that `amtool` can find your `alertmanager` instance
alertmanager.url: "http://localhost:9093"

# Override the default author. (unset defaults to your username)
author: me@example.com

# Force amtool to give you an error if you don't include a comment on a silence
comment_required: true

# Set a default output format. (unset defaults to simple)
output: extended

# Set a default receiver
receiver: team-X-pager

Routes

amtool allows you to visualize the routes of your configuration in form of text tree view. Also you can use it to test the routing by passing it label set of an alert and it prints out all receivers the alert would match ordered and separated by ,. (If you use --verify.receivers amtool returns error code 1 on mismatch)

Example of usage:

# View routing tree of remote Alertmanager
$ amtool config routes --alertmanager.url=http://localhost:9090

# Test if alert matches expected receiver
$ amtool config routes test --config.file=doc/examples/simple.yml --tree --verify.receivers=team-X-pager service=database owner=team-X

High Availability

Alertmanager's high availability is in production use at many companies and is enabled by default.

Important: Both UDP and TCP are needed in alertmanager 0.15 and higher for the cluster to work. - If you are using a firewall, make sure to whitelist the clustering port for both protocols. - If you are running in a container, make sure to expose the clustering port for both protocols.

To create a highly available cluster of the Alertmanager the instances need to be configured to communicate with e

Extension points exported contracts — how you extend this code

Notifier (Interface)
Notifier notifies about alerts under constraints of the given context. It returns an error if unsuccessful and a flag wh [19 …
notify/notify.go
Destination (Interface)
Destination is a single event destination. Each implementation owns its own serialization: it receives the structured e [4 …
eventrecorder/recorder.go
Formatter (Interface)
Formatter needs to be implemented for each new output formatter. [3 implementers]
cli/format/format.go
Muter (Interface)
A Muter determines whether a given label set is muted. Implementers that maintain an underlying AlertMarker are expected [3 …
notify/mute.go
Limits (Interface)
Limits describes limits used by Dispatcher. [2 implementers]
dispatch/dispatch.go
AlertIterator (Interface)
AlertIterator is an Iterator for Alerts. [2 implementers]
provider/provider.go
State (Interface)
State is a piece of state that can be serialized and merged with other serialized state. [2 implementers]
cluster/cluster.go
AlertMarker (Interface)
AlertMarker tracks per-alert silenced/inhibited status within a single aggregation group. Each aggregation group owns it [1 …
marker/marker.go

Core symbols most depended-on inside this repo

New
called by 633
notify/notify.go
Add
called by 582
test/testutils/collector.go
Error
called by 323
notify/util.go
Fatalf
called by 239
api/v2/restapi/server.go
Run
called by 171
store/store.go
NewMatcher
called by 128
pkg/labels/matcher.go
Context
called by 127
api/v2/restapi/operations/alertmanager_api.go
String
called by 124
notify/util.go

Shape

Method 1,912
Function 1,211
Struct 450
TypeAlias 73
Interface 42
FuncType 37
Class 4

Languages

Go99%
TypeScript1%

Modules by API surface

eventrecorder/eventrecorderpb/eventrecorder.pb.go255 symbols
config/config_test.go81 symbols
silence/silence.go69 symbols
silence/silencepb/silence.pb.go60 symbols
nflog/nflogpb/nflog.pb.go53 symbols
cluster/cluster.go53 symbols
timeinterval/timeinterval.go47 symbols
api/v2/client/silence/post_silences_responses.go43 symbols
silence/silence_test.go41 symbols
nflog/nflog.go41 symbols
config/notifiers.go40 symbols
dispatch/dispatch.go38 symbols

Dependencies from manifests, versioned

buf.build/gen/go/bufbuild/bufplugin/protocolbuffers/gov1.36.11-20250718181 · 1×
buf.build/gen/go/bufbuild/protodescriptor/protocolbuffers/gov1.36.11-20250109164 · 1×
buf.build/gen/go/bufbuild/protovalidate/protocolbuffers/gov1.36.11-20251209175 · 1×
buf.build/gen/go/bufbuild/registry/connectrpc/gov1.19.1-202601261449 · 1×
buf.build/gen/go/bufbuild/registry/protocolbuffers/gov1.36.11-20260126144 · 1×
buf.build/gen/go/pluginrpc/pluginrpc/protocolbuffers/gov1.36.11-20241007202 · 1×
buf.build/go/appv0.2.0 · 1×
buf.build/go/bufpluginv0.9.0 · 1×
buf.build/go/bufprivateusagev0.1.0 · 1×
buf.build/go/interruptv1.1.0 · 1×
buf.build/go/protovalidatev1.1.0 · 1×
buf.build/go/protoyamlv0.6.0 · 1×

For agents

$ claude mcp add alertmanager \
  -- python -m otcore.mcp_server <graph>

⬇ download graph artifact