Several tests slept a fixed duration then took a single snapshot of an async result, racing whatever they waited on: - forward health tests waited 20ms for the health-check goroutine to bump an atomic counter, - the auto plugin tests (dns + metrics) waited 50-110ms for a file-watch reload to be picked up, - the file ZoneReload test waited 30ms (self-described as could still be racy) for a reload, - the overloaded health test slept 1s for its background goroutine to fire its first request. Replace each with a bounded poll of the actual condition (the atomic counter, a dns.Exchange response, a metrics scrape, z.ApexIfDefined, or a channel signalled by the test's own handler) so they pass as soon as the awaited state is reached and no longer flake when it is slower than the fixed wait. Test-only. Signed-off-by: Nikolaus Schuetz <nikolauspschuetz@gmail.com>
health
Name
health - enables a health check endpoint.
Description
Enabled process wide health endpoint. When CoreDNS is up and running this returns a 200 OK HTTP status code. The health is exported, by default, on port 8080/health.
Syntax
health [ADDRESS]
Optionally takes an address; the default is :8080. The health path is fixed to /health. The
health endpoint returns a 200 response code and the word "OK" when this server is healthy.
An extra option can be set with this extended syntax:
health [ADDRESS] {
lameduck DURATION
}
- Where
lameduckwill delay shutdown for DURATION. /health will still answer 200 OK. Note: The ready plugin will not answer OK while CoreDNS is in lame duck mode prior to shutdown.
If you have multiple Server Blocks, health can only be enabled in one of them (as it is process wide). If you really need multiple endpoints, you must run health endpoints on different ports:
com {
whoami
health :8080
}
net {
erratic
health :8081
}
Doing this is supported but both endpoints ":8080" and ":8081" will export the exact same health.
Metrics
If monitoring is enabled (via the prometheus plugin) then the following metrics are exported:
coredns_health_request_duration_seconds{}- The health plugin performs a self health check once per second on the/healthendpoint. This metric is the duration to process that request. As this is a local operation it should be fast. A (large) increase in this duration indicates the CoreDNS process is having trouble keeping up with its query load.coredns_health_request_failures_total{}- The number of times the self health check failed.
Note that these metrics do not have a server label, because being overloaded is a symptom of
the running process, not a specific server.
Examples
Run another health endpoint on http://localhost:8091.
. {
health localhost:8091
}
Set a lame duck duration of 1 second:
. {
health localhost:8092 {
lameduck 1s
}
}