psi-alerts/CONFIGURE.md

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# CONFIGURE
Included in this project are a number of systemd units:
* psi-monitor.service
* uses psi-monitor executable (in /usr/bin/)
* psi-alerts@.service (system template service)
* uses psi-alerts.sh script
The `psi-alerts.sh` is essentially a daemon (a systemd simple service), and for
now the systemd template needs to be instantiated with the username that will
execute `psi-alerts.sh`. Also, a systemd unit override should be created, like
so:
```
sudo systemctl edit psi-alerts@<user>.service
```
This will open an editor, and in later versions of systemd the comment code will be included, clearly showing where the override should be entered:
```
### Editing /etc/systemd/system/psi-alerts@trey.service.d/override.conf
### Anything between here and the comment below will become the contents of the drop-in file
[Service]
Environment=EMAIL_TO="email@domain.tld"
Environment=SMS_DST="phone_number@sms.domain.tld"
Environment=NOTIFICATION_CMD="dunstify"
Environment=NOTIFICATION_OPTS="--timeout=0 --printid --urgency=critical --icon=/usr/share/icons/breeze-dark/emblems/16/emblem-warning.svg"
Environment=NOTIFICATION_HIST_CMD="dunstctl history"
Environment=NOTIFICATION_IDX=15
Environment=SSH_USER="username"
Environment=SSH_HOST="localhost"
Environment=SSH_PORT=5999
Environment=SSH_ID_PATH="~user/.ssh/psi-alerts"
Environment=CLEAR_THRESHOLD="5.0"
### Edits below this comment will be discarded
### /etc/systemd/system/psi-alerts@.service
# [Unit]
# Description=Pressure Stall Information (PSI) alerts
# PartOf=multi-user.target
# After=psi-monitor.service
#
# [Service]
# User=%i
# Type=simple
# ExecStart=psi-alerts.sh
#
# [Install]
# WantedBy=multi-user.target
```
All of these are required except where noted, there are no default options
(defaults may be added in the future). A brief description of each:
* **EMAIL_TO**: the email address the notification should be sent to. The
output of `pidstat` will be included in the body of this email, for each
triggered resource type (CPU, I/O, Memory), at the time the monitor alerted.
* **SMS_DST**: the email-to-SMS address, as defined by your mobile carrier.
Please review your mobile carrier's documentation. For Google Fi, based in
the US, the format is
`<mobile_number_without_country_code>@msg.fi.google.com`. This email address
does **not** get the output of `pidstat` in the body of the message.
* **NOTIFICATION_CMD**: The command on the remote host to run to display
notifications, e.g. `notify-send` or `dunstify`.
* **NOTIFICATION_OPTS**: Options for the `${NOTIFICATION_CMD}`. Should
include `--print-id` if supported by the command.
* **NOTIFICATION_HIST_CMD**: The command to display the notification history
(e.g. `dunst history`).
* **NOTIFICATION_IDX**: The index if the JSON structure that contains the
notification ID. `dunst`, as of version 1.9.2-1, displays its history as a
JSON structure. For other notification daemons, some other history mechanism
will likely be required; patches needed and welcome!
* **SSH_USER**: The SSH username to connect to the remote host that will
display the notifications to the system administrator.
* **SSH_HOST**: The SSH host to connect to. This is where
`${NOTIFICATION_CMD} ${NOTIFICATION_OPTS}` and `${NOTIFICATION_HIST_CMD}`
will run.
* **SSH_PORT**: The SSH port to connect to.
* **SSH_ID_PATH**: The path to the SSH id (private key file) to use for
authenticating to the remote host. This can be exluded if the local user
already has an ssh-agent running, with the necessary key and passphrase
entered. If ssh-agent is not desired, then this SSH id (private key file)
should have an empty passphrase (i.e., no passphrase). Not having this
environment variable, and no ssh-agent will disable the desktop notifications
(SMS and email will still work, as they don't use SSH)
* **CLEAR_THRESHOLD**: The percentage threshold the some avg300 threshold
should be below before considering the alert cleared. This will depend
highly on the workload running on