A Receiver is used to prepare Senlin engine to react to external alarms or events so that a specific Action can be initiated on a senlin cluster automatically. For example, when workload on a cluster climbs high, a receiver can change the size of a specified cluster.
The senlin command line provides a command receiver-list that can be used to enumerate receiver objects known to the service. For example:
$ senlin receiver-list
You can specify the sorting keys and sorting direction when list receivers, using the option --sort (or -o). The --sort option accepts a string of format key1[:dir1],key2[:dir2],key3[:dir3], where the keys used are receiver properties and the dirs can be one of asc and desc. When omitted, Senlin sorts a given key using asc as the default direction.
For example, the following command instructs the senlin command line to sort receivers using the name property in descending order:
$ senlin receiver-list -o name:desc
When sorting the list of receivers, you can use one of type, name, action, cluster_id, created_at.
In case you have a huge collection of receiver objects, you can limit the number of receivers returned from Senlin server, using the option --limit (or (or -l). For example:
$ senlin receiver-list -l 1
Yet another option you can specify is the ID of a receiver object after which you want to see the list starts. In other words, you don’t want to see those receivers with IDs that is or come before the one you specify. You can use the option --marker (or option:-m <ID>) for this purpose. For example:
$ senlin receiver-list -l 1 -m 239d7212-6196-4a89-9446-44d28717d7de
Combining the -m and the -l enables you to do pagination on the results returned from the server.
senlin cluster-create -p $PROFILE_ID -c 2 -n 1 -m 5 test-cluster
senlin cluster-policy-attach -p $POLICY_ID test-cluster
Create a receiver, use the option -c to specify test-cluster as the targeted cluster and use the option -a to specify CLUSTER_SCALE_OUT or CLUSTER_SCALE_IN as the action name. By default, the senlin command line creates a receiver of type webhook, for example::
senlin receiver-create -c test-cluster \
-a CLUSTER_SCALE_OUT \
test-receiver
Senlin service will return the receiver information with its channel ready to receive signals. For a webhook receiver, this means you can check the alarm_url field of the channel property. You can use this url to trigger the action you specified.
Trigger the receiver by sending a POST request to its URL, for example:
curl -X POST <alarm_url>
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