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Triggers

How you create a trigger differs depending on the monitor method selected when the monitor was created. The monitor methods are Visual editor, Extraction query editor, and Anomaly detector. Learn more about each type in the following sections.

Creating triggers

To create a trigger:

  1. In the Create monitor window, select Add trigger.
  2. Enter the trigger name, severity level, and trigger condition. Severity levels, which range from 1 (highest) to 5 (lowest) help manage alerts. For example, a trigger with a high severity level (for example, 1 or 2) may notify a specific individual, whereas a trigger with a low severity level (4 or 5) might notify a chat room. Trigger conditions include “IS ABOVE,” “IS BELOW,” and “IS EXACTLY.”

Query-level monitors run your trigger’s script once against the query’s results, and bucket-level monitors run your trigger’s script on each bucket. Create a trigger that best fits the monitor method. To run multiple scripts, you must create multiple triggers.

Visual editor

For a query-level monitor’s trigger condition, specify a threshold for the aggregation and time frame you chose when you created the monitor (for example, “IS BELOW 1,000” or “IS EXACTLY 10”). The line moves up and down as you increase or decrease the threshold. Once this line is crossed, the trigger evaluates to true.

For a bucket-level monitor, you must specify a threshold and value for the aggregation and time frame. You can use a maximum of five conditions to refine your trigger. Optionally, you can also use a keyword filter to filter for a specific field in your index.

For document-level monitors, use tags that represent multiple queries connected by the logical OR operator. To create a multiple-query trigger:

  1. Select Per document monitor.
  2. Select a data source.
  3. Enter the query name and field information. For example, set the query to search for the region field with either the operator “is” or “is not” and the value “us-west-2”.
  4. Select Add tag and enter a tag name.
  5. Create the second query by selecting Add another query and add the same tag to it.

Now you can create the trigger condition and specify the tag name. This creates a combination trigger that checks two queries that both contain the same tag. The monitor checks both queries with a logical OR operation, and if either query’s conditions are met, the alert notification is generated.

Extraction query editor

For a query-level monitor, specify a Painless script that returns true or false. Painless is the default OpenSearch scripting language and has a syntax similar to Groovy.

Trigger condition scripts revolve around the ctx.results[0] variable, which corresponds to the extraction query response. For example, the script might reference ctx.results[0].hits.total.value or ctx.results[0].hits.hits[i]._source.error_code.

A return value of true means that the trigger condition has been met and the trigger should run its actions. Test the script using the Run button.

The Info link next to Trigger condition contains a useful summary of the variables and results available to your query.

Bucket-level monitors require you to specify more information in your trigger condition. At a minimum, you must have the following fields:

  • buckets_path: Maps variable names to metrics to use in your script.
  • parent_bucket_path: The path to a multi-bucket aggregation. The path can include single-bucket aggregations, but the last aggregation must be multi-bucket. For example, if you have a pipeline such as agg1>agg2>agg3, agg1 and agg2 are single-bucket aggregations, but agg3 must be a multi-bucket aggregation.
  • script: The script that OpenSearch runs to evaluate whether to trigger any alerts.

The following is an example script:

{
  "buckets_path": {
    "count_var": "_count"
  },
  "parent_bucket_path": "composite_agg",
  "script": {
    "source": "params.count_var > 5"
  }
}

After mapping the count_var variable to the _count metric, you can use count_var in your script and reference _count data. The composite_agg is a path to a multi-bucket aggregation.

Anomaly detector

To use the anomaly detector method:

  1. For Trigger type, choose Anomaly detector grade and confidence.
  2. Specify the Anomaly grade condition for the aggregation and time frame you chose when you created the monitor, for example, “IS ABOVE 0.7” or “IS EXACTLY 0.5.” The anomaly grade is a number between 0 and 1 that indicates how anomalous a data point is.
  3. Specify the Anomaly confidence condition for the aggregation and time frame you chose earlier, “IS ABOVE 0.7” or “IS EXACTLY 0.5.” The anomaly confidence is an estimate of the probability that the reported anomaly grade matches the expected anomaly grade. The line moves up and down as you increase and decrease the threshold. Once this line is crossed, the trigger evaluates to true.

Sample scripts

// Evaluates to true if the query returned any documents
ctx.results[0].hits.total.value > 0
// Returns true if the avg_cpu aggregation exceeds 90
if (ctx.results[0].aggregations.avg_cpu.value > 90) {
  return true;
}
// Performs some crude custom scoring and returns true if that score exceeds a certain value
int score = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < ctx.results[0].hits.hits.length; i++) {
  // Weighs 500 errors 10 times as heavily as 503 errors
  if (ctx.results[0].hits.hits[i]._source.http_status_code == "500") {
    score += 10;
  } else if (ctx.results[0].hits.hits[i]._source.http_status_code == "503") {
    score += 1;
  }
}
if (score > 99) {
  return true;
} else {
  return false;
}

Trigger variables

Variable Data type Description
ctx.trigger.id String The trigger ID.
ctx.trigger.name String The trigger name.
ctx.trigger.severity String The trigger severity.
ctx.trigger.condition Object Contains the Painless script used when the monitor was created.
ctx.trigger.condition.script.source String The language used to define the script. Must be Painless.
ctx.trigger.condition.script.lang String The script used to define the trigger.
ctx.trigger.actions Array An array with one element that contains information about the action the monitor needs to trigger.

Other variables

Variable Data type Description
ctx.results Array An array with one element (ctx.results[0]). Contains the query results. This variable is empty if the trigger was unable to retrieve results. See ctx.error.
ctx.last_update_time Milliseconds Unix epoch time of when the monitor was last updated.
ctx.periodStart String Unix timestamp for the beginning of the period during which the alert was triggered. For example, if a monitor runs every 10 minutes, a period might begin at 10:40 and end at 10:50.
ctx.periodEnd String The end of the period during which the alert triggered.
ctx.error String The error message displayed if the trigger was unable to retrieve results or could not be evaluated, typically due to a compile error or null pointer exception. Null otherwise.
ctx.alert Object The current, active alert (if it exists). Includes ctx.alert.id, ctx.alert.version, and ctx.alert.isAcknowledged. Null if no alert is active. Only available with query-level monitors.
ctx.dedupedAlerts Object Alerts that have been triggered. OpenSearch keeps the existing alert to prevent the plugin from creating endless numbers of the same alert. Only available with bucket-level monitors.
ctx.newAlerts Object Newly created alerts. Only available with bucket-level monitors.
ctx.completedAlerts Object Alerts that are no longer ongoing. Only available with bucket-level monitors.
bucket_keys String Comma-separated list of the monitor’s bucket key values. Available only for ctx.dedupedAlerts, ctx.newAlerts, and ctx.completedAlerts. Accessed through ctx.dedupedAlerts[0].bucket_keys.
parent_bucket_path String The parent bucket path of the bucket that triggered the alert. Accessed through ctx.dedupedAlerts[0].parent_bucket_path.
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