Version 7.0 of the Alerta web UI is a VueJS web app.
To install the web console:
$ wget https://github.com/alerta/alerta-webui/releases/latest/download/alerta-webui.tar.gz
$ tar zxvf alerta-webui.tar.gz
$ cd dist
$ python3 -m http.server 8000
>> browse to http://localhost:8000
Most configuration will come from the Alerta API server. The minimum, and most common, configuration is simply to tell the web UI where the API server is located.
Environment variables for some settings can be used at build time:
$ export VUE_APP_ALERTA_ENDPOINT=https://alerta-api.example.com
$ npm install
$ npm run build
or place a config.json
configuration file in the dist
directory
for run time configuration:
{
"endpoint": "https://alerta-api.example.com"
}
Any setting from the API server can be overridden if included in
the local config.json
file. For a full list of supported settings
see the web UI config settings in the online docs.
As a special case, support for setting an OAuth Client ID using a build-time environment variable is possible but should not be be necessary for most deployments.
$ export VUE_APP_CLIENT_ID=0ffe5d26-6c66-4871-a6fa-593d9fa972b1
A docker container that is built using the most recent master branch is available for download from Docker Hub.
$ docker pull alerta/alerta-beta
It can also be built locally using the Dockerfile
in this repository.
$ docker build -t alerta/alerta-beta .
To run, create a config.json
file and mount the file into the container
$ echo '{"endpoint": "https://alerta-api.example.com"}' > config.json
$ docker run -v "$PWD/config.json:/usr/share/nginx/html/config.json" \
-it -p 8000:80 --rm --name alerta-beta alerta/alerta-beta
Note: Update the CORS_ORIGINS
setting in the Alerta API server config
to include the URL that the beta web console is hosted at otherwise
the browser will throw "blocked by CORS policy" errors and not work.
Since this is a static web app then a production deployment of Alerta web UI
is simply a matter of downloading the release tarball and copying the dist
directory to the a location that can be served via a web server or CDN.
See the VueJS platform guide for more information.
The two main issues with deployment in production involve CORS and HTML5 history mode.
All modern browsers restrict access of a web app running at one domain to resources at a different origin (domain). This mechanism is known as CORS.
To ensure that the Alerta web app has permission to access the Alerta API
at a different origin the web URL needs to be added to the CORS_ORIGINS
settings for the API.
See API server configuration for more details.
The web app uses HTML5 history mode so you must ensure to configure
the web server or CDN correctly otherwise users will get 404
errors when
accessing deep links such as /alert/:id
directly in their browser.
The fix is to provide a catch-all fallback route so that any URL that doesn't match a static asset will be handled by the web app and redirected.
Example using nginx
location / {
try_files $uri $uri/ /index.html;
}
Project setup
npm install
Compiles and hot-reloads for development
npm run serve
Compiles and minifies for production
npm run build
Run your tests
npm run test
Lints and fixes files
npm run lint
Run your end-to-end tests
npm run test:e2e
Run your unit tests
npm run test:unit
Alerta monitoring system and console
Copyright 2019-2021 Nick Satterly
Licensed under the Apache License, Version 2.0 (the "License");
you may not use this file except in compliance with the License.
You may obtain a copy of the License at
http://www.apache.org/licenses/LICENSE-2.0
Unless required by applicable law or agreed to in writing, software
distributed under the License is distributed on an "AS IS" BASIS,
WITHOUT WARRANTIES OR CONDITIONS OF ANY KIND, either express or implied.
See the License for the specific language governing permissions and
limitations under the License.