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Overview
Webhooks enable you to:
Connect to your services.
Alert your services when a metric alert is triggered.
To use your webhook, add @webhook-<WEBHOOK_NAME> in the text of the metric alert you want to trigger the webhook. It triggers a POST request to the URL you set with the following content in JSON format. The timeout for any individual request is 15 seconds. Datadog only issues a retry if there is an internal error (badly formed notification message), or if Datadog receives a 5XX response from the webhook endpoint. Missed connections are retried 5 times.
Note: Custom headers must be in JSON format.
To add your own custom fields to the request, you can also specify your own payload in the Payload field. If you want your payload to be URL-encoded, check the Encode as form checkbox and specify your payload in JSON format. Use the variables in the following section.
Variables
$AGGREG_KEY
ID to aggregate events belonging together. Example: 9bd4ac313a4d1e8fae2482df7b77628
$ALERT_CYCLE_KEY
ID to link events from the time an alert triggers until it resolves.
$ALERT_ID
ID of the alerting monitor. Example: 1234
$ALERT_METRIC
Name of the metric if it’s an alert. Example: system.load.1
$ALERT_PRIORITY
Priority of the alerting monitor. Example: P1, P2
$ALERT_QUERY
Query of the monitor that triggered the webhook.
$ALERT_SCOPE
Comma-separated list of tags triggering the alert. Example: availability-zone:us-east-1a, role:computing-node
$ALERT_STATUS
Summary of the alert status. Example: system.load.1 over host:my-host was > 0 at least once during the last 1mNote: To populate this variable in webhook payloads from Logs Monitor alerts, $ALERT_STATUS must be manually added in the Webhook integration tile.
$ALERT_TITLE
Title of the alert. Example: [Triggered on {host:ip-012345}] Host is Down
$ALERT_TRANSITION
Type of alert notification. Example: Recovered, Triggered/Re-Triggered, No Data/Re-No Data, Warn/Re-Warn, Renotify
$ALERT_TYPE
Type of the alert. Example: error, warning, success, info
$DATE
Date (epoch) where the event happened. Example: 1406662672000
$EMAIL
Email of the user posting the event that triggered the webhook.
$EVENT_MSG
Text of the event. Example: @webhook-url Sending to the webhook
$EVENT_TITLE
Title of the event. Example: [Triggered] [Memory Alert]
The hostname of the server associated with the event, if there is one.
$ID
ID of the event. Example: 1234567
$INCIDENT_ATTACHMENTS
List of JSON objects with the incident’s attachments, such as postmortem and documents. Example: [{"attachment_type": "postmortem", "attachment": {"documentUrl": "https://app.datadoghq.com/notebook/123","title": "Postmortem IR-1"}}]
$INCIDENT_COMMANDER
JSON object with the incident commander’s handle, uuid, name, email, and icon.
$INCIDENT_CUSTOMER_IMPACT
JSON object with an incident’s customer impact status, duration, and scope. Example: {"customer_impacted": true, "customer_impact_duration": 300 ,"customer_impact_scope": "scope here"}
$INCIDENT_FIELDS
JSON object mapping each of an incident’s fields to its values. Example: {"state": "active", "datacenter": ["eu1", "us1"]}
$INCIDENT_INTEGRATIONS
List of JSON objects with the incident’s integrations, such as Slack and Jira. Example: [{"uuid": "11a15def-eb08-52c8-84cd-714e6651829b", "integration_type": 1, "status": 2, "metadata": {"channels": [{"channel_name": "#incident-1", "channel_id": "<channel_id>", "team_id": "<team_id>", "redirect_url": "<redirect_url>"}]}}]
$INCIDENT_MSG
The message of the incident notification.
$INCIDENT_PUBLIC_ID
Public ID of the associated incident. Example: 123
$INCIDENT_SEVERITY
Severity of the incident.
$INCIDENT_STATUS
Status of the incident.
$INCIDENT_TITLE
Title of the incident.
$INCIDENT_TODOS
List of JSON objects with the incident’s remediation tasks. Example: [{"uuid": "01c03111-172a-50c7-8df3-d61e64b0e74b", "content": "task description", "due_date": "2022-12-02T05:00:00+00:00", "completed": "2022-12-01T20:15:00.112207+00:00", "assignees": []}]
$INCIDENT_URL
URL of the incident. Example: https://app.datadoghq.com/incidents/1
$INCIDENT_UUID
UUID of the associated incident. Example: 01c03111-172a-50c7-8df3-d61e64b0e74b
$LAST_UPDATED
Date when the event was last updated.
$LINK
URL of the event. Example: https://app.datadoghq.com/event/jump_to?event_id=123456
$LOGS_SAMPLE
A JSON object containing a logs sample from log monitor alerts. The maximum length of the sample message is 500 characters. Example:
The unique identifier of the signal. Example: AAAAA-AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
$SECURITY_SIGNAL_SEVERITY
The severity of the security signal. Example: medium
$SECURITY_SIGNAL_TITLE
The title of the security signal.
$SECURITY_SIGNAL_MSG
The message of the security signal.
$SECURITY_SIGNAL_ATTRIBUTES
The security signal attributes. Example: {"network":{"client":{"ip":"1.2.3.4"}}, "service": ["agent"]}
$SECURITY_RULE_ID
The security rule ID. Example: aaa-aaa-aaa
$SECURITY_RULE_MATCHED_QUERIES
The queries associated with the security rule. Example: ["@evt.name:authentication"]
$SECURITY_RULE_GROUP_BY_FIELDS
The security group by key value pairs. Example: {"@usr.name":"john.doe@your_domain.com"}
$SECURITY_RULE_TYPE
The security rule type. Example: log_detection
$SNAPSHOT
URL of the image if the event contains a snapshot. Example: https://p.datadoghq.com/path-to-snapshot
$SYNTHETICS_TEST_NAME
Name of the Synthetics test.
$SYNTHETICS_FIRST_FAILING_STEP_NAME
Name of the first failing step of the Synthetics test.
$SYNTHETICS_SUMMARY
Summary of Synthetic test details. Example:
{"result_id":"1871796423670117676","test_type":"browser","test_name":"Test name","date":"Nov 05, 2021, 09:49AM UTC","test_url":"https://app.datadoghq.com/synthetics/edit/apc-ki3-jwx","result_url":"https://app.datadoghq.com/synthetics/details/anc-ki2-jwx?resultId=1871796423670117676","location":"Frankfurt (AWS)","browser":"Chrome","device":"Laptop Large","failing_steps":[{"error_message":"Error: Element's content should contain given value.","name":"Test span #title content","is_critical":true,"number":"3.1"}]}
$TAGS
Comma-separated list of the event tags. Example: monitor, name:myService, role:computing-node
$TAGS[key]
Value of the key tag. If there is no key tag or the key tag has no value, this expression evaluates to an empty string.
Example: If $TAGS includes role:computing-node, then $TAGS[role] evaluates to computing-node
$TEXT_ONLY_MSG
Text of the event without Markdown formatting.
$USER
User posting the event that triggered the webhook. Example: rudy
$USERNAME
Username of the user posting the event that triggered the webhook.
Custom variables
In addition to the list of built-in variables, you can create your own custom ones in the integration tile. You can use these variables in webhook URLs, payloads, and custom headers. A common use case is storing credentials, like usernames and passwords.
You can also hide custom variable values for extra security. To hide a value, select the hide from view checkbox when you edit or add a custom variable:
Authentication
HTTP Basic Authentication
If you want to post your webhooks to a service requiring authentication, you can use basic HTTP authentication by modifying your URL from https://my.service.example.com to https://<USERNAME>:<PASSWORD>@my.service.example.com.
OAuth 2.0 Authentication
If you want to post your webhooks to a service that requires OAuth 2.0 authentication, you can setup an Auth Method. An Auth Method includes all of the information required to obtain an OAuth token from your service. Once an Auth Method is configured and associated with a webhook, Datadog will handle obtaining the OAuth token, refreshing it if necessary, and adding it to the webhook request as a Bearer token.
To add an Auth Method, click the Auth Methods tab then click the New Auth Method button. Give the Auth Method a descriptive name, then enter the following information:
Access Token URL
Client ID
Client Secret
Scope (optional)
Audience (optional)
Click Save to create the Auth Method. To apply this Auth Method to a webhook, go back to the Configuration tab and select an existing webhook configuration and click the Edit button. The Auth Method that you created should now appear in the Auth Method select list.
Multiple webhooks
In a monitor alert, if 2 or more webhook endpoints are notified, then a webhook queue is created on a per service level. For instance, if you reach out to PagerDuty and Slack, a retry on the Slack webhook does not affect the PagerDuty one.
However, in the PagerDuty scope, certain events always go before others—specifically, an “Acknowledge” payload always goes before “Resolution”. If an “Acknowledge” ping fails, the “Resolution” ping is queued due to the retry logic.
Examples
Sending SMS through Twilio
Use as URL:
https://<ACCOUNT_ID>:<AUTH_TOKEN>@api.twilio.com/2010-04-01/Accounts/<ACCOUNT_ID>/Messages.json
and as a payload:
{"To":"+1347XXXXXXX","From":"+1347XXXXXX","Body":"$EVENT_TITLE \n Related Graph: $SNAPSHOT"}
Replace To with your phone number and From with the one Twilio attributed to you. Check the Encode as form checkbox.
Creating an issue in Jira
Use as URL:
https://<JIRA_USER_NAME>:<JIRA_PASSWORD>@<YOUR_DOMAIN>.atlassian.net/rest/api/2/issue
and as a payload:
{"fields":{"project":{"key":"YOUR-PROJECT-KEY"},"issuetype":{"name":"Task"},"description":"There's an issue. See the graph: $SNAPSHOT and event: $LINK","summary":"$EVENT_TITLE"}}