Run Synthetic Tests from Private Locations
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Overview
Private locations allow you to monitor internal-facing applications or any private endpoints that aren’t accessible from the public internet. They can also be used to:
- Create custom Synthetic locations in areas that are mission-critical to your business.
- Verify application performance in your internal CI environment before you release new features to production with Continuous Testing and CI/CD.
- Compare application performance from both inside and outside your internal network.
Private locations come as Docker containers or Windows services that you can install inside of your private network. After you create and install a private location, you can assign Synthetic tests to it, like with any managed location.
Your private location worker pulls your test configurations from Datadog’s servers using HTTPS, executes the test on a schedule or on-demand, and returns the test results to Datadog’s servers. You can then visualize your private locations test results in a completely identical manner to how you would visualize tests running from managed locations:
Prerequisites
To use private locations for Continuous Testing tests, you need v1.27.0 or later.
Private locations are Docker containers that you can install anywhere inside your private network. You can access the private location worker image on Docker hub. It can run on a Linux-based OS or Windows OS if the Docker engine is available on your host and can run in Linux containers mode.*
* Use and operation of this software is governed by the End User License Agreement available here.
Private locations are Kubernetes deployments that you can install on your Kubernetes cluster with Helm. The helm chart can run on Linux-based Kubernetes.
Note: Use and operation of this software is governed by the End-User License Agreement.
Private locations are Windows services that you can install anywhere inside your private network using an MSI file. Run this file from the virtual or physical machine that you would like to install the private location on.*
* Use and operation of this software is governed by the End User License Agreement available here.
This machine’s requirements are listed in the table below. PowerShell scripting must be enabled on the machine where you are installing the private location worker.
System | Requirements |
---|
OS | Windows Server 2022, Windows Server 2019, Windows Server 2016, or Windows 10. |
RAM | 4GB minimum. 8GB recommended. |
CPU | Intel or AMD processor with 64-bit support. 2.8 GHz or faster processor recommended. |
Note: For Windows Private Locations to run browser tests, the browsers (for example, Chrome, Edge, or Firefox) must be installed on the Windows computer.
You must install .NET version 4.7.2 or later on your computer before using the MSI installer.
Datadog private locations endpoints
To pull test configurations and push test results, the private location worker needs access to the following Datadog API endpoints.
Port | Endpoint | Description |
---|
443 | intake.synthetics.datadoghq.com | Used by the private location to pull test configurations and push test results to Datadog using an in-house protocol based on AWS Signature Version 4 protocol. |
443 | intake-v2.synthetics.datadoghq.com for versions >=0.2.0 and <=1.4.0 | Used by the private location to push browser test artifacts such as screenshots, errors, and resources. |
Port | Endpoint | Description |
---|
443 | intake.synthetics.datadoghq.eu | Used by the private location to pull test configurations and push test results to Datadog using an in-house protocol based on AWS Signature Version 4 protocol. |
Note: These domains are pointing to a set of static IP addresses. These addresses can be found at https://ip-ranges.datadoghq.eu.
Port | Endpoint | Description |
---|
443 | intake.synthetics.us3.datadoghq.com | Used by the private location to pull test configurations and push test results to Datadog using an in-house protocol based on AWS Signature Version 4 protocol. |
Port | Endpoint | Description |
---|
443 | intake.synthetics.ap1.datadoghq.com | Used by the private location to pull test configurations and push test results to Datadog using an in-house protocol based on AWS Signature Version 4 protocol. |
Port | Endpoint | Description |
---|
443 | intake.synthetics.us5.datadoghq.com | Used by the private location to pull test configurations and push test results to Datadog using an in-house protocol based on AWS Signature Version 4 protocol. |
Port | Endpoint | Description |
---|
443 | intake.synthetics.ddog-gov.com | Used by the private location to pull test configurations and push test results to Datadog using an in-house protocol based on AWS Signature Version 4 protocol. For versions 1.32.0 and later, these requests are Federal Information Processing Standards (FIPS) compliant. |
Set up your private location
Only users with the Synthetics Private Locations Write role can create private locations. For more information, see Permissions.
Create your private location
Navigate to Synthetic Monitoring > Settings > Private Locations and click Add Private Location.
Fill out your private location details:
- Specify your private location’s Name and Description.
- Add any Tags you would like to associate with your private location.
- Choose one of your existing API Keys. Selecting an API key allows communication between your private location and Datadog. If you don’t have an existing API key, click Generate API key to create one on the dedicated page. Only
Name
and API key
fields are mandatory. - Set access for your private location and click Save Location and Generate Configuration File. Datadog creates your private location and generates the associated configuration file.
Configure your private location by customizing the generated configuration file. When you add initial configuration parameters such as proxies and blocked reserved IPs in Step 3, your generated configuration file updates automatically in Step 4.
You can access advanced options to adjust the configuration based on your internal network setup. For more information about the help
command, see Configuration.
Proxy configuration
If the traffic between your private location and Datadog has to go through a proxy, specify your proxy URL as http://<YOUR_USER>:<YOUR_PWD>@<YOUR_IP>:<YOUR_PORT>
to add the associated proxyDatadog
parameter to your generated configuration file.
Blocking reserved IPs
By default, Synthetic users can create Synthetic tests on endpoints using any IP. If you want to prevent users from creating tests on sensitive internal IPs in your network, toggle the Block reserved IPs button to block a default set of reserved IP ranges (IPv4 address registry and IPv6 address registry) and set the associated enableDefaultBlockedIpRanges
parameter to true
in your generated configuration file.
If some of the endpoints you are willing to test are located within one or several of the blocked reserved IP ranges, you can add their IPs and/or CIDRs to the allowed lists to add the associated allowedIPRanges
parameters to your generated configuration file.
View your configuration file
After adding the appropriate options to your private location configuration file, you can copy and paste this file into your working directory. The configuration file contains secrets for private location authentication, test configuration decryption, and test result encryption.
Datadog does not store your secrets, so store them locally before clicking View Installation Instructions.
Note: You need to be able to reference these secrets again if you decide to add more workers or install workers on another host.
Install your private location
You can use DATADOG_API_KEY
, DATADOG_ACCESS_KEY
, DATADOG_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
, DATADOG_PUBLIC_KEY_PEM
and DATADOG_PRIVATE_KEY
environment variables in your task definition.
Launch your private location on:
Run this command to boot your private location worker by mounting your configuration file to the container. Ensure that your <MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json
file is in /etc/docker
, not the root home folder:
docker run -d --restart unless-stopped -v $PWD/<MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json:/etc/datadog/synthetics-check-runner.json datadog/synthetics-private-location-worker:latest
Note: If you have blocked reserved IPs, add the NET_ADMIN
Linux capabilities to your private location container.
This command starts a Docker container and makes your private location ready to run tests. Datadog recommends running the container in detached mode with proper restart policy.
Root certificates
You can upload custom root certificates to your private locations to have your API and browser tests perform the SSL handshake using your own .pem
files.
When spinning up your private location containers, mount the relevant certificate .pem
files to /etc/datadog/certs/<filename>.pem
in the same way you mount your private location configuration file. These certificates are considered trusted CA and are used at test runtime. Note: If you combine all your .pem
files into one file, then the order in which the certificates are placed matters. It is required that the intermediate certificate precedes the root certificate to successfully establish a chain of trust.
For more information about private locations parameters for admins, see Configuration.
Create a docker-compose.yml
file with:
version: "3"
services:
synthetics-private-location-worker:
image: datadog/synthetics-private-location-worker:latest
volumes:
- PATH_TO_PRIVATE_LOCATION_CONFIG_FILE:/etc/datadog/synthetics-check-runner.json
Note: If you have blocked reserved IPs, add the NET_ADMIN
Linux capabilities to your private location container.
Start your container with:
docker-compose -f docker-compose.yml up
Root certificates
You can upload custom root certificates to your private locations to have your API and browser tests perform the SSL handshake using your own .pem
files.
When spinning up your private location containers, mount the relevant certificate .pem
files to /etc/datadog/certs
in the same way you mount your private location configuration file. These certificates are considered trusted CA and are used at test runtime. Note: If you combine all your .pem
files into one file, then the order in which the certificates are placed matters. It is required that the intermediate certificate precedes the root certificate to successfully establish a chain of trust.
For more information about private locations parameters for admins, see Configuration.
The Podman configuration is very similar to Docker, however, you must set NET_RAW
as an additional capability to support ICMP tests.
Run sysctl -w "net.ipv4.ping_group_range = 0 2147483647"
from the host where the container runs.
Run this command to boot your private location worker by mounting your configuration file to the container. Ensure that your <MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json
file is accessible to mount to the container:
podman run --cap-add=NET_RAW --rm -it -v $PWD/<MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json:/etc/datadog/synthetics-check-runner.json gcr.io/datadoghq/synthetics-private-location-worker:latest
If you have configured blocked reserved IP addresses, add the NET_ADMIN
Linux capabilities to your private location container.
This command starts a Podman container and makes your private location ready to run tests. Datadog recommends running the container in detached mode with proper restart policy.
To deploy the private locations worker in a secure manner, set up and mount a Kubernetes Secret resource in the container under /etc/datadog/synthetics-check-runner.json
.
Create a Kubernetes Secret with the previously created JSON file by executing the following:
kubectl create secret generic private-location-worker-config --from-file=<MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json
Use deployments to describe the desired state associated with your private locations. Create the following private-location-worker-deployment.yaml
file:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: datadog-private-location-worker
namespace: default
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: private-location
template:
metadata:
name: datadog-private-location-worker
labels:
app: private-location
spec:
containers:
- name: datadog-private-location-worker
image: datadog/synthetics-private-location-worker
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /etc/datadog/synthetics-check-runner.json
name: worker-config
subPath: <MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>
volumes:
- name: worker-config
secret:
secretName: private-location-worker-config
Note: If you have blocked reserved IPs, add the NET_ADMIN
Linux capabilities to your private location container.
Apply the configuration:
kubectl apply -f private-location-worker-deployment.yaml
For OpenShift, run the private location with the anyuid
SCC. This is required for your browser test to run.
You can set environment variables in your configuration parameters that point to secrets you have already configured. To create environment variables with secrets, see the Kubernetes documentation.
Alternatively:
Add the Datadog Synthetics Private Location to your Helm repositories:
helm repo add datadog https://helm.datadoghq.com
helm repo update
Install the chart with the release name <RELEASE_NAME>
by using the previously created JSON file:
helm install <RELEASE_NAME> datadog/synthetics-private-location --set-file configFile=<MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json
Note: If you have blocked reserved IPs, add the NET_ADMIN
Linux capabilities to your private location container.
Create a new EC2 task definition that matches the following. Replace each parameter with the corresponding value found in your previously generated private location configuration file:
{
...
"containerDefinitions": [
{
"command": [
"--site='...'",
"--locationID='...'",
"--accessKey='...'",
"--datadogApiKey='...'",
"--secretAccessKey='...'",
"--privateKey='-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----XXXXXXXX-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----'",
"--publicKey.pem='-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----XXXXXXXX-----END PUBLIC KEY-----'",
"--publicKey.fingerprint='...'"
],
...
"image": "datadog/synthetics-private-location-worker:latest",
...
}
],
...
"compatibilities": [
"EC2"
],
...
}
Notes:
- If you have blocked reserved IPs, configure a linuxParameters to grant
NET_ADMIN
capabilities to your private location containers. - If you use the
DATADOG_API_KEY
, DATADOG_ACCESS_KEY
, DATADOG_SECRET_ACCESS_KEY
, DATADOG_PUBLIC_KEY_PEM
and DATADOG_PRIVATE_KEY
environment variables, you do not need to include them in the "command": [ ]
section.
Create a new Fargate task definition that matches the following. Replace each parameter with the corresponding value found in your previously generated private location configuration file:
{
...
"containerDefinitions": [
{
"command": [
"--site='...'",
"--locationID='...'",
"--accessKey='...'",
"--datadogApiKey='...'",
"--secretAccessKey='...'",
"--privateKey='-----BEGIN RSA PRIVATE KEY-----XXXXXXXX-----END RSA PRIVATE KEY-----'",
"--publicKey.pem='-----BEGIN PUBLIC KEY-----XXXXXXXX-----END PUBLIC KEY-----'",
"--publicKey.fingerprint='...'"
],
...
"image": "datadog/synthetics-private-location-worker:latest",
...
}
],
...
"compatibilities": [
"EC2",
"FARGATE"
],
...
}
Note: Because the private location firewall option is not supported on AWS Fargate, the enableDefaultBlockedIpRanges
parameter cannot be set to true
.
Because Datadog already integrates with Kubernetes and AWS, it is ready-made to monitor EKS.
Create a Kubernetes Secret with the previously created JSON file by executing the following:
kubectl create secret generic private-location-worker-config --from-file=<MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>.json
Use deployments to describe the desired state associated with your private locations. Create the following private-location-worker-deployment.yaml
file:
apiVersion: apps/v1
kind: Deployment
metadata:
name: datadog-private-location-worker
namespace: default
spec:
selector:
matchLabels:
app: private-location
template:
metadata:
name: datadog-private-location-worker
labels:
app: private-location
spec:
containers:
- name: datadog-private-location-worker
image: datadog/synthetics-private-location-worker
volumeMounts:
- mountPath: /etc/datadog/synthetics-check-runner.json
name: worker-config
subPath: <MY_WORKER_CONFIG_FILE_NAME>
volumes:
- name: worker-config
configMap:
name: private-location-worker-config
Note: If you have blocked reserved IPs, configure a security context to grant NET_ADMIN
Linux capabilities to your private location containers.
Apply the configuration:
kubectl apply -f private-location-worker-deployment.yaml
Download the datadog-synthetics-worker-1.53.0.amd64.msi
file and run this file from the machine you want to install the private location on.
Click Next on the welcome page, read the EULA, and accept the terms and conditions. Click Next.
Modify where the application will be installed, or leave the default settings. Click Next.
To configure your Windows private location, you can either:
Paste and enter a JSON configuration for your Datadog Synthetics Private Location Worker. This file is generated by Datadog when you create a private location.
Browse or type a file path to a file containing a JSON configuration for your Datadog Synthetics Private Location Worker.
You can leave it blank and run C:\\Program Files\Datadog-Synthetics\Synthetics\synthetics-pl-worker.exe --config=<PathToYourConfiguration>
in the Windows command-line prompt after the installation is complete.
You can apply the following configuration options:
- Apply firewall rules needed by this program to Windows Firewall
- Allow the installer to apply firewall rules on install and remove them on uninstall.
- Apply rules to block reserved IPs in Windows Firewall
- Configure blocking rules for Chrome, Firefox, and Edge (if they are installed) and add rules to block reserved IP address ranges outbound in Windows Firewall.
- Enable File Logging
- Allow the Synthetics Private Location Worker to log files in the installation directory.
- Log Rotation Days
- Specifies how many days to keep logs before deleting them from the local system.
- Logging Verbosity
- Specifies the verbosity of the console and file logging for the Synthetics Private Location Worker.
Click Next and Install to start the installation process.
Once the process is complete, click Finish on the installation completion page.
If you entered your JSON configuration, the Windows Service starts running using that configuration. If you did not enter your configuration, run C:\\Program Files\Datadog-Synthetics\Synthetics\synthetics-pl-worker.exe --config=< PathToYourConfiguration >
from a command prompt or use the start menu
shortcut to start the Synthetics Private Location Worker.
Download the datadog-synthetics-worker-1.53.0.amd64.msi
file and run this file from the machine you want to install the private location on.
Run one of the following commands inside the directory where you downloaded the installer:
Additional parameters can be added:
Optional Parameter | Definition | Value | Default Value | Type |
---|
APPLYDEFAULTFIREWALLRULES | Applies firewall rules needed for the program. | 1 | N/A | 0: Disabled 1: Enabled |
APPLYFIREWALLDEFAULTBLOCKRULES | Blocks reserved IP addresses for each browser you have installed (Chrome, Edge, and Firefox). Blocking loopback connections is not possible in Windows Firewall. | 0 | N/A | 0: Disabled 1: Enabled |
LOGGING_ENABLED | When enabled, this configures file logging. These logs are stored in the installation directory under the logs folder. | 0 | --enableFileLogging | 0: Disabled 1: Enabled |
LOGGING_VERBOSITY | Configures the logging verbosity for the program. This affects console and file logs. | This affects console and file logs. | -vvv | -v : Error
-vv : Warning
-vvv : Info
vvvv : Debug |
LOGGING_MAXDAYS | Number of days to keep file logs on the system before deleting them. Can be any number when running an unattended installation. | 7 | --logFileMaxDays | Integer |
WORKERCONFIG_FILEPATH | This should be changed to the path to your Synthetics Private Location Worker JSON configuration file. Wrap this path in quotes if your path contains spaces. | | --config | String |
Set up liveness and readiness probes
Add a liveness or readiness probe so your orchestrator can ensure the workers are running correctly.
For readiness probes, you need to enable private location status probes on port 8080
in your private location deployment. For more information, see Private Locations Configuration.
healthcheck:
retries: 3
test: [
"CMD", "wget", "-O", "/dev/null", "-q", "http://localhost:8080/liveness"
]
timeout: 2s
interval: 10s
start_period: 30s
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /liveness
port: 8080
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
readinessProbe:
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
httpGet:
path: /readiness
port: 8080
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /liveness
port: 8080
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
readinessProbe:
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
httpGet:
path: /readiness
port: 8080
"healthCheck": {
"retries": 3,
"command": [
"CMD-SHELL", "/usr/bin/wget", "-O", "/dev/null", "-q", "http://localhost:8080/liveness"
],
"timeout": 2,
"interval": 10,
"startPeriod": 30
}
"healthCheck": {
"retries": 3,
"command": [
"CMD-SHELL", "wget -O /dev/null -q http://localhost:8080/liveness || exit 1"
],
"timeout": 2,
"interval": 10,
"startPeriod": 30
}
livenessProbe:
httpGet:
path: /liveness
port: 8080
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
readinessProbe:
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
httpGet:
path: /readiness
port: 8080
Additional health check configurations
This method of adding private location health checks is no longer supported. Datadog recommends using liveness and readiness probes.
The /tmp/liveness.date
file of private location containers gets updated after every successful poll from Datadog (2s by default). The container is considered unhealthy if no poll has been performed in a while, for example: no fetch in the last minute.
Use the configuration below to set up health checks on your containers with livenessProbe
:
healthcheck:
retries: 3
test: [
"CMD", "/bin/sh", "-c", "'[ $$(expr $$(cat /tmp/liveness.date) + 300000) -gt $$(date +%s%3N) ]'"
]
timeout: 2s
interval: 10s
start_period: 30s
livenessProbe:
exec:
command:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- '[ $(expr $(cat /tmp/liveness.date) + 300000) -gt $(date +%s%3N) ]'
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
failureThreshold: 3
livenessProbe:
exec:
command:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- '[ $(expr $(cat /tmp/liveness.date) + 300000) -gt $(date +%s%3N) ]'
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
failureThreshold: 3
"healthCheck": {
"retries": 3,
"command": [
"CMD-SHELL", "/bin/sh -c '[ $(expr $(cat /tmp/liveness.date) + 300000) -gt $(date +%s%3N) ]'"
],
"timeout": 2,
"interval": 10,
"startPeriod": 30
}
"healthCheck": {
"retries": 3,
"command": [
"CMD-SHELL", "/bin/sh -c '[ $(expr $(cat /tmp/liveness.date) + 300000) -gt $(date +%s%3N) ]'"
],
"timeout": 2,
"interval": 10,
"startPeriod": 30
}
livenessProbe:
exec:
command:
- /bin/sh
- -c
- '[ $(expr $(cat /tmp/liveness.date) + 300000) -gt $(date +%s%3N) ]'
initialDelaySeconds: 30
periodSeconds: 10
timeoutSeconds: 2
failureThreshold: 3
Upgrade a private location image
To upgrade an existing private location, click the Gear icon on the private location side panel and click Installation instructions.
Then, run the configuration command based on your environment to get the latest version of the private location image.
Note: If you’re using docker run
to launch your Private Location image and you’ve previously installed the Private Location image using the latest
tag, make sure to add --pull=always
to the docker run
command to make sure the newest version is pulled rather than relying on the cached version of the image that may exist locally with the same latest
tag.
Test your internal endpoint
Once at least one private location worker starts reporting to Datadog, the private location status displays green.
You can see a REPORTING
health status and an associated monitor status displayed on the Private Locations list in the Settings page.
Start testing your first internal endpoint by launching a fast test on one of your internal endpoints to see if you get the expected response:
Note: Datadog only sends outbound traffic from your private location, no inbound traffic is transmitted.
Launch Synthetic tests from your private location
Create an API, multistep API, or browser test, and select your Private Locations of interest.
Use private locations just like your Datadog managed locations: assign Synthetic tests to private locations, visualize test results, retrieve Synthetic metrics, and more.
Scale your private location
Because you can run several workers for one single private location with a single configuration file, you can horizontally scale your private locations by adding or removing workers to them. When doing so, make sure to set a concurrency
parameter and allocate worker resources that are consistent with the types and the number of tests you want your private location to execute.
You can also vertically scale your private locations by increasing the load your private location workers can handle. Similarly, you should use the concurrency
parameter to adjust the maximum number of test your workers allowed to run and update the resources allocated to your workers.
For more information, see Dimensioning Private Locations.
In order to use private locations for Continuous Testing, set a value in the concurrency
parameter to control your parallelization. For more information, see Continuous Testing.
Monitor your private location
While you initially add resources that are consistent with the number and type of tests to execute from your private location, the easiest way to know if you should downscale or upscale your private location is to closely monitor them. Private Location Monitoring provides insight about the performance and state of your private location as well as out-of-the-box metrics and monitors.
For more information, see Private Location Monitoring.
Permissions
By default, only users with the Datadog Admin Role can create private locations, delete private locations, and access private location installation guidelines.
Users with the Datadog Admin and Datadog Standard roles can view private locations, search for private locations, and assign Synthetic tests to private locations. Grant access to the Private Locations page by upgrading your user to one of these two default roles.
If you are using the custom role feature, add your user to a custom role that includes synthetics_private_location_read
and synthetics_private_location_write
permissions.
Further Reading
Documentation, liens et articles supplémentaires utiles: