Event Handler Setup
Integrate Kapacitor into your monitoring system by sending alert messages to supported event handlers. Currently, Kapacitor can send alert messages to specific log files and specific URLs, as well as to applications like Slack and HipChat.
This document offers step-by-step instructions for setting up event handlers with Kapacitor, including the relevant configuration options and TICKscript syntax. Currently, this document doesn’t cover every supported event handler, but we will continue to add content to this page over time. For a complete list of the supported event handlers and for additional information, please see the event handler reference documentation.
| HipChat Setup | Telegram Setup | 
HipChat Setup
HipChat is Atlassian’s web service for group chat, video chat, and screen sharing. Configure Kapacitor to send alert messages to a HipChat room.
Requirements
To configure Kapacitor with HipChat, you need:
- your HipChat subdomain name
- your HipChat room name
- a HipChat API access token for sending notifications
HipChat API Access Token
The following steps describe how to create the API access token.
1. From the HipChat home page, access
Account settingsby clicking on the person icon in the top right corner.2. Select
API accessfrom the items in the left menu sidebar.3. Under
Create new token, enter a label for your token (it can be anything).4. Under
Create new token, selectSend Notificationas the Scope.5. Click
Create.Your token appears in the table just above the
Create new tokensection:
Configuration
In the [hipchat] section of Kapacitor’s configuration file, set:
- 
enabledtotrue
- 
subdomainin theurlsetting to your HipChat subdomain
The optional configuration settings are:
room Set to your HipChat room. This serves as the default chat id if the TICKscript doesn’t specify a chat id. token Set to your HipChat API access token. This serves as the default token if the TICKscript doesn’t specify an API access token. global Set to true to send all alerts to HipChat without needing to specify HipChat in TICKscripts. state-changes-only Set to true to only send an alert to HipChat if the alert state changes. This setting only applies if the global setting is also set to true.
Sample Configuration
    [hipchat]
      enabled = true
      url = "https://my-subdomain.hipchat.com/v2/room"
      room = "my-room"
      token = "mytokentokentokentoken"
      global = false
      state-changes-only = false
 TICKscript Syntax
|alert()
    .hipChat()
        .room('<HipChat-room>')
        .token('<HipChat-API-token>')
 The .room() and .token() specifications are optional. If they aren’t set in the TICKscript, they default to the room and token settings in the [hipchat] section of the configuration file. Note that if global is set to true in the configuration file, there’s no need to specify .hipChat() in the TICKscript; Kapacitor sends all alerts to HipChat by default.
.room('<HipChat-room>') Sets the HipChat room. .token('<HipChat-API-token>') Sets the HipChat API access token.
Examples
Example 1: Send alerts to the HipChat room set in the configuration file
Configuration file:
[hipchat] enabled = true url = "https://testtest.hipchat.com/v2/room" room = "my-alerts" token = "tokentokentokentokentoken" global = false state-changes-only = true
TICKscript:
stream
    |from()
        .measurement('cpu')
    |alert()
        .crit(lambda: "usage_idle" <  97)
        .message('Hey, check your CPU')
        .hipChat()
 The setup sends Hey, check your CPU to the my-alerts room associated with the testest subdomain.
Example 2: Send alerts to the HipChat room set in the TICKscript
Configuration file:
[hipchat] enabled = true url = "https://testtest.hipchat.com/v2/room" room = "my-alerts" token = "tokentokentokentokentoken" global = false state-changes-only = true
TICKscript:
stream
    |from()
        .measurement('cpu')
    |alert()
        .crit(lambda: "usage_idle" <  97)
        .message('Hey, check your CPU')
        .hipChat()
        .room('random')
 The setup sends Hey, check your CPU to the random room associated with the testest subdomain. Notice that .room() in the TICKscript overrides the room setting in the configuration file.
Telegram Setup
Telegram is a messaging app. Configure Kapacitor to send alert messages to a Telegram bot.
Requirements
To configure Kapacitor with Telegraf, you need:
- a Telegram bot
- a Telegram API access token
- your Telegram chat id
Telegram Bot
The following steps describe how to create a new Telegram bot.
1. Search for the
@BotFatherusername in your Telegram application2. Click
Startto begin a conversation with@BotFather3. Send
/newbotto@BotFather
@BotFatherresponds:Alright, a new bot. How are we going to call it? Please choose a name for your bot.
@BotFatherwill prompt you through the rest of the bot-creation process; feel free to follow his directions or continue with our version of the steps below. Both setups result in success!4. Send your bot’s name to
@BotFatherYour bot’s name can be anything. Note that this is not your bot’s Telegram
@username; you’ll create the username in step 5.
@BotFatherresponds:Good. Now let's choose a username for your bot. It must end in `bot`. Like this, for example: TetrisBot or tetris_bot.5. Send your bot’s username to
@BotFatherYour bot’s username must end in
bot. For example:mushroomKap_bot.
BotFatherresponds:Done! Congratulations on your new bot. You will find it at t.me/<bot-username>. You can now add a description, about section and profile picture for your bot, see /help for a list of commands. By the way, when you've finished creating your cool bot, ping our Bot Support if you want a better username for it. Just make sure the bot is fully operational before you do this. Use this token to access the HTTP API: <API-access-token> For a description of the Bot API, see this page: https://core.telegram.org/bots/api6. Begin a conversation with your bot
Click on the
t.me/<bot-username>link in@BotFather’s response and clickStartat the bottom of your Telegram application.Your newly-created bot will appear in the chat list on the left side of the application.
Telegram API Access Token
The following section describes how to identify or create the API access token.
Telegram’s
@BotFatherbot sent you an API access token when you created your bot. See the@BotFatherresponse in step 5 of the previous section for where to find your token.If you can’t find the API access token, create a new token with the steps below.
1. Send
/tokento@BotFather2. Select the relevant bot at the bottom of your Telegram application
@BotFatherresponds with a new API access token:You can use this token to access HTTP API: <API-access-token> For a description of the Bot API, see this page: https://core.telegram.org/bots/apiTelegram Chat Id
The following steps describe how to identify your chat id.
1. Paste the following link in your browser
Replace
<API-access-token>with the API access token that you identified or created in the previous section:https://api.telegram.org/bot<API-access-token>/getUpdates?offset=02. Send a message to your bot
Send a message to your bot in the Telegram application. The message text can be anything; your chat history must include at least one message to get your chat id.
3. Refresh your browser
4. Identify the chat id
Identify the numerical chat id in the browser. In the example below, the chat id is
123456789.{"ok":true,"result":[{"update_id":XXXXXXXXX, "message":{"message_id":2,"from":{"id":123456789,"first_name":"Mushroom","last_name":"Kap"},"chat":{"id":123456789,"first_name":"Mushroom","last_name":"Kap","type":"private"},"date":1487183963,"text":"hi"}}]}
Configuration
In the [telegram] section of Kapacitor’s configuration file set:
- 
enabledtotrue
- 
tokento your API access token
The default url setting (https://api.telegram.org/bot) requires no additional configuration.
The optional configuration settings are:
chat_id Set to your Telegram chat id. This serves as the default chat id if the TICKscript doesn’t specify a chat id. parse-mode Set to Markdown or HTML for markdown-formatted or HTML-formatted alert messages. The default parse-mode is Markdown. disable-web-page-preview Set to true to disable link previews in alert messages. disable-notification. Set to true to disable notifications on iOS devices and disable sounds on Android devices. When set to true, Android users continue to receive notifications. global Set to true to send all alerts to Telegram without needing to specify Telegram in TICKscripts. state-changes-only Set to true to only send an alert to Telegram if the alert state changes. This setting only applies if the global setting is also set to true.
Sample Configuration
[telegram] enabled = true url = "https://api.telegram.org/bot" token = "abcdefghi:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" chat-id = "123456789" parse-mode = Markdown disable-web-page-preview = true disable-notification = false global = true state-changes-only = true
TICKscript Syntax
|alert()
    .telegram()
        .chatId('<chat_id>')
        .disableNotification()
        .disableWebPagePreview()
        .parseMode(['Markdown' | 'HTML'])
 The .chatId(), .disableNotification(), .disableWebPagePreview(), and .parseMode() specifications are optional. If they aren’t set in the TICKscript, they default to the chat-id, disable-notification, disable-web-page-preview, and parse-mode settings in the [telegram] section of the configuration file. Note that if global is set to true in the configuration file, there’s no need to specify .telegram() in the TICKscript; Kapacitor sends all alerts to Telegram by default.
.chatId('<chat_id>') Sets the Telegram chat id. .disableNotification() Disables notifications on iOS devices and disables sounds on Android devices. Android users continue to receive notifications. .disableWebPagePreview() Disables link previews in alert messages. .parseMode(['Markdown' | 'HTML']) Sets Markdown or HTML as the format for alert messages.
Examples
Example 1: Send alerts to the Telegram chat id set in the configuration file
Configuration file:
[telegram] enabled = true url = "https://api.telegram.org/bot" token = "abcdefghi:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" chat-id = "123456789" parse-mode = "Markdown" disable-web-page-preview = false disable-notification = false global = false state-changes-only = false
TICKscript:
stream
  |from()
    .measurement('cpu')
  |alert()
    .crit(lambda: "usage_idle" < 97)
    .message('Might want to check your CPU')
    .telegram()
 The setup sends Might want to check your CPU to the Telegram bot associated with the chat id 123456789 and API access token abcdefghi:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
Example 2: Send alerts to the Telegram chat id set in the TICKscript
Configuration file:
[telegram] enabled = true url = "https://api.telegram.org/bot" token = "abcdefghi:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx" chat-id = "" parse-mode = "Markdown" disable-web-page-preview = false disable-notification = false global = false state-changes-only = false
TICKscript:
stream
  |from()
    .measurement('cpu')
  |alert()
    .crit(lambda: "usage_idle" < 97)
    .message('Might want to check your CPU')
    .telegram()
      .chatId('123456789')
 The setup sends Might want to check your CPU to the Telegram bot associated with the chat id 123456789 and API access token abcdefghi:xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx.
    © 2015 InfluxData, Inc.
Licensed under the MIT license.
    https://docs.influxdata.com/kapacitor/v1.3/guides/event-handler-setup/