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General Programming Discussion @lemmy.ml bahmanm @lemmy.ml

Using Make and cURL to measure Lemmy's performance

github.com GitHub - bahmanm/lemmy-clerk at v0.0.1

A web application to track Lemmy instances performance and represent the results visually - GitHub - bahmanm/lemmy-clerk at v0.0.1

GitHub - bahmanm/lemmy-clerk at v0.0.1

cross-posted from: https://lemmy.ml/post/4560181

A follow up on [DISCUSS] Website to monitor Lemmy servers' performance/availability


I wanted to experiment w/ Lemmy's APIs to, eventually, build a public-facing performance monitoring solution for Lemmy.

It started w/ a couple of shell commands which I found myself repeating. Then I recalled the saying "Don't repeat yourself - make Make make things happen for you!" and, well, stopped typing commands in bash.

Instead I, incrementally, wrote a makefile to do the crud work for me (esp thanks to its declarative style): https://github.com/bahmanm/lemmy-clerk/blob/v0.0.1/run-clerk


TBH there's nothing special about the file. But I thought I'd share this primarily b/c it is a demonstration of the patterns I usually use in my makefiles and I'd love some feedback on those.

Additionally, it's a real world use-case for bmakelib (a library that I maintain ๐Ÿ˜Ž )

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2 comments
  • This is the kind of thing I'd probably just monitor with prometheus' blackbox exporter if I wanted the list, and to be able to see trends and/or alerts for http response time, http response code, cert expiration, all that.

    • Now that I know which endpoints I'm interested in and which arguments I need to pass, exporting them to Prometheus is my next step. Though I wasn't sure where to begin w/ - I was thinking about writing the HTTP requests in Java or Python and export the results from there.

      Blackbox exporter is definitely easier and cleaner. Thanks for the tip ๐Ÿ’ฏ