uptime-monitoring
Installation
SKILL.md
Uptime Monitoring
Table of Contents
Overview
Set up comprehensive uptime monitoring with health checks, status pages, and incident tracking to ensure visibility into service availability.
When to Use
- Service availability tracking
- Health check implementation
- Status page creation
- Incident management
- SLA monitoring
Quick Start
Minimal working example:
// Node.js health check
const express = require("express");
const app = express();
app.get("/health", (req, res) => {
res.json({
status: "ok",
timestamp: new Date().toISOString(),
uptime: process.uptime(),
});
});
app.get("/health/deep", async (req, res) => {
const health = {
status: "ok",
checks: {
database: "unknown",
cache: "unknown",
externalApi: "unknown",
},
};
try {
const dbResult = await db.query("SELECT 1");
health.checks.database = dbResult ? "ok" : "error";
// ... (see reference guides for full implementation)
Reference Guides
Detailed implementations in the references/ directory:
| Guide | Contents |
|---|---|
| Health Check Endpoints | Health Check Endpoints |
| Python Health Checks | Python Health Checks |
| Uptime Monitor with Heartbeat | Uptime Monitor with Heartbeat |
| Public Status Page API | Public Status Page API |
| Kubernetes Health Probes | Kubernetes Health Probes |
Best Practices
✅ DO
- Implement comprehensive health checks
- Check all critical dependencies
- Use appropriate timeout values
- Track response times
- Store check history
- Monitor uptime trends
- Alert on status changes
- Use standard HTTP status codes
❌ DON'T
- Check only application process
- Ignore external dependencies
- Set timeouts too low
- Alert on every failure
- Use health checks for load balancing
- Expose sensitive information
Weekly Installs
172
Repository
aj-geddes/usefu…-promptsGitHub Stars
162
First Seen
Jan 21, 2026
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