webhookd/README.md

3.2 KiB

webhookd

Image size Docker pulls

A very simple webhook server to launch shell scripts.

Installation

Run the following command:

$ go get -v github.com/ncarlier/webhookd/webhookd

Or download the binary regarding your architecture:

$ sudo curl -s https://raw.githubusercontent.com/ncarlier/webhookd/master/install.sh | sh

Or use Docker:

$ docker run -d --name=webhookd \
  --env-file .env \
  -v ${PWD}/scripts:/var/opt/webhookd/scripts \
  -p 8080:8080 \
  ncarlier/webhookd

Check the provided environment file .env for details.

Note that this image extends docker:dind Docker image. Therefore you are able to interact with a Docker daemon with yours shell scripts.

Usage

Directory structure

Webhooks are simple scripts dispatched into a directory structure.

By default inside the ./scripts directory. You can override the default using the APP_SCRIPTS_DIR environment variable.

Example:

/scripts
|--> /github
  |--> /build.sh
  |--> /deploy.sh
|--> /ping.sh
|--> ...

Webhook URL

The directory structure define the webhook URL. The Webhook can only be call with HTTP POST verb. If the script exists, the HTTP response will be a text/event-stream content type (Server-sent events).

Example:

The script: ./scripts/foo/bar.sh

#!/bin/bash

echo "foo foo foo"
echo "bar bar bar"
$ curl -XPOST http://localhost/foo/bar
data: Hook work request "foo/bar" queued...

data: Running foo/bar script...

data: foo foo foo

data: bar bar bar

data: done

Webhook parameters

You can add query parameters to the webhook URL. Those parameters will be available as environment variables into the shell script. You can also send a payload (text/plain or application/json) as request body. This payload will be transmit to the shell script as first parameter.

Example:

The script:

#!/bin/bash

echo "Environment parameters: foo=$foo"
echo "Script parameters: $1"
$ curl --data @test.json http://localhost/echo?foo=bar
data: Hook work request "echo" queued...

data: Running echo script...

data: Environment parameters: foo=bar

data: Script parameters: {"foo": "bar"}

data: done

Notifications

The script's output is collected and stored into a log file (configured by the APP_WORKING_DIR environment variable).

Once the script executed, you can send the result and this log file to a notification channel. Currently only two channels are supported: Email and HTTP.

HTTP notification

HTTP notification configuration:

Note that the HTTP notification is compatible with Mailgun API.

Email notification

SMTP notification configuration:

  • APP_NOTIFIER=smtp
  • APP_SMTP_NOTIFIER_HOST=localhost:25

The log file will be sent as an GZIP attachment.