This document describes how to create an alerting policy to monitor the error budget of an SLO associated with a service. To monitor the error budget for your SLO, you can create one or more alerting policies for the SLO. The purpose of the alerting policy is to warn you when the service is consuming the error budget too quickly.
You can have up to 500 alerting policies in a metrics scope.
For general information on SLO-based alerting policies, see Alerting on your burn rate.
To create an alerting policy for an SLO associated with a service, start by doing the following:
On the Services Overview page, click the name of the service for which you want to create an alerting policy.
In the Current status pane, locate the entry for the SLO you want to monitor. Click notifications Create SLO alert.
Clicking Create SLO alert takes to you the condition editor for a SLO-based alerting policy.
Creating the condition
When you click Create SLO alert, an in-context pane, Set SLO alert conditions, opens for creating a SLO-based condition for an alerting policy. The following screenshot shows an example:
Because you clicked Create SLO alert from a specific SLO in a specific service, the configuration pane is pre-populated with best-practice values for your SLO. The value of the Target field is the SLO for which you are creating the alerting policy.
The condition must have a name. The Display name field is pre-populated with a suggestion based on the configuration of the SLO. You can change this value by clicking on the text box.
The Lookback duration field specifies how far back in time to retrieve the burn-rate data. This value is also used as the evaluation period for calculating the error-budget consumption. This field has a default value, but you can change it. See Alerting policies and lookback periods for more information.
The Burn rate threshold field specifies the rate of error-budget consumption for which you want to be notified. This field has a default value, but you can change it. Set this value so that, as long as the rate of error-budget consumption stays below this threshold, you will not exhaust your error budget during the SLO compliance period.
The condition describes the behavior of the alerting policy, and SLOs often have two, a “fast burn” and a “slow burn” policy. For more information, see Types of error-budget alerts.
When you are satisfied with the condition, click Next to proceed to the next pane, Who should be notified?
Setting up notifications
In this step, you specify notification channels for the alerting policy. Notification channels tell Cloud Monitoring how to notify you that the alerting policy has fired. This step is optional:
After selecting a notification channel or deciding to skip the step, click Next to proceed to the next pane, What are the steps to fix the issue?
Setting up documentation
In this step, you can provide information that is included in notifications. This documentation can describe the alerting policy and provide troubleshooting information to the recipient of the notification.
Documentation is optional but strongly recommended. This information can help guide the troubleshooting process once an alert has fired.
When you are satisfied with the documentation, click Save to finish the creation of the alerting policy.
Notification channels and documentation are standard parts of an alerting policy in Cloud Monitoring; for more information about them, see the general documentation for Creating an alerting policy.