Enabled process wide health endpoint\. When CoreDNS is up and running this returns a 200 OK http status code\. The health is exported, by default, on port 8080/health \.
Optionally takes an address; the default is \fB:8080\fR\. The health path is fixed to \fB/health\fR\. The health endpoint returns a 200 response code and the word "OK" when this server is healthy\.
If you have multiple Server Blocks, \fIhealth\fR should only be enabled in one of them (as it is process wide)\. If you really need multiple endpoints, you must run health endpoints on different ports:
\fBcoredns_health_request_duration_seconds{}\fR\- duration to process a /health query\. As this should be a local operation it should be fast\. A (large) increases in this duration indicates the CoreDNS process is having trouble keeping up with its query load\.
Note that this metric \fIdoes not\fR have a \fBserver\fR label, because being overloaded is a symptom of the running process, \fInot\fR a specific server\.
When reloading, the health handler is stopped before the new server instance is started\. If that new server fails to start, then the initial server instance is still available and DNS queries still served, but health handler stays down\. Health will not reply HTTP request until a successful reload or a complete restart of CoreDNS\.