--- sidebar_position: 8 slug: /run_health_check --- # Monitoring Double-check the health status of RAGFlow's dependencies. --- The operation of RAGFlow depends on four services: - **Elasticsearch** (default) or [Infinity](https://github.com/infiniflow/infinity) as the document engine - **MySQL** - **Redis** - **MinIO** for object storage If an exception or error occurs related to any of the above services, such as `Exception: Can't connect to ES cluster`, refer to this document to check their health status. You can also click you avatar in the top right corner of the page **>** System to view the visualized health status of RAGFlow's core services. The following screenshot shows that all services are 'green' (running healthily). The task executor displays the *cumulative* number of completed and failed document parsing tasks from the past 30 minutes: ![system_status_page](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/b0c1a11e-93e3-4947-b17a-1bfb4cdab6e4) Services with a yellow or red light are not running properly. The following is a screenshot of the system page after running `docker stop ragflow-es-10`: ![es_failed](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/06056540-49f5-48bf-9cc9-a7086bc75790) You can click on a specific 30-second time interval to view the details of completed and failed tasks: ![done_tasks](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/49b25ec4-03af-48cf-b2e5-c892f6eaa261) ![done_vs_failed](https://github.com/user-attachments/assets/eaa928d0-a31c-4072-adea-046091e04599) ## API Health Check In addition to checking the system dependencies from the **avatar > System** page in the UI, you can directly query the backend health check endpoint: ```bash http://IP_OF_YOUR_MACHINE/v1/system/healthz ``` Here `` refers to the actual port of your backend service (e.g., `7897`, `9222`, etc.). Key points: - **No login required** (no `@login_required` decorator) - Returns results in JSON format - If all dependencies are healthy → HTTP **200 OK** - If any dependency fails → HTTP **500 Internal Server Error** ### Example 1: All services healthy (HTTP 200) ```bash http://127.0.0.1/v1/system/healthz ``` Response: ```http HTTP/1.1 200 OK Content-Type: application/json Content-Length: 120 { "db": "ok", "redis": "ok", "doc_engine": "ok", "storage": "ok", "status": "ok" } ``` Explanation: - Database (MySQL/Postgres), Redis, document engine (Elasticsearch/Infinity), and object storage (MinIO) are all healthy. - The `status` field returns `"ok"`. ### Example 2: One service unhealthy (HTTP 500) For example, if Redis is down: Response: ```http HTTP/1.1 500 INTERNAL SERVER ERROR Content-Type: application/json Content-Length: 300 { "db": "ok", "redis": "nok", "doc_engine": "ok", "storage": "ok", "status": "nok", "_meta": { "redis": { "elapsed": "5.2", "error": "Lost connection!" } } } ``` Explanation: - `redis` is marked as `"nok"`, with detailed error info under `_meta.redis.error`. - The overall `status` is `"nok"`, so the endpoint returns 500. --- This endpoint allows you to monitor RAGFlow’s core dependencies programmatically in scripts or external monitoring systems, without relying on the frontend UI.