Server Health
The Server Health report contains results of the server inspection for any configuration issues which impact or could potentially impact the performance. Such issues, the so-called server health items, are collectively reported by TeamCity on the Server Health page in the Administration area.
The Project Administrator permissions at least are required to see the report.
Scope and Severity
The report enables you to define the analysis scope: you can select to analyze the global configuration or report on project-related items. The scope available to you depends on the level of the View Project permission granted to you. Note that the report is not available for archived projects.
The Server Health analysis also employs the severity rating, depending on the issue impact on the configuration of the system on the whole or an individual project.
Visibility Options
By default, the warning and error level results pertaining to the global configuration will be displayed on the report page as well as at the top of each page in TeamCity.
Besides those, some items will be displayed in-place: depending on the object causing the issue, the server health item will be reported on the Build Configuration, Template or VCS root settings page.
Only active items are displayed on the TeamCity pages. To remove an item from display, use the hide option next to an item on the report page. For global items, this option is available in every server health message.
Hidden items will be removed from the TeamCity pages, and will be displayed on the Server Health page below the active items. Their description will be greyed out.
To return an item to display, use the Show option.
The visibility changes will be listed on the Audit page in the Administration area.
Issue Categories
Health items cover a wide range of server functionality to allow administrators to easily monitor the TeamCity overall status.
Global Configuration Items
TeamCity displays a notification on the availability of the new TeamCity version and a prompt to upgrade.
A warning is displayed if any of the licenses are incompatible with this new version. The notification is visible to system administrators only and they can use the link in the "Some Licenses are incompatible" message to quickly navigate to the Licenses page, where all incompatible licenses will have a warning icon.
Agent Configuration
TeamCity displays a notification if agents are not running the recommended Java 8: this report shows all the agents running under Java earlier than version 1.8.
Build Configuration Items
Dependency problems
TeamCity detects build configurations dependent on a missing build configuration (for example, on a build configuration deleted after the dependency was configured).
Configurations with Large Build Logs
Large Build Logs (more than 200 MB by default) can reduce the server performance as they could be too heavy to parse and are hard to view in the browser.
The build script can be tuned to print less output if this inspection fails frequently for some build configuration.
Inefficient Artifacts Publishing
TeamCity detects a build publishing many small artifact files and suggests publishing them as a single .zip
archive to optimize the upload/download operations. See more information here.
VCS Root Related Problems
Unused VCS Roots
TeamCity will show you the VCS roots defined in a project and will offer to delete the unused roots.
Similar VCS roots
TeamCity qualifies VCS roots as identical when their major settings (for example, URLs, branch settings) are the same even if some of their settings (for example, username, password) are different.
The report will show you identical roots and will leave it up to you whether to merge them or not.
Similar VCS Root Usages (AKA instances)
You can define values for VCS root settings or use parameter references to various parameters defined at different levels.
When the referenced VCS roots parameters are resolved to the same values as the values defined, such cases will be reported as identical VCS root usages.
The general recommendation is to use parameter references for root settings, thus optimizing the amount of VCS roots.
Trigger Rules for Unattached VCS roots
TeamCity displays a warning if a rule of a VCS Trigger or Schedule Trigger references a VCS root which is not attached to any build configuration.
Redundant Trigger
The report will show cases when a build trigger is redundant, for example:
There are two build configurations A and B
A snapshot depends on B
Both have VCS triggers, A with the Trigger on changes in snapshot dependencies option enabled. In this case, the VCS trigger in B is redundant and causes builds of A to be put into the queue several times.
Multiple identical build triggers
The warning is displayed if there are two or more enabled triggers of the same type with identical sets of parameter values. Disabled triggers are not taken into account.
Effective Quiet Period is Bigger Than Specified
When a VCS trigger for a build configuration has a quiet period, TeamCity will wait the specified time after the last detected change before triggering the build. During this time, all VCS Roots which affect this build configuration are checked for changes. If other VCS Roots have checking for changes interval bigger than the quiet period, the effective quiet period will be equal to the maximum checking for changes interval of the involved VCS Roots (it could be a VCS Roots from the dependencies).
A possible fix could be one of the following:
Use commit hooks to trigger checking for changes operations
Increase quiet period in the VCS trigger so it is larger than checking for changes interval of the related VCS Roots
Reduce checking for changes interval for the problematic VCS Roots
VCS checkout
Possible Frequent Clean Checkout
This section of the report will show possible frequent clean checkout, which may be caused by the following two reasons:
Custom Checkout Directory
Build configurations having different VCS settings but the same custom checkout directory may lead to frequent clean checkouts, slowing down the performance and hindering the consistency of incremental sources updates.
Build Files Cleaner (Swabra) Settings
Enabling the Build files cleaner (Swabra) build feature in several build configurations may cause extra clean checkouts. This may happen if builds from these configurations alternately run on the same agents and have identical Version Control Settings or the same custom checkout directory specified.
Possible frequent clean checkout (Swabra case) server health report shows such incorrectly set up configurations grouped by Swabra settings.
Optimal recommended checkout
A report is shown for large server-side patches with a recommendation to switch to the agent-side checkout.
Default auto-checkout on agent
If the default agent-side checkout is not possible, TeamCity will display a corresponding health report item and will use the server-side checkout.
Integrations-related Items
If a project or build configuration has secured parameters and is configured to build GitHub pull requests, this report will raise the warning, because malicious code submitted via the pull request can obtain these secured parameters
If a VCS root points to GitHub or Bitbucket, a suggestion to configure a corresponding issue tracker is displayed.
Agents Health
Some agents cannot upgrade
The report helps to find agents which failed to upgrade. Build agent logs should help identify the cause of the issue.
Unused Build Agents
The report is displayed for the agents not used for 3 days and more, if
you have more than 3 agents in your environment
your agents have been registered for more than 3 days
if the builds were run on the server during these 3 days
Suggested Settings
TeamCity analyzes the current settings of a build configuration and suggests additional options, for example, adding a VCS trigger, a build step, and so on. Besides the server health report, the suggestions for a specific build configuration are shown right on the configuration settings pages.