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Querying Magic Transit or Magic WAN tunnel health check results with GraphQL

In this example, you are going to use the GraphQL Analytics API to query Magic Transit or Magic WAN health check results which are aggregated from individual health checks carried out by Cloudflare servers to Generic Routing Encapsulation (GRE) tunnels you have set up to work with Magic Transit or Magic WAN during the onboarding process. You can query up to one week of data for dates up to three months ago.

The following API call will request a particular account’s tunnel health checks over a one day period for a particular Cloudflare data center, and outputs the requested fields. Be sure to replace CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID, CLOUDFLARE_EMAIL, and CLOUDFLARE_API_KEY with your API credentials, and adjust the datetimeStart, datetimeEnd variables as needed.

It will return the tunnel health check results by Cloudflare data center. The result for each data center is aggregated from the healthchecks conducted on individual servers. The tunnel state field in the value represents the state of the tunnel. These states are used by Magic Transit or Magic WAN for routing. The value 0 for the tunnel state represents it being down, the value 0.5 being degraded and the value 1 as healthy.

​​ API Call

echo '{ "query":
"query GetTunnelHealthCheckResults($accountTag: string, $datetimeStart: string, $datetimeEnd: string) {
viewer {
accounts(filter: {accountTag: $accountTag}) {
magicTransitTunnelHealthChecksAdaptiveGroups(
limit: 100,
filter: {
datetime_geq: $datetimeStart,
datetime_lt: $datetimeEnd,
}
) {
avg {
tunnelState
}
dimensions {
tunnelName
edgeColoName
}
}
}
}
}",
"variables": {
"accountTag": "CLOUDFLARE_ACCOUNT_ID",
"datetimeStart": "2022-08-04T00:00:00.000Z",
"datetimeEnd": "2022-08-04T01:00:00.000Z"
}
}' | tr -d '\n' | curl \
-X POST \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "X-Auth-Email: CLOUDFLARE_EMAIL" \
-H "X-Auth-key: CLOUDFLARE_API_KEY" \
-s \
-d @- \
https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/graphql/

The results returned will be in JSON (as requested), so piping the output to jq will make them easier to read, like in the following example:

... | curl \
-X POST \
-H "Content-Type: application/json" \
-H "X-Auth-Email: CLOUDFLARE_EMAIL" \
-H "X-Auth-key: CLOUDFLARE_API_KEY" \
-s \
-d @- \
https://api.cloudflare.com/client/v4/graphql/ | jq .
#=> {
#=> "data": {
#=> "viewer": {
#=> "accounts": [
#=> {
#=> "conduitEdgeTunnelHealthChecks": [
#=> {
#=> {
#=> "avg": {
#=> "tunnelState": 1
#=> },
#=> "dimensions": {
#=> "edgeColoName": "mel01",
#=> "tunnelName": "tunnel_01",
#=> "tunnelState": 0.5
#=> }
#=> },
#=> {
#=> "avg": {
#=> "tunnelState": 0.5
#=> },
#=> "count": 310,
#=> "dimensions": {
#=> "edgeColoName": "mel01",
#=> "tunnelName": "tunnel_02",
#=> "tunnelState": 0.5
#=> }
#=> }
#=> ]
#=> }
#=> ]
#=> }
#=> },
#=> "errors": null
#=> }