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PagerDuty Webhooks

This guide covers how to use ngrok to integrate your localhost app with PagerDuty by using Webhooks. PagerDuty webhooks can be used to notify an external application whenever specific events occur in your PagerDuty account.

By integrating ngrok with PagerDuty, you can:

  • Develop and test PagerDuty webhooks locally, eliminating the time in deploying your development code to a public environment and setting it up in HTTPS.
  • Inspect and troubleshoot requests from PagerDuty in real-time via the inspection UI and API.
  • Modify and Replay PagerDuty Webhook requests with a single click and without spending time reproducing events manually in your PagerDuty account.
  • Secure your app with PagerDuty validation provided by ngrok. Invalid requests are blocked by ngrok before reaching your app.

Step 1: Start your app

For this tutorial, we'll use the sample NodeJS app available on GitHub.

To install this sample, run the following commands in a terminal:

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This will get the project installed locally.

Now you can launch the app by running the following command:

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The app runs by default on port 3000.

You can validate that the app is up and running by visiting http://localhost:3000. The application logs request headers and body in the terminal and responds with a message in the browser.

Step 2: Launch ngrok

Once your app is running successfully on localhost, let's get it on the internet securely using ngrok!

  1. If you're not an ngrok user yet, just sign up for ngrok for free.

  2. Download the ngrok agent.

  3. Go to the ngrok dashboard and copy your Authtoken.
    Tip: The ngrok agent uses the auth token to log into your account when you start a tunnel.

  4. Start ngrok by running the following command:

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  5. ngrok will display a URL where your localhost application is exposed to the internet (copy this URL for use with PagerDuty). ngrok agent running

Step 3: Integrate PagerDuty

To register a webhook on your PagerDuty account follow the instructions below:

  1. Access PagerDuty, and sign in using your PagerDuty account.

  2. Click Integrations on the top menu and then click Generic Webhooks.

  3. On the Your Webhooks page, click +New Webook for your application.

  4. On the New Webhook page, in the WEBHOOK URL field enter the URL provided by the ngrok agent to expose your application to the internet (i.e. https://1a2b-3c4d-5e6f-7g8h-9i0j.ngrok.app). Your request endpoint URL

  5. On the same page, select Service as SCOPE TYPE, select one of your service for SCOPE, click Select all under EVENT SUBSCRIPTION, and then click Add Webhook.

  6. In the Webhook subscription created popup, click OK. Tip: Click Copy to copy the webhook payload signing code for later usage. See Secure your webhook requests with verification.

  7. In the Your Webhooks page, click the webhook you have just created.

  8. In your webhook's settings page, scroll down until the Test section, click Send Test Event, and then click Yes, Send Event. Confirm your localhost app receives the test event notification and logs both headers and body in the terminal.

Run Webhooks with PagerDuty and ngrok

PagerDuty sends different request body contents depending on the event that is being triggered. You can trigger new calls from PagerDuty to your application by following the instructions below.

  1. In the same browser, access your PagerDuty company page, click Services on the top menu, and then click the Service Directory.

  2. On the Service Directory page, click + New Service.

  3. In the Create a Service page, enter your service Name and then click Next until the Integrations step appears.

  4. In the Integrations step, click Create service without an integration.

  5. On your service page, click New Incident, select your service for Create an incident on the following service, provide a short title, select Urgency as Low, and then click Create Incident. Confirm your localhost app receives the create new incident event notification and logs both headers and body in the terminal.

Inspecting requests

ngrok's Traffic Inspector captures all requests made through your ngrok endpoint to your localhost app. Click on any request to view detailed information about both the request and response.

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By default, accounts only collect traffic metadata to avoid exposing secrets. You must enable full capture in the Observability section of your account settings to capture complete request and response data.

Use the traffic inspector to:

  • Validate webhook payloads and response data
  • Debug request headers, methods, and status codes
  • Troubleshoot integration issues without adding logging to your app

Replaying requests

Test your webhook handling code without triggering new events from your service using the Traffic Inspector's replay feature:

  1. Send a test webhook from your service to generate traffic in your Traffic Inspector.

  2. Select the request you want to replay in the traffic inspector.

  3. Choose your replay option:

    • Click Replay to send the exact same request again
    • Select Replay with modifications to edit the request before sending
  4. Modify the request (optional): Edit any part of the original request, such as changing field values in the request body.

  5. Send the request by clicking Replay.

Your local application will receive the replayed request and log the data to the terminal.

Secure webhook requests

The ngrok signature webhook verification feature allows ngrok to assert that requests from your PagerDuty webhook are the only traffic allowed to make calls to your localhost app.

Note: This ngrok feature is limited to 500 validations per month on free ngrok accounts. For unlimited, upgrade to Pro or Enterprise.

This is a quick step to add extra protection to your application.

  1. Create a file named pagerduty_policy.yml, replacing {your webhook payload signing} with the value you copied before (See Integrate ngrok and PagerDuty.):

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  2. Restart your ngrok agent by running the command:

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  3. Access PagerDuty (https://{tenant}.pagerduty.com/incidents) and create a new incident.

  4. Verify that your local application receives the request and logs information to the terminal.

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