# Examples
There are a million ways to use ntfy, but here are some inspirations. I try to collect
examples on GitHub, so be sure to check
those out, too.
## A long process is done: backups, copying data, pipelines, ...
I started adding notifications pretty much all of my scripts. Typically, I just chain the curl call
directly to the command I'm running. The following example will either send Laptop backup succeeded
or ⚠️ Laptop backup failed directly to my phone:
```
rsync -a root@laptop /backups/laptop \
&& zfs snapshot ... \
&& curl -H prio:low -d "Laptop backup succeeded" ntfy.sh/backups \
|| curl -H tags:warning -H prio:high -d "Laptop backup failed" ntfy.sh/backups
```
## Server-sent messages in your web app
Just as you can [subscribe to topics in the Web UI](subscribe/web.md), you can use ntfy in your own
web application. Check out the live example or just look the source of this page.
## Notify on SSH login
Years ago my home server was broken into. That shook me hard, so every time someone logs into any machine that I
own, I now message myself. Here's an example of how to use PAM
to notify yourself on SSH login.
=== "/etc/pam.d/sshd"
```
# at the end of the file
session optional pam_exec.so /usr/bin/ntfy-ssh-login.sh
```
=== "/usr/bin/ntfy-ssh-login.sh"
```bash
#!/bin/bash
if [ "${PAM_TYPE}" = "open_session" ]; then
curl \
-H prio:high \
-H tags:warning \
-d "SSH login: ${PAM_USER} from ${PAM_RHOST}" \
ntfy.sh/alerts
fi
```
## Collect data from multiple machines
The other day I was running tasks on 20 servers, and I wanted to collect the interim results
as a CSV in one place. Each of the servers was publishing to a topic as the results completed (`publish-result.sh`),
and I had one central collector to grab the results as they came in (`collect-results.sh`).
It looked something like this:
=== "collect-results.sh"
```bash
while read result; do
[ -n "$result" ] && echo "$result" >> results.csv
done < <(stdbuf -i0 -o0 curl -s ntfy.sh/results/raw)
```
=== "publish-result.sh"
```bash
// This script was run on each of the 20 servers. It was doing heavy processing ...
// Publish script results
curl -d "$(hostname),$count,$time" ntfy.sh/results
```
## Ansible, Salt and Puppet
You can easily integrate ntfy into Ansible, Salt, or Puppet to notify you when runs are done or are highstated.
One of my co-workers uses the following Ansible task to let him know when things are done:
```yml
- name: Send ntfy.sh update
uri:
url: "https://ntfy.sh/{{ ntfy_channel }}"
method: POST
body: "{{ inventory_hostname }} reseeding complete"
```