Showing posts with label Nagios. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nagios. Show all posts

Nagios Client Install on Linux CentOS


Packages you will need:
gcc
openssl-devel
1.      Create an install dir:
mkdir /install
2.      Download NRPE:
wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/nagios/nrpe-2.12.tar.gz
3.  tar -zxvf nrpe-2.12.tar.gz
4.  cd nrpe-2.12
5.  ./configure
should end with an output like this:
*** Configuration summary for nrpe 2.12 03-10-2008 ***:

 General Options:
 -------------------------
 NRPE port:    5666
 NRPE user:    nagios
 NRPE group:   nagios
 Nagios user:  nagios
 Nagios group: nagios


Review the options above for accuracy.  If they look okay,
type 'make all' to compile the NRPE daemon and client.
6.      Run
make all
7.  useradd nagios
8.  make install
9.      Edit and install nrpe.cfg into /usr/local/nagios/etc
10.  Go back into
cd /install
11.  Download Nagios-Plugisns:
wget http://prdownloads.sourceforge.net/sourceforge/nagiosplug/nagios-plugins-1.4.14.tar.gz
12.tar -zxvf nagios-plugins-1.4.14.tar.gz
13.cd nagios-plugins-1.4.14
14../configure
15.make all
16.make install
17.  Install nrpe into /etc/init.d
18.chmod a+x nrpe
19.  Run
 chkconfig --add nrpe
20.chkconfig --level 235 nrpe on
Labels parameters

How To Monitor Remote Linux Host using Nagios 3.0



6 steps to install Nagios plugin and NRPE on remote host.
  1. Download Nagios Plugins and NRPE Add-on
  2. Create nagios account
  3. Install Nagios Plugins
  4. Install NRPE
  5. Setup NRPE to run as daemon
  6. Modify the /usr/local/nagios/etc/nrpe.cfg
III. 4 Configuration steps on the Nagios monitoring server to monitor remote host:
  1. Download NRPE Add-on
  2. Install check_nrpe
  3. Create host and service definition for remote host
  4. Restart the nagios service


I. Overview:

.
Following three steps will happen on a very high level when Nagios (installed on the nagios-servers) monitors a service (for e.g. disk space usage) on the remote Linux host.

  1. Nagios will execute check_nrpe command on nagios-server and request it to monitor disk usage on remote host using check_disk command.
  2. The check_nrpe on the nagios-server will contact the NRPE daemon on remote host and request it to execute the check_disk on remote host.
  3. The results of the check_disk command will be returned back by NRPE daemon to the check_nrpe on nagios-server.

Following flow summarizes the above explanation:

Nagios Server (check_nrpe) —–> Remote host (NRPE deamon) —–> check_disk
Nagios Server (check_nrpe) <—– Remote host (NRPE deamon) <—– check_disk (returns disk space usage)

II. 7 steps to install Nagios Plugins and NRPE on the remote host


1. Download Nagios Plugins and NRPE Add-on

Download following files from Nagios.org and move to /home/downloads:
  • nagios-plugins-1.4.11.tar.gz
  • nrpe-2.12.tar.gz

2. Create nagios account

[remotehost]# useradd nagios
[remotehost]# passwd nagios

3. Install nagios-plugin

[remotehost]# cd /home/downloads
[remotehost]# tar xvfz nagios-plugins-1.4.11.tar.gz
[remotehost]# cd nagios-plugins-1.4.11
[remotehost]# export LDFLAGS=-ldl

[remotehost]# ./configure --with-nagios-user=nagios --with-nagios-group=nagios --enable-redhat-pthread-workaround
[remotehost]# make
[remotehost]# make install

[remotehost]# chown nagios.nagios /usr/local/nagios
[remotehost]# chown -R nagios.nagios /usr/local/nagios/libexec/

Note: On Red Hat, For me the ./configure command was hanging with the the message: “checking for redhat spopen problem…”. Add --enable-redhat-pthread-workaround to the ./configure command as a work-around for the above problem.

4. Install NRPE

[remotehost]# cd /home/downloads
[remotehost]# tar xvfz nrpe-2.12.tar.gz
[remotehost]# cd nrpe-2.12

[remotehost]# ./configure
[remotehost]# make all
[remotehost]# make install-plugin
[remotehost]# make install-daemon
[remotehost]# make install-daemon-config
[remotehost]# make install-xinetd

5. Setup NRPE to run as daemon (i.e as part of xinetd):

  • Modify the /etc/xinetd.d/nrpe to add the ip-address of the Nagios monitoring server to the only_from directive. Note that there is a space after the 127.0.0.1 and the nagios monitoring server ip-address (in this example, nagios monitoring server ip-address is: 192.168.1.2)
only_from       = 127.0.0.1 192.168.1.2
  • Modify the /etc/services and add the following at the end of the file.
nrpe 5666/tcp # NRPE
  • Start the service
[remotehost]#service xinetd restart
  • Verify whether NRPE is listening
[remotehost]# netstat -at | grep nrpe
       tcp 0      0 *:nrpe *:*                         LISTEN
  • Verify to make sure the NRPE is functioning properly
[remotehost]# /usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_nrpe -H localhost
NRPE v2.12

6. Modify the /usr/local/nagios/etc/nrpe.cfg

The nrpe.cfg file located on the remote host contains the commands that are needed to check the services on the remote host. By default the nrpe.cfg comes with few standard check commands as samples. check_users and check_load are shown below as an example.

command[check_users]=/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_users -w 5 -c 10
command[check_load]=/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load -w 15,10,5 -c 30,25,20

In all the check commands, the “-w” stands for “Warning” and “-c” stands for “Critical”. for e.g. in the check_disk command below, if the available disk space gets to 20% of less, nagios will send warning message. If it gets to 10% or less, nagios will send critical message. Change the value of “-c” and “-w” parameter below depending on your environment.
command[check_disk]=/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_disk -w 20% -c 10% -p /dev/hda1

Note: You can execute any of the commands shown in the nrpe.cfg on the command line on remote host and see the results for yourself. For e.g. When I executed the check_disk command on the command line, it displayed the following:

[remotehost]#/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_disk -w 20% -c 10% -p /dev/hda1
DISK CRITICAL - free space: / 6420 MB (10% inode=98%);| /=55032MB;51792;58266;0;64741

In the above example, since the free disk space on /dev/hda1 is only 10% , it is displaying the CRITICAL message, which will be returned to nagios server.

III. 4 Configuration steps on the Nagios monitoring server to monitor remote host:

.1. Download NRPE Add-on
Download nrpe-2.12.tar.gz from Nagios.org and move to /home/downloads:

2. Install check_nrpe on the nagios monitoring server

[nagios-server]# tar xvfz nrpe-2.12.tar.gz
[nagios-server]# cd nrpe-2.1.2
[nagios-server]# ./configure
[nagios-server]# make all
[nagios-server]# make install-plugin

./configure will give a configuration summary as shown below:

*** Configuration summary for nrpe 2.12 05-31-2008 ***:

General Options:
————————-
NRPE port: 5666
NRPE user: nagios
NRPE group: nagios
Nagios user: nagios
Nagios group: nagios

Note: I got the “checking for SSL headers… configure: error: Cannot find ssl headers” error message while performing ./configure. Install openssl-devel as shown below and run the ./configure again to fix the problem.
[nagios-server]# rpm -ivh openssl-devel-0.9.7a-43.16.i386.rpm krb5-devel-1.3.4-47.i386.rpm zlib-devel-1.2.1.2-1.2.i386.rpm e2fsprogs-devel-1.35-12.5.
el4.i386.rpm
warning: openssl-devel-0.9.7a-43.16.i386.rpm: V3 DSA signature: NOKEY, key ID db42a60e
Preparing… ########################################### [100%]
1:e2fsprogs-devel ########################################### [ 25%]
2:krb5-devel ########################################### [ 50%]
3:zlib-devel ########################################### [ 75%]
4:openssl-devel ########################################### [100%]
Verify whether nagios monitoring server can talk to the remotehost.
[nagios-server]#/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_nrpe -H 192.168.1.3
NRPE v2.12

Note: 192.168.1.3 in the ip-address of the remotehost where the NRPE and nagios plugin was installed as explained in Section II above.

3. Create host and service definition for remotehost

Create a new configuration file /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/remotehost.cfg to define the host and service definition for this particular remotehost. It is good to take the localhost.cfg and copy it as remotehost.cfg and start modifying it according to your needs.

host definition sample:
define host{
use linux-server
host_name remotehost
alias Remote Host
address 192.168.1.3
contact_groups admins
}

Service definition sample:
define service{
use generic-service
service_description Root Partition
contact_groups admins
check_command check_nrpe!check_disk
}
Note: In all the above examples, replace remotehost with the corresponding hostname of your remotehost.

4. Restart the nagios service

Restart the nagios as shown below and login to the nagios web (http://nagios-server/nagios/) to verify the status of the remotehost linux sever that was added to nagios for monitoring.
[nagios-server]# service nagios reload

How To Monitor Remote Windows Machine Using Nagios on Linux

Nagios In this article, l’ll explain how to monitor remote windows machine and the various service running on the windows server using nagios monitoring server. Following three sections are covered in this article.

I. Overview
II. 4 steps to install nagios on remote windows host
  1. Install NSClient++ on the remote windows server
  2. Modify the NSClient++ Service
  3. Modify the NSC.ini
  4. Start the NSClient++ Service
III. 6 configuration steps on nagios monitoring server
  1. Verify check_nt command and windows-server template
  2. Uncomment windows.cfg in /usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg
  3. Modify /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/windows.cfg
  4. Define windows services that should be monitored.
  5. Enable Password Protection
  6. Verify Configuration and Restart Nagios.

I. Overview

. Following three steps will happen on a very high level when Nagios (installed on the nagios-server) monitors a service (for e.g. disk space usage) on the remote Windows host.

  1. Nagios will execute check_nt command on nagios-server and request it to monitor disk usage on remote windows host.
  2. The check_nt on the nagios-server will contact the NSClient++ service on remote windows host and request it to execute the USEDDISKSPACE on the remote host.
  3. The results of the USEDDISKSPACE command will be returned back by NSClient++ daemon to the check_nt on nagios-server.

Following flow summarizes the above explanation:

Nagios Server (check_nt) —–> Remote host (NSClient++) —–> USEDDISKSPACE
Nagios Server (check_nt) <—– Remote host (NSClient++) <—– USEDDISKSPACE (returns disk space usage)

II. 4 steps to setup nagios on remote windows host

.1. Install NSClient++ on the remote windows server
Download NSCP 0.3.1 (NSClient++-Win32-0.3.1.msi) from NSClient++ Project. NSClient++ is an open source windows service that allows performance metrics to be gathered by Nagios for windows services. Go through the following five NSClient++ installation steps to get the installation completed.

(1) NSClient++ Welcome Screen

(2) License Agreement Screen

(3) Select Installation option and location. Use the default option and click next.

NSClient++ Install Screen

(4) Ready to Install Screen.  Click on Install to get it started.

(5) Installation completed Screen.

2. Modify the NSClient++ Service

Go to Control Panel -> Administrative Tools -> Services. Double click on the “NSClientpp (Nagios) 0.3.1.14 2008-03-12 w32″ service and select the check-box that says “Allow service to interact with desktop” as shown below.
NSClient++ Service Modification

3. Modify the NSC.ini

(1) Modify NSC.ini and uncomment *.dll: Edit the C:\Program Files\NSClient++\NSC.ini file and uncomment everything under [modules] except RemoteConfiguration.dll and CheckWMI.dll
[modules]
;# NSCLIENT++ MODULES
;# A list with DLLs to load at startup.
;  You will need to enable some of these for NSClient++ to work.
; ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
; *                                                               *
; * N O T I C E ! ! ! - Y O U   H A V E   T O   E D I T   T H I S *
; *                                                               *
; ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! ! !
FileLogger.dll
CheckSystem.dll
CheckDisk.dll
NSClientListener.dll
NRPEListener.dll
SysTray.dll
CheckEventLog.dll
CheckHelpers.dll
;CheckWMI.dll
;
; RemoteConfiguration IS AN EXTREM EARLY IDEA SO DONT USE FOR PRODUCTION ENVIROMNEMTS!
;RemoteConfiguration.dll
; NSCA Agent is a new beta module use with care!
NSCAAgent.dll
; LUA script module used to write your own "check deamon" (sort of) early beta.
LUAScript.dll
; Script to check external scripts and/or internal aliases, early beta.
CheckExternalScripts.dll
; Check other hosts through NRPE extreme beta and probably a bit dangerous! :)
NRPEClient.dll

(2) Modify NSC.ini and uncomment allowed_hosts. Edit the C:\Program Files\NSClient++\NSC.ini file and Uncomment allowed_host under settings and add the ip-address of the nagios-server.
;# ALLOWED HOST ADDRESSES
;  This is a comma-delimited list of IP address of hosts that are allowed to talk to the all daemons.
;  If leave this blank anyone can access the deamon remotly (NSClient still requires a valid password).
;  The syntax is host or ip/mask so 192.168.0.0/24 will allow anyone on that subnet access
allowed_hosts=192.168.1.2/255.255.255.0
Note: allowed_host is located under [Settings], [NSClient] and [NRPE] section. Make sure to change allowed_host under [Settings] for this purpose.

(3) Modify NSC.ini and uncomment port. Edit the C:\Program Files\NSClient++\NSC.ini file and uncomment the port# under [NSClient] section
;# NSCLIENT PORT NUMBER
;  This is the port the NSClientListener.dll will listen to.
port=12489

(4) Modify NSC.ini and specify password. You can also specify a password the nagios server needs to use to remotely access the NSClient++ agent.
[Settings]
;# OBFUSCATED PASSWORD
;  This is the same as the password option but here you can store the password in an obfuscated manner.
;  *NOTICE* obfuscation is *NOT* the same as encryption, someone with access to this file can still figure out the
;  password. Its just a bit harder to do it at first glance.
;obfuscated_password=Jw0KAUUdXlAAUwASDAAB
;
;# PASSWORD
;  This is the password (-s) that is required to access NSClient remotely. If you leave this blank everyone will be able to access the daemon remotly.
password=My2Secure$Password

4. Start the NSClient++ Service

Start the NSClient++ service either from the Control Panel -> Administrative tools -> Services -> Select “NSClientpp (Nagios) 0.3.1.14 2008-03-12 w32″ and click on start (or) Click on “Start -> All Programs -> NSClient++ -> Start NSClient++ (Win32) . Please note that this will start the NSClient++ as a windows service.

Later if you modify anything in the NSC.ini file, you should restart the “NSClientpp (Nagios) 0.3.1.14 2008-03-12 w32″ from the windows service.

III. 6 configuration steps on nagios monitoring server

.

1. Verify check_nt command and windows-server template

Verify that the check_nt is enabled under /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/commands.cfg
# 'check_nt' command definition
define command{
command_name    check_nt
command_line    $USER1$/check_nt -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -p 12489 -v $ARG1$ $ARG2$
}

Verify that the windows-server template is enabled under /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/templates.cfg
# Windows host definition template - This is NOT a real host, just a template!
define host{
name                    windows-server  ; The name of this host template
use                     generic-host    ; Inherit default values from the generic-host template
check_period            24x7            ; By default, Windows servers are monitored round the clock
check_interval          5               ; Actively check the server every 5 minutes
retry_interval          1               ; Schedule host check retries at 1 minute intervals
max_check_attempts      10              ; Check each server 10 times (max)
check_command           check-host-alive        ; Default command to check if servers are "alive"
notification_period     24x7            ; Send notification out at any time - day or night
notification_interval   30              ; Resend notifications every 30 minutes
notification_options    d,r             ; Only send notifications for specific host states
contact_groups          admins          ; Notifications get sent to the admins by default
hostgroups              windows-servers ; Host groups that Windows servers should be a member of
register                0               ; DONT REGISTER THIS - ITS JUST A TEMPLATE
}

2. Uncomment windows.cfg in /usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg

# Definitions for monitoring a Windows machine
cfg_file=/usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/windows.cfg

3. Modify /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/windows.cfg

By default a sample host definition for a windows server is given under windows.cfg, modify this to reflect the appropriate windows server that needs to be monitored through nagios.
# Define a host for the Windows machine we'll be monitoring
# Change the host_name, alias, and address to fit your situation

define host{
use             windows-server              ; Inherit default values from a template
host_name   remote-windows-host      ; The name we're giving to this host
alias            Remote Windows Host     ; A longer name associated with the host
address       192.168.1.4                   ; IP address of the remote windows host
}

4. Define windows services that should be monitored.

Following are the default windows services that are already enabled in the sample windows.cfg. Make sure to update the host_name on these services to reflect the host_name defined in the above step.
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     NSClient++ Version
check_command           check_nt!CLIENTVERSION
}
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     Uptime
check_command           check_nt!UPTIME
}
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     CPU Load
check_command           check_nt!CPULOAD!-l 5,80,90
}
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     Memory Usage
check_command           check_nt!MEMUSE!-w 80 -c 90
}
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     C:\ Drive Space
check_command           check_nt!USEDDISKSPACE!-l c -w 80 -c 90
}
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     W3SVC
check_command           check_nt!SERVICESTATE!-d SHOWALL -l W3SVC
}
define service{
use                     generic-service
host_name               remote-windows-host
service_description     Explorer
check_command           check_nt!PROCSTATE!-d SHOWALL -l Explorer.exe
}

5. Enable Password Protection

If you specified a password in the NSC.ini file of the NSClient++ configuration file on the Windows machine, you’ll need to modify the check_nt command definition to include the password. Modify the /usr/local/nagios/etc/commands.cfg file and add password as shown below.
define command{
command_name check_nt
command_line $USER1$/check_nt -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -p 12489 -s My2Secure$Password -v $ARG1$ $ARG2$
}

6. Verify Configuration and Restart Nagios.

Verify the nagios configuration files as shown below.
[nagios-server]# /usr/local/nagios/bin/nagios -v /usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg
Total Warnings: 0
Total Errors:   0

Things look okay - No serious problems were detected during the pre-flight check

Restart nagios as shown below.
[nagios-server]# /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios stopStopping nagios: .done.

[nagios-server]# /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios start
Starting nagios: done.

Verify the status of the various services running on the remote windows host from the Nagios web UI (http://nagios-server/nagios) as shown below.
Nagios Web UI - Remote Windows Host Status