- [General Information](#general information)
- Installation
- Support
- Vagrant - Virtual development environment
Icinga Web 2
is the next generation monitoring web interface, framework
and CLI tool developed by the Icinga Project.
Responsive and fast, rewritten from scratch supporting multiple backends and providing a CLI tool. Compatible with Icinga Core 2.x and 1.x.
Check the Icinga website for some insights.
Note
Icinga Web 2
is still in development and not meant for production deployment. Watch the development roadmap and Icinga website for release schedule updates!
Please navigate to doc/installation.md for updated details.
Please head over to the community support channels in case of questions, bugs, etc.
Please make sure to provide the following details:
- OS, distribution, version
- PHP and/or MySQL/PostgreSQL version
- Which browser and its version
- Screenshot and problem description
- Vagrant 1.2+
- Virtualbox 4.2.16+
- a fairly powerful hardware (quad core, 4gb ram, fast hdd)
Note
The deployment of the virtual machine is tested against Vagrant starting with version 1.2. Unfortunately older versions will not work.
The Icinga Web 2 project ships with a Vagrant virtual machine that integrates the source code with various services and example data in a controlled environment. This enables developers and users to test Livestatus, status.dat, MySQL and PostgreSQL backends as well as the LDAP authentication. All you have to do is install Vagrant and run:
vagrant up
Note
The first boot of the vm takes a fairly long time because you'll download a plain CentOS base box and Vagrant will automatically provision the environment on the first go.
After you should be able to browse localhost:8080/icingaweb.
Forwarded ports:
Proctocol | Local port (virtual machine host) | Remote port (the virtual machine) |
---|---|---|
SSH | 2222 | 22 |
HTTP | 8080 | 80 |
Installed packages:
- Apache2 with PHP enabled
- PHP with MySQL and PostgreSQL libraries
- MySQL server and client software
- PostgreSQL server and client software
- Icinga prerequisites
- OpenLDAP servers and clients
Installed users and groups:
- User icinga with group icinga and icinga-cmd
- Webserver user added to group icinga-cmd
Installed software:
- Icinga with IDOUtils using a MySQL database
- Icinga with IDOUtils using a PostgreSQL database
- Icinga 2
Installed files:
/usr/share/icinga/htpasswd.users
account information for logging into the Icinga classic web interface for both icinga instances/usr/lib64/nagios/plugins
Monitoring Plugins for all Icinga instances
Installation path: /usr/local/icinga-mysql
Services:
icinga-mysql
ido2db-mysql
Connect to the icinga mysql database using the following command:
mysql -u icinga -p icinga icinga
Access the Classic UI (CGIs) via localhost:8080/icinga-mysql. For logging into the Icinga classic web interface use user icingaadmin with password icinga.
Installation path: /usr/local/icinga-pgsql
Services:
icinga-pgsql
ido2db-pgsql
Connect to the icinga mysql database using the following command:
sudo -u postgres psql -U icinga -d icinga
Access the Classic UI (CGIs) via localhost:8080/icinga-pgsql. For logging into the Icinga classic web interface use user icingaadmin with password icinga.
Test config is added to both the MySQL and PostgreSQL Icinga instance utilizing the Perl module Monitoring::Generator::TestConfig to generate test config to /usr/local/share/misc/monitoring_test_config which is then copied to /etc/conf.d/test_config/. Configuration can be adjusted and recreated with /usr/local/share/misc/monitoring_test_config/recreate.pl. Note that you have to run
vagrant provision
in the host after any modification to the script just mentioned.
MK Livestatus is added to the Icinga installation using a MySQL database.
Installation path:
/usr/local/icinga-mysql/bin/unixcat
/usr/local/icinga-mysql/lib/mk-livestatus/livecheck
/usr/local/icinga-mysql/lib/mk-livestatus/livestatus.o
/usr/local/icinga-mysql/etc/modules/mk-livestatus.cfg
/usr/local/icinga-mysql/var/rw/live
Example usage:
echo "GET hosts" | /usr/local/icinga-mysql/bin/unixcat /usr/local/icinga-mysql/var/rw/live
The environment includes a openldap server with example data. Domain suffix is dc=icinga,dc=org.
Administrator (rootDN) of the slapd configuration database is cn=admin,cn=config and the
administrator (rootDN) of our database instance is cn=admin,dc=icinga,dc=org. Both share
the password admin
.
Examples to query the slapd configuration database:
ldapsearch -x -W -LLL -D cn=admin,cn=config -b cn=config dn
ldapsearch -Y EXTERNAL -H ldapi:/// -LLL -b cn=config dn
Examples to query our database instance:
ldapsearch -x -W -LLL -D cn=admin,dc=icinga,dc=org -b dc=icinga,dc=org dn
ldapsearch -Y EXTERNAL -H ldapi:/// -LLL -b dc=icinga,dc=org dn
This is what the dc=icinga,dc=org DIT looks like:
dn: dc=icinga,dc=org
dn: ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org
dn: ou=groups,dc=icinga,dc=org
dn: cn=Users,ou=groups,dc=icinga,dc=org cn: Users uniqueMember: cn=Jon Doe,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org uniqueMember: cn=Jane Smith,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org uniqueMember: cn=John Q. Public,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org uniqueMember: cn=Richard Roe,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org
dn: cn=John Doe,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org cn: John Doe uid: jdoe
dn: cn=Jane Smith,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org cn: Jane Smith uid: jsmith
dn: cn=John Q. Public,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org cn: John Q. Public uid: jqpublic
dn: cn=Richard Roe,ou=people,dc=icinga,dc=org cn: Richard Roe uid: rroe
All users share the password password
.
All software required to run tests is installed in the virtual machine. In order to run all tests you have to execute the following commands:
vagrant ssh -c /vagrant/test/php/runtests
vagrant ssh -c /vagrant/test/php/checkswag
vagrant ssh -c /vagrant/test/js/runtests
vagrant ssh -c /vagrant/test/js/checkswag
vagrant ssh -c /vagrant/test/frontend/runtests
runtests
will execute unit and regression tests and checkswag
will report
code style issues.
Installed from the Icinga snapshot package repository.
The configuration is located in /etc/icinga2
.
Example usage:
/etc/init.d/icinga2 (start|stop|restart|reload)
If you've configure LDAP as authentication backend (which is the default) use the following login credentials:
Username: jdoe Password: password
Have a look at [LDAP example data](#ldap example data) for more accounts.
Using MySQL as backend:
Username: icingaadmin Password: icinga