Documentation and examples related to the puppi action check
puppi check [project_name] [-r yes|no|fail]
Run host-wide checks. puppi check Run project "myapp" specific tests AND host-wide checks puppi check myapp
Run checks and send reports only if some of them fail puppi check -r fail
Run checks and send reports puppi check -r yes
Run checks and show only failed ones puppi check -s fail
The basic define related to a check is: puppi::check - Creates a single command to be placed in the check sequence.
A simple example might be: puppi::check { 'Port_Apache': command => "check_tcp -H ${fqdn} -p 80" , }
but also something that uses variables Puppet already knows puppi::check { 'apache_process': command => "check_procs -c 1: -C ${apache::params::processname}" , }
To avoid repetitions you can include the relevant checks in defines you already have
to manage, for example, virtualhosts, and use the data you already provide to configure
their local puppi checks.
puppi::check { "Url_$name":
enable =>
You can also use custom scripts for your checks. They should behave similarly to Nagios plugins inn their exit codes: 0 for SUCCESS, 1 for WARNINGS, 2 for CRITICAL. In this case you've to specify the directory there the scripts stays: puppi::check { 'my_stack': command => 'stack_check.sh', bade_dir => '/usr/bin', }
If you use the whole Example42 modules set you get automatically many service related checks out of the box. Just set (via an ENC, facts or manifests) these puppet variables: $monitor="yes" # To enable automagic monitoring $monitor_tool = "puppi" # As monitoring tool define at least puppi. If you like Nagios, you may use: $monitor_tool = ["nagios","puppi"] # This enables the below checks both for Puppi and Nagios $puppi=yes # To enable puppi extensions autoloading
To the port and service checks automatically added for the included modules, you can add custom url checks with something like: monitor::url { "URL_Check_Database_Connection": url => "http://www.example42.com/check/db", pattern => 'SUCCESS', port => '80', target => "${fqdn}", }