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See Also: Active Checks, Macros
Introduction
Several people have asked how to go about monitoring clusters of hosts or services, so I decided to write up a little documentation on how to do this. Its fairly straightforward, so hopefully you find things easy to understand...
First off, we need to define what we mean by a "cluster". The simplest way to understand this is with an example. Let's say that your organization has five hosts which provide redundant DNS services to your organization. If one of them fails, its not a major catastrophe because the remaining servers will continue to provide name resolution services. If you're concerned with monitoring the availability of DNS service to your organization, you will want to monitor five DNS servers. This is what I consider to be a service cluster. The service cluster consists of five separate DNS services that you are monitoring. Although you do want to monitor each individual service, your main concern is with the overall status of the DNS service cluster, rather than the availability of any one particular service.
If your organization has a group of hosts that provide a high-availability (clustering) solution, I would consider those to be a host cluster. If one particular host fails, another will step in to take over all the duties of the failed server. As a side note, check out the High-Availability Linux Project for information on providing host and service redundancy with Linux.
Plan of Attack
There are several ways you could potentially monitor service or host clusters. I'll describe the method that I believe to be the easiest. Monitoring service or host clusters involves two things:
Monitoring individual host or service cluster elements is easier than you think. In fact, you're probably already doing it. For service clusters, just make sure that you are monitoring each service element of the cluster. If you've got a cluster of five DNS servers, make sure you have five separate service definitions (probably using the check_dns plugin). For host clusters, make sure you have configured appropriate host definitions for each member of the cluster (you'll also have to define at least one service to be monitored for each of the hosts). Important: You're going to want to disable notifications for the individual cluster elements (host or service definitions). Even though no notifications will be sent about the individual elements, you'll still get a visual display of the individual host or service status in the status CGI. This will be useful for pinpointing the source of problems within the cluster in the future.
Monitoring the overall cluster can be done by using the previously cached results of cluster elements. Although you could re-check all elements of the cluster to determine the cluster's status, why waste bandwidth and resources when you already have the results cached? Where are the results cached? Cached results for cluster elements can be found in the status file (assuming you are monitoring each element). The check_cluster plugin is designed specifically for checking cached host and service states in the status file. Important: Although you didn't enable notifications for individual elements of the cluster, you will want them enabled for the overall cluster status check.
Using the check_cluster Plugin
The check_cluster plugin is designed to report the overall status of a host or service cluster by checking the status information of each individual host or service cluster elements.
More to come... The check_cluster plugin can be found in the contrib directory of the Nagios Plugins release at http://sourceforge.net/projects/nagiosplug/.
Monitoring Service Clusters
Let's say you have three DNS servers that provide redundant services on your network. First off, you need to be monitoring each of these DNS servers seperately before you can monitor them as a cluster. I'll assume that you already have three seperate services (all called "DNS Service") associated with your DNS hosts (called "host1", "host2" and "host3").
In order to monitor the services as a cluster, you'll need to create a new "cluster" service. However, before you do that, make sure you have a service cluster check command configured. Let's assume that you have a command called check_service_cluster defined as follows:
define command{ command_name check_service_cluster command_line /usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_cluster --service -l $ARG1$ -w $ARG2$ -c $ARG3$ -d $ARG4$ }
Now you'll need to create the "cluster" service and use the check_service_cluster command you just created as the cluster's check command. The example below gives an example of how to do this. The example below will generate a CRITICAL alert if 2 or more services in the cluster are in a non-OK state, and a WARNING alert if only 1 of the services is in a non-OK state. If all the individual service members of the cluster are OK, the cluster check will return an OK state as well.
define service{ ... check_command check_service_cluster!"DNS Cluster"!1!2!$SERVICESTATEID:host1:DNS Service$,$SERVICESTATEID:host2:DNS Service$,$SERVICESTATEID:host3:DNS Service$ ... }
It is important to notice that we are passing a comma-delimited list of on-demand service state macros to the $ARG4$ macro in the cluster check command. That's important! Nagios will fill those on-demand macros in with the current service state IDs (numerical values, rather than text strings) of the individual members of the cluster.
Monitoring Host Clusters
Monitoring host clusters is very similiar to monitoring service clusters. Obviously, the main difference is that the cluster members are hosts and not services. In order to monitor the status of a host cluster, you must define a service that uses the check_cluster plugin. The service should not be associated with any of the hosts in the cluster, as this will cause problems with notifications for the cluster if that host goes down. A good idea might be to associate the service with the host that Nagios is running on. After all, if the host that Nagios is running on goes down, then Nagios isn't running anymore, so there isn't anything you can do as far as monitoring (unless you've setup redundant monitoring hosts)...
Anyway, let's assume that you have a check_host_cluster command defined as follows:
define command{ command_name check_host_cluster command_line /usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_cluster --host -l $ARG1$ -w $ARG2$ -c $ARG3$ -d $ARG4$ }
Let's say you have three hosts (named "host1", "host2" and "host3") in the host cluster. If you want Nagios to generate a warning alert if one host in the cluster is not UP or a critical alert if two or more hosts are not UP, the the service you define to monitor the host cluster might look something like this:
define service{ ... check_command check_host_cluster!"Super Host Cluster"!1!2!$HOSTSTATEID:host1$,$HOSTSTATEID:host2$,$HOSTSTATEID:host3$ ... }
It is important to notice that we are passing a comma-delimited list of on-demand host state macros to the $ARG4$ macro in the cluster check command. That's important! Nagios will fill those on-demand macros in with the current host state IDs (numerical values, rather than text strings) of the individual members of the cluster.
That's it! Nagios will periodically check the status of the host cluster and send notifications to you when its status is degraded (assuming you've enabled notification for the service). Note that for thehost definitions of each cluster member, you will most likely want to disable notifications when the host goes down . Remeber that you don't care as much about the status of any individual host as you do the overall status of the cluster. Depending on your network layout and what you're trying to accomplish, you may wish to leave notifications for unreachable states enabled for the host definitions.