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External Command Transport Configuration

Configuration

Navigate into Configuration -> Modules -> Monitoring -> Backends. You can create/edit command transports here.

The commandtransports.ini configuration file defines how Icinga Web 2 transports commands to your Icinga instance in order to submit external commands. By default, this file is located at /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/commandtransports.ini.

You can define multiple command transports in the commandtransports.ini file. Every transport starts with a section header containing its name, followed by the config directives for this transport in the standard INI-format.

Icinga Web 2 will try one transport after another to send a command until the command is successfully sent. If configured, Icinga Web 2 will take different instances into account. The order in which Icinga Web 2 processes the configured transports is defined by the order of sections in commandtransports.ini.

Use the Icinga 2 API

If you’re running Icinga 2 it’s best to use the Icinga 2 API for transmitting external commands.

Icinga 2 Preparations

You have to run the api setup on the Icinga 2 host where you want to send the commands to:

icinga2 api setup

Next, you have to create an ApiUser object for authenticating against the Icinga 2 API. This configuration also applies to the host where you want to send the commands to. We recommend to create/edit the file /etc/icinga2/conf.d/api-users.conf:

object ApiUser "icingaweb2" {
  password = "bea11beb7b810ea9ce6ea" // Change this!
  permissions = [ "status/query", "actions/*", "objects/modify/*", "objects/query/*" ]
}

The permissions are mandatory in order to submit all external commands from within Icinga Web 2.

Restart Icinga 2 for the changes to take effect.

systemctl restart icinga2

Configuration in Icinga Web 2

Note

Please make sure that your server running Icinga Web 2 has the PHP cURL extension installed and enabled.

The Icinga 2 API requires the following settings:

Option Description
transport Required. The transport type. Must be set to api.
host Required. The host address where the Icinga 2 API is listening on.
port Required. The port where the Icinga 2 API is listening on. Defaults to 5665.
username Required. Basic auth username.
password Required. Basic auth password.

Example:

# vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/commandtransports.ini

[icinga2]
transport = "api"
host = "127.0.0.1" ; Icinga 2 host
port = "5665"
username = "icingaweb2"
password = "bea11beb7b810ea9ce6ea" ; Change this!

Use a Local Command Pipe

A local Icinga instance requires the following settings:

Option Description
transport Required. The transport type. Must be set to local.
path Required. The absolute path to the local command pipe.

Example:

# vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/commandtransports.ini

[icinga2]
transport   = local
path        = /var/run/icinga2/cmd/icinga2.cmd

When commands are being sent to the Icinga instance, Icinga Web 2 opens the file found on the local filesystem underneath path and writes the external command to it.

Please note that errors are not returned using this method. The Icinga 2 API sends error feedback.

Use SSH For a Remote Command Pipe

A command pipe on a remote host’s filesystem can be accessed by configuring a SSH based command transport and requires the following settings:

Option Description
transport Required. The transport type. Must be set to remote.
path Required. The path on the remote server to its local command pipe.
host Required. The SSH host.
port Optional. The SSH port. Defaults to 22.
user Required. The SSH auth user.
resource Optional. The SSH resource
instance Optional. The Icinga instance name. Only required for multiple instances.

Example:

# vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/commandtransports.ini

[icinga2]
transport   = remote
path        = /var/run/icinga2/cmd/icinga2.cmd
host        = example.tld
user        = icinga
;port        = 22 ; Optional. The default is 22

To make this example work, you’ll need to permit your web-server’s user public-key based access to the defined remote host so that Icinga Web 2 can connect to it and login as the defined user.

You can also make use of a dedicated SSH resource to permit access for a different user than the web-server’s one. This way, you can provide a private key file on the local filesystem that is used to access the remote host.

To accomplish this, a new resource is required that is defined in your transport’s configuration instead of a user:

# vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/commandtransports.ini

[icinga2]
transport   = remote
path        = /var/run/icinga2/cmd/icinga2.cmd
host        = example.tld
resource    = example.tld-icinga2
;port        = 22 ; Optional. The default is 22

The resource’s configuration needs to be put into the resources.ini file:

# vim /etc/icingaweb2/resources.ini

[example.tld-icinga2]
type        = ssh
user        = icinga
private_key = /etc/icingaweb2/ssh/icinga

Configure Transports for Different Icinga Instances

If there are multiple but different Icinga instances writing to your IDO database, you can define which transport belongs to which Icinga instance by providing the instance setting. This setting must specify the name of the Icinga instance you want to assign to the transport:

[icinga1]
...
instance = icinga1

[icinga2]
...
instance = icinga2

Associating a transport to a specific Icinga instance causes this transport to be used to send commands to the linked instance only. Transports without a linked Icinga instance are used to send commands to all instances.