icinga2/doc/6.06-dependencies.md

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## <a id="dependencies"></a> Dependencies
Icinga 2 uses host and service [Dependency](#objecttype-dependency) objects either directly
defined or as inline definition as `dependencies` dictionary. The `parent_host` and `parent_service`
attributes are mandatory, `child_host` and `child_service` attributes are obsolete within
inline definitions in an existing service object or service inline definition.
A service can depend on a host, and vice versa. A service has an implicit dependency (parent)
to its host. A host to host dependency acts implicit as host parent relation.
When dependencies are calculated, not only the immediate parent is taken into
account but all parents are inherited.
A common scenario is the Icinga 2 server behind a router. Checking internet
access by pinging the Google DNS server `google-dns` is a common method, but
will fail in case the `dsl-router` host is down. Therefore the example below
defines a host dependency which acts implicit as parent relation too.
Furthermore the host may be reachable but ping samples are dropped by the
router's firewall. In case the `dsl-router``ping4` service check fails, all
further checks for the `google-dns` `ping4` service should be suppressed.
This is achieved by setting the `disable_checks` attribute to `true`.
object Host "dsl-router" {
services["ping4"] = {
templates = "generic-service",
check_command = "ping4"
}
macros = {
address = "192.168.1.1",
},
}
object Host "google-dns" {
services["ping4"] = {
templates = "generic-service",
check_command = "ping4",
dependencies["dsl-router-ping4"] = {
parent_host = "dsl-router",
parent_service = "ping4",
disable_checks = true
}
}
macros = {
address = "8.8.8.8",
},
dependencies["dsl-router"] = {
parent_host = "dsl-router"
},
}