# Icinga 2 Addons and Plugins ## PNP [PNP](http://www.pnp4nagios.org) is a graphing addon. If you're planning to use it you have to configure it to use the [bulk mode with npcd and npcdmod](http://docs.pnp4nagios.org/pnp-0.6/modes#bulk_mode_with_npcd_and_npcdmod) in combination with Icinga 2's [PerfdataWriter](4-advanced-topics.md#performance-data). NPCD collects the performance data files which Icinga 2 generates. ## inGraph [inGraph](https://www.netways.org/projects/ingraph/wiki) requires the ingraph-collector addon to be configured to point at the perfdata files. Icinga 2's [PerfdataWriter](4-advanced-topics.md#performance-data) will write to the performance data spool directory. ## Graphite There are Graphite addons available for collecting the performance data files as well. But natively you can use the [GraphiteWriter](4-advanced-topics.md#graphite-carbon-cache-writer) feature. ## Icinga Reporting By enabling the DB IDO feature you can use the Icinga Reporting package. ## NagVis By using either Livestatus or DB IDO as a backend you can create your own network maps based on your monitoring configuration and status data using [NagVis](http://www.nagvis.org). ## Thruk [Thruk](http://www.thruk.org) is an alternative web interface which can be used with Icinga 2. ## Plugins For some services you may need additional 'check plugins' which are not provided by the official Monitoring Plugins project. All existing Nagios or Icinga 1.x plugins work with Icinga 2. Here's a list of popular community sites which host check plugins: * [Icinga Exchange](https://exchange.icinga.org) * [Icinga Wiki](https://wiki.icinga.org) The recommended way of setting up these plugins is to copy them to a common directory and create a new global constant, e.g. `CustomPluginDir` in your [constants.conf](5-configuring-icinga-2.md#constants-conf) configuration file: # cp check_snmp_int.pl /opt/monitoring/plugins # chmod +x /opt/plugins/check_snmp_int.pl # cat /etc/icinga2/constants.conf /** * This file defines global constants which can be used in * the other configuration files. At a minimum the * PluginDir constant should be defined. */ const PluginDir = "/usr/lib/nagios/plugins" const CustomPluginDir = "/opt/monitoring/plugins" Prior to using the check plugin with Icinga 2 you should ensure that it is working properly by trying to run it on the console using whichever user Icinga 2 is running as: # su - icinga -s /bin/bash $ /opt/monitoring/plugins/check_snmp_int.pl --help Additional libraries may be required for some plugins. Please consult the plugin documentation and/or plugin provided README for installation instructions. Sometimes plugins contain hard-coded paths to other components. Instead of changing the plugin it might be easier to create logical links which is (more) update-safe. Each plugin requires a [CheckCommand](6-object-types.md#objecttype-checkcommand) object in your configuration which can be used in the [Service](6-object-types.md#objecttype-service) or [Host](6-object-types.md#objecttype-host) object definition. There are the following conventions to follow when adding a new command object definition: * Always import the `plugin-check-command` template * Use [command-arguments](#) whenever possible. The `command` attribute must be an array in `[ ... ]` then for shell escaping. * Define a unique `prefix` for the command's specific command arguments. That way you can safely set them on host/service level and you'll always know which command they control. * Use command argument default values, e.g. for thresholds * Use [advanced conditions](6-object-types.md#objecttype-checkcommand) like `set_if` definitions. Example for a custom `my-snmp-int` check command: object CheckCommand "my-snmp-int" { import "plugin-check-command" command = [ CustomPluginDir + "/check_snmp_int.pl" ] arguments = { "-H" = "$snmp_address$" "-C" = "$snmp_community$" "-p" = "$snmp_port$" "-2" = { set_if = "$snmp_v2$" } "-n" = "$snmp_interface$" "-f" = { set_if = "$snmp_perf$" } "-w" = "$snmp_warn$" "-c" = "$snmp_crit$" } vars.snmp_v2 = true vars.snmp_perf = true vars.snmp_warn = "300,400" vars.snmp_crit = "0,600" } Icinga 2 has built-in check command definitions for the [Manubulon Plugin Checks](7-icinga-template-library.md#snmp-manubulon-plugin-check-commands). For further information on your monitoring configuration read the [Monitoring Basics](3-monitoring-basics.md#monitoring-basics) chapter. You can find additional plugins at the [Icinga Exchange](https://exchange.icinga.org) More details on the plugins can also be found on the Icinga Wiki at https://wiki.icinga.org ## Plugin API Currently Icinga 2 supports the native plugin API specification from the `Monitoring Plugins` project. The `Monitoring Plugin API` is defined in the [Monitoring Plugins Development Guidelines](https://www.monitoring-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html). There are no output length restrictions using Icinga 2. This is different to the [Icinga 1.x plugin api definition](http://docs.icinga.org/latest/en/pluginapi.html#outputlengthrestrictions). ## Configuration Tools If you require your favourite configuration tool to export Icinga 2 configuration, please get in touch with their developers. The Icinga project does not provide a configuration web interface or similar. > **Tip** > > Get to know the new configuration format and the advanced [apply](3-monitoring-basics.md#using-apply) rules and > use [syntax highlighting](10-addons-plugins.md#configuration-syntax-highlighting) in vim/nano. If you're looking for puppet manifests, chef cookbooks, ansible recipes, etc - we're happy to integrate them upstream, so please get in touch at [https://support.icinga.org](https://support.icinga.org). These tools are in development and require feedback and tests: * [Ansible Roles](https://github.com/Icinga/icinga2-ansible) * [Puppet Module](https://github.com/Icinga/puppet-icinga2) ## Configuration Syntax Highlighting Icinga 2 ships configuration examples for syntax highlighting using the `vim` and `nano` editors. The RHEL, SUSE and Debian package `icinga2-common` install these files into `/usr/share/*/icinga2-common/syntax`. Sources provide these files in `tools/syntax`. ### Configuration Syntax Highlighting using Vim Create a new local vim configuration storage, if not already existing. Edit `vim/ftdetect/icinga2.vim` if your paths to the Icinga 2 configuration differ. $ PREFIX=~/.vim $ mkdir -p $PREFIX/{syntax,ftdetect} $ cp vim/syntax/icinga2.vim $PREFIX/syntax/ $ cp vim/ftdetect/icinga2.vim $PREFIX/ftdetect/ Test it: $ vim /etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf ### Configuration Syntax Highlighting using Nano Copy the `/etc/nanorc` sample file to your home directory. Create the `/etc/nano` directory and copy the provided `icinga2.nanorc` into it. $ cp /etc/nanorc ~/.nanorc # mkdir -p /etc/nano # cp icinga2.nanorc /etc/nano/ Then include the icinga2.nanorc file in your ~/.nanorc by adding the following line: $ vim ~/.nanorc ## Icinga 2 include "/etc/nano/icinga2.nanorc" Test it: $ nano /etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf