## Hosts and Services Icinga 2 can be used to monitor the availability of hosts and services. Services can be virtually anything which can be checked in some way: * Network services (HTTP, SMTP, SNMP, SSH, etc.) * Printers * Switches / Routers * Temperature Sensors * Other local or network-accessible services Host objects provide a mechanism to group together services that are running on the same physical device. Here is an example of a host object which defines two child services: object Host "my-server1" { services["ping4"] = { check_command = "ping4" }, services["http"] = { check_command = "http_ip" }, check = "ping4", macros["address"] = "10.0.0.1" } The example host `my-server1` creates two services which belong to this host: `ping4` and `http`. It also specifies that the host should inherit its availability state from the `ping4` service. > **Note** > > In Icinga 1.x hosts had their own check command, check interval and > notification settings. Instead, in Icinga 2 hosts inherit their state > from one of its child services. No checks are performed for the host > itself. The `address` macro is used by check commands to determine which network address is associated with the host object. ### Host States Hosts inherit their state from the host check service that is specified using the `check` attribute. Hosts can be in any of the following states: Name | Description ------------|-------------- UP | The host is available. DOWN | The host is unavailable. UNREACHABLE | At least one of the host's dependencies (e.g. its upstream router) is unavailable causing the host to be unreachable. ### Service States Services can be in any of the following states: Name | Description ------------|-------------- OK | The service is working properly. WARNING | The service is experiencing some problems but is still considered to be in working condition. CRITICAL | The service is in a critical state. UNKNOWN | The check could not determine the service's state. ### Hard and Soft States When detecting a problem with a service Icinga re-checks the service a number of times (based on the `max_check_attempts` and `retry_interval` settings) before sending notifications. This ensures that no unnecessary notifications are sent for transient failures. During this time the service is in a `SOFT` state. After all re-checks have been executed and the service is still in a non-OK state the service switches to a `HARD` state and notifications are sent. Name | Description ------------|-------------- HARD | The host/service's state hasn't recently changed. SOFT | The host/service has recently changed state and is being re-checked.