40 KiB
Icinga 2 Troubleshooting
Required Information
Please ensure to provide any detail which may help reproduce and understand your issue. Whether you ask on the community channels or you create an issue at GitHub, make sure that others can follow your explanations. If necessary, draw a picture and attach it for better illustration. This is especially helpful if you are troubleshooting a distributed setup.
We've come around many community questions and compiled this list. Add your own findings and details please.
- Describe the expected behavior in your own words.
- Describe the actual behavior in one or two sentences.
- Ensure to provide general information such as:
- How was Icinga 2 installed (and which repository in case) and which distribution are you using
icinga2 --version
icinga2 feature list
icinga2 daemon -C
- Icinga Web 2 version (screenshot from System - About)
- Icinga Web 2 modules e.g. the Icinga Director (optional)
- Configuration insights:
- Provide complete configuration snippets explaining your problem in detail
- Your icinga2.conf file
- If you run multiple Icinga 2 instances, the zones.conf file (or
icinga2 object list --type Endpoint
andicinga2 object list --type Zone
) from all affected nodes.
- Logs
- Relevant output from your main and debug log in
/var/log/icinga2
. Please add step-by-step explanations with timestamps if required. - The newest Icinga 2 crash log if relevant, located in
/var/log/icinga2/crash
- Relevant output from your main and debug log in
- Additional details
- If the check command failed, what's the output of your manual plugin tests?
- In case of debugging Icinga 2, the full back traces and outputs
Analyze your Environment
There are many components involved on a server running Icinga 2. When you analyze a problem, keep in mind that basic system administration knowledge is also key to identify bottlenecks and issues.
Tip
Monitor Icinga 2 and use the hints for further analysis.
- Analyze the system's performance and dentify bottlenecks and issues.
- Collect details about all applications (e.g. Icinga 2, MySQL, Apache, Graphite, Elastic, etc.).
- If data is exchanged via network (e.g. central MySQL cluster) ensure to monitor the bandwidth capabilities too.
- Add graphs and screenshots to your issue description
Install tools which help you to do so. Opinions differ, let us know if you have any additions here!
Analyse your Linux/Unix Environment
htop is a better replacement for top
and helps to analyze processes
interactively.
yum install htop
apt-get install htop
If you are for example experiencing performance issues, open htop
and take a screenshot.
Add it to your question and/or bug report.
Analyse disk I/O performance in Grafana, take a screenshot and obfuscate any sensitive details. Attach it when posting a question to the community channels.
The sysstat package provides a number of tools to
analyze the performance on Linux. On FreeBSD you could use systat
for example.
yum install sysstat
apt-get install sysstat
Example for vmstat
(summary of memory, processes, etc.):
// summary
vmstat -s
// print timestamps, format in MB, stats every 1 second, 5 times
vmstat -t -S M 1 5
Example for iostat
:
watch -n 1 iostat
Example for sar
:
sar //cpu
sar -r //ram
sar -q //load avg
sar -b //I/O
sysstat
also provides the iostat
binary. On FreeBSD you could use systat
for example.
If you are missing checks and metrics found in your analysis, add them to your monitoring!
Analyze your Windows Environment
A good tip for Windows are the tools found inside the Sysinternals Suite.
You can also start perfmon
and analyze specific performance counters.
Keep notes which could be important for your monitoring, and add service
checks later on.
Enable Debug Output
Enable Debug Output on Linux/Unix
Enable the debuglog
feature:
# icinga2 feature enable debuglog
# service icinga2 restart
The debug log file can be found in /var/log/icinga2/debug.log
.
Alternatively you may run Icinga 2 in the foreground with debugging enabled. Specify the console
log severity as an additional parameter argument to -x
.
# /usr/sbin/icinga2 daemon -x notice
The log severity can be one of critical
, warning
, information
, notice
and debug
.
Enable Debug Output on Windows
Open a command prompt with administrative privileges and enable the debug log feature.
C:> icinga2.exe feature enable debuglog
Ensure that the Icinga 2 service already writes the main log into C:\ProgramData\icinga2\var\log\icinga2
.
Restart the Icinga 2 service and open the newly created debug.log
file.
C:> net stop icinga2
C:> net start icinga2
Configuration Troubleshooting
List Configuration Objects
The icinga2 object list
CLI command can be used to list all configuration objects and their
attributes. The tool also shows where each of the attributes was modified.
Tip
Use the Icinga 2 API to access config objects at runtime directly.
That way you can also identify which objects have been created from your apply rules.
# icinga2 object list
Object 'localhost!ssh' of type 'Service':
* __name = 'localhost!ssh'
* check_command = 'ssh'
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 5:3-5:23
* check_interval = 60
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 24:3-24:21
* host_name = 'localhost'
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 4:3-4:25
* max_check_attempts = 3
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 23:3-23:24
* name = 'ssh'
* retry_interval = 30
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 25:3-25:22
* templates = [ 'ssh', 'generic-service' ]
% += modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 1:0-7:1
% += modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 22:1-26:1
* type = 'Service'
* vars
% += modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 6:3-6:19
* sla = '24x7'
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 6:3-6:19
[...]
You can also filter by name and type:
# icinga2 object list --name *ssh* --type Service
Object 'localhost!ssh' of type 'Service':
* __name = 'localhost!ssh'
* check_command = 'ssh'
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 5:3-5:23
* check_interval = 60
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 24:3-24:21
* host_name = 'localhost'
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 4:3-4:25
* max_check_attempts = 3
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 23:3-23:24
* name = 'ssh'
* retry_interval = 30
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 25:3-25:22
* templates = [ 'ssh', 'generic-service' ]
% += modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 1:0-7:1
% += modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf', lines 22:1-26:1
* type = 'Service'
* vars
% += modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 6:3-6:19
* sla = '24x7'
% = modified in '/etc/icinga2/conf.d/hosts/localhost/ssh.conf', lines 6:3-6:19
Found 1 Service objects.
[2014-10-15 14:27:19 +0200] information/cli: Parsed 175 objects.
Runtime modifications via the REST API
are not immediately updated. Furthermore there is a known issue with
group assign expressions which are not reflected in the host object output.
You need to restart Icinga 2 in order to update the icinga2.debug
cache file.
Apply rules do not match
You can analyze apply rules and matching objects by using the script debugger.
Where are the check command definitions?
Icinga 2 features a number of built-in check command definitions which are included with
include <itl>
include <plugins>
in the icinga2.conf configuration file. These files are not considered configuration files and will be overridden
on upgrade, so please send modifications as proposed patches upstream. The default include path is set to
LocalStateDir + "/share/icinga2/includes"
.
You should add your own command definitions to a new file in conf.d/
called commands.conf
or similar.
Configuration is ignored
- Make sure that the line(s) are not commented out (starting with
//
or#
, or encapsulated by/* ... */
). - Is the configuration file included in icinga2.conf?
Run the configuration validation and add notice
as log severity.
Search for the file which should be included i.e. using the grep
CLI command.
# icinga2 daemon -C -x notice | grep command
Configuration attributes are inherited from
Icinga 2 allows you to import templates using the import keyword. If these templates contain additional attributes, your objects will automatically inherit them. You can override or modify these attributes in the current object.
The object list CLI command allows you to verify the attribute origin.
Configuration Value with Single Dollar Sign
In case your configuration validation fails with a missing closing dollar sign error message, you did not properly escape the single dollar sign preventing its usage as runtime macro.
critical/config: Error: Validation failed for Object 'ping4' (Type: 'Service') at /etc/icinga2/zones.d/global-templates/windows.conf:24: Closing $ not found in macro format string 'top-syntax=${list}'.
Correct the custom attribute value to
"top-syntax=$${list}"
Checks Troubleshooting
Executed Command for Checks
- Use the Icinga 2 API to query host/service objects for their check result containing the executed shell command.
- Use the Icinga 2 console cli command to fetch the checkable object, its check result and the executed shell command.
- Alternatively enable the debug log and look for the executed command.
Example for a service object query using a regex match on the name:
$ curl -k -s -u root:icinga -H 'Accept: application/json' -H 'X-HTTP-Method-Override: GET' -X POST 'https://localhost:5665/v1/objects/services' \
-d '{ "filter": "regex(pattern, service.name)", "filter_vars": { "pattern": "^http" }, "attrs": [ "__name", "last_check_result" ], "pretty": true }'
{
"results": [
{
"attrs": {
"__name": "example.localdomain!http",
"last_check_result": {
"active": true,
"check_source": "example.localdomain",
"command": [
"/usr/local/sbin/check_http",
"-I",
"127.0.0.1",
"-u",
"/"
],
...
}
},
"joins": {},
"meta": {},
"name": "example.localdomain!http",
"type": "Service"
}
]
}
Example for using the icinga2 console
CLI command evaluation functionality:
$ ICINGA2_API_PASSWORD=icinga icinga2 console --connect 'https://root@localhost:5665/' \
--eval 'get_service("example.localdomain", "http").last_check_result.command' | python -m json.tool
[
"/usr/local/sbin/check_http",
"-I",
"127.0.0.1",
"-u",
"/"
]
Example for searching the debug log:
# icinga2 feature enable debuglog
# systemctl restart icinga2
# tail -f /var/log/icinga2/debug.log | grep "notice/Process"
Checks are not executed
- Check the debug log to see if the check command gets executed.
- Verify that failed depedencies do not prevent command execution.
- Make sure that the plugin is executable by the Icinga 2 user (run a manual test).
- Make sure the checker feature is enabled.
- Use the Icinga 2 API event streams to receive live check result streams.
Examples:
# sudo -u icinga /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_ping -4 -H 127.0.0.1 -c 5000,100% -w 3000,80%
# icinga2 feature enable checker
The feature 'checker' is already enabled.
Fetch all check result events matching the event.service
name random
:
$ curl -k -s -u root:icinga -H 'Accept: application/json' -X POST 'https://localhost:5665/v1/events?queue=debugchecks&types=CheckResult&filter=match%28%22random*%22,event.service%29'
Analyze Check Source
Sometimes checks are not executed on the remote host, but on the master and so on. This could lead into unwanted results or NOT-OK states.
The check_source
attribute is the best indication where a check command
was actually executed. This could be a satellite with synced configuration
or a client as remote command bridge -- both will return the check source
as where the plugin is called.
Example for retrieving the check source from all disk
services using a
regex match on the name:
$ curl -k -s -u root:icinga -H 'Accept: application/json' -H 'X-HTTP-Method-Override: GET' -X POST 'https://localhost:5665/v1/objects/services' \
-d '{ "filter": "regex(pattern, service.name)", "filter_vars": { "pattern": "^disk" }, "attrs": [ "__name", "last_check_result" ], "pretty": true }'
{
"results": [
{
"attrs": {
"__name": "icinga2-client1.localdomain!disk",
"last_check_result": {
"active": true,
"check_source": "icinga2-client1.localdomain",
...
}
},
"joins": {},
"meta": {},
"name": "icinga2-client1.localdomain!disk",
"type": "Service"
}
]
}
Example for using the icinga2 console
CLI command evaluation functionality:
$ ICINGA2_API_PASSWORD=icinga icinga2 console --connect 'https://root@localhost:5665/' \
--eval 'get_service("icinga2-client1.localdomain", "disk").last_check_result.check_source' | python -m json.tool
"icinga2-client1.localdomain"
NSClient++ Check Errors with nscp-local
The nscp-local CheckCommand object definitions call the local nscp.exe
command.
If a Windows client service check fails to find the nscp.exe
command, the log output would look like this:
Command ".\nscp.exe" "client" "-a" "drive=d" "-a" "show-all" "-b" "-q" "check_drivesize" failed to execute: 2, "The system cannot find the file specified."
or
Command ".
scp.exe" "client" "-a" "drive=d" "-a" "show-all" "-b" "-q" "check_drivesize" failed to execute: 2, "The system cannot find the file specified."
The above actually prints .\\nscp.exe
where the escaped \n
character gets interpreted as new line.
Both errors lead to the assumption that the NscpPath
constant is empty or set to a .
character.
This could mean the following:
- The command is not executed on the Windows client. Check the check_source attribute from the check result.
- You are using an outdated NSClient++ version (0.3.x or 0.4.x) which is not compatible with Icinga 2.
- You are using a custom NSClient++ installer which does not register the correct GUID for NSClient++
More troubleshooting:
Retrieve the NscpPath
constant on your Windows client:
C:\Program Files\ICINGA2\sbin\icinga2.exe variable get NscpPath
If the variable is returned empty, manually test how Icinga 2 would resolve its path (this can be found inside the ITL):
C:\Program Files\ICINGA2\sbin\icinga2.exe console --eval "dirname(msi_get_component_path(\"{5C45463A-4AE9-4325-96DB-6E239C034F93}\"))"
If this command does not return anything, NSClient++ is not properly installed.
Verify that inside the Programs and Features
(appwiz.cpl
) control panel.
You can run the bundled NSClient++ installer from the Icinga 2 Windows package.
The msi package is located in C:\Program Files\ICINGA2\sbin
.
The bundled NSClient++ version has properly been tested with Icinga 2. Keep that in mind when using a different package.
Check Thresholds Not Applied
This could happen with clients as command endpoint execution.
If you have for example a client host icinga2-client1.localdomain
and a service disk
check defined on the master, the warning and
critical thresholds are sometimes to applied and unwanted notification
alerts are raised.
This happens because the client itself includes a host object with
its NodeName
and a basic set of checks in the conf.d
directory, i.e. disk
with the default thresholds.
Clients which have the checker
feature enabled will attempt
to execute checks for local services and send their results
back to the master.
If you now have the same host and service objects on the master you will receive wrong check results from the client.
Solution:
- Disable the
checker
feature on clients:icinga2 feature disable checker
. - Remove the inclusion of conf.d as suggested in the client setup docs.
Check Fork Errors
Newer versions of Systemd on Linux limit spawned processes for services.
- v227 introduces the
TasksMax
setting to units which allows to specify the spawned process limit. - v228 adds
DefaultTasksMax
in the globalsystemd-system.conf
with a default setting of 512 processes. - v231 changes the default value to 15%
This can cause problems with Icinga 2 in large environments with many commands executed in parallel starting with Systemd v228. Some distributions also may have changed the defaults.
The error message could look like this:
2017-01-12T11:55:40.742685+01:00 icinga2-master1 kernel: [65567.582895] cgroup: fork rejected by pids controller in /system.slice/icinga2.service
In order to solve the problem, increase the value for DefaultTasksMax
or set it to infinity
.
mkdir /etc/systemd/system/icinga2.service.d
cat >/etc/systemd/system/icinga2.service.d/limits.conf <<EOF
[Service]
DefaultTasksMax=infinity
EOF
systemctl daemon-reload
systemctl restart icinga2
An example is available inside the GitHub repository in etc/initsystem.
External Resources:
Late Check Results
Icinga Web 2 provides
a dashboard overview for overdue checks
.
The REST API provides the status URL endpoint with some generic metrics on Icinga and its features.
# curl -k -s -u root:icinga 'https://localhost:5665/v1/status?pretty=1' | less
You can also calculate late check results via the REST API:
- Fetch the
last_check
timestamp from each object - Compare the timestamp with the current time and add
check_interval
multiple times (change it to see which results are really late, like five times check_interval)
You can use the icinga2 console to connect to the instance, fetch all data and calculate the differences. More infos can be found in this blogpost.
# ICINGA2_API_USERNAME=root ICINGA2_API_PASSWORD=icinga icinga2 console --connect 'https://localhost:5665/'
<1> => var res = []; for (s in get_objects(Service).filter(s => s.last_check < get_time() - 2 * s.check_interval)) { res.add([s.__name, DateTime(s.last_check).to_string()]) }; res
[ [ "10807-host!10807-service", "2016-06-10 15:54:55 +0200" ], [ "mbmif.int.netways.de!disk /", "2016-01-26 16:32:29 +0100" ] ]
Or if you are just interested in numbers, call len on the result array res
:
<2> => var res = []; for (s in get_objects(Service).filter(s => s.last_check < get_time() - 2 * s.check_interval)) { res.add([s.__name, DateTime(s.last_check).to_string()]) }; res.len()
2.000000
If you need to analyze that problem multiple times, just add the current formatted timestamp and repeat the commands.
<23> => DateTime(get_time()).to_string()
"2017-04-04 16:09:39 +0200"
<24> => var res = []; for (s in get_objects(Service).filter(s => s.last_check < get_time() - 2 * s.check_interval)) { res.add([s.__name, DateTime(s.last_check).to_string()]) }; res.len()
8287.000000
More details about the Icinga 2 DSL and its possibilities can be found in the language and library reference chapters.
Late Check Results in Distributed Environments
When it comes to a distributed HA setup, each node is responsible for a load-balanced amount of checks.
Host and Service objects provide the attribute paused
. If this is set to false
, the current node
actively attempts to schedule and execute checks. Otherwise the node does not feel responsible.
<3> => var res = {}; for (s in get_objects(Service).filter(s => s.last_check < get_time() - 2 * s.check_interval)) { res[s.paused] += 1 }; res
{
@false = 2.000000
@true = 1.000000
}
You may ask why this analysis is important? Fair enough - if the numbers are not inverted in a HA zone with two members, this may give a hint that the cluster nodes are in a split-brain scenario, or you've found a bug in the cluster.
If you are running a cluster setup where the master/satellite executes checks on the client via top down command endpoint mode, you might want to know which zones are affected.
This analysis assumes that clients which are not connected, have the string connected
in their
service check result output and their state is UNKNOWN
.
<4> => var res = {}; for (s in get_objects(Service)) { if (s.state==3) { if (match("*connected*", s.last_check_result.output)) { res[s.zone] += [s.host_name] } } }; for (k => v in res) { res[k] = len(v.unique()) }; res
{
Asia = 31.000000
Europe = 214.000000
USA = 207.000000
}
The result set shows the configured zones and their affected hosts in a unique list. The output also just prints the numbers
but you can adjust this by omitting the len()
call inside the for loop.
Notifications Troubleshooting
Notifications are not sent
- Check the debug log to see if a notification is triggered.
- If yes, verify that all conditions are satisfied.
- Are any errors on the notification command execution logged?
Please ensure to add these details with your own description to any question or issue posted to the community channels.
Verify the following configuration:
- Is the host/service
enable_notifications
attribute set, and if so, to which value? - Do the notification attributes
states
,types
,period
match the notification conditions? - Do the user attributes
states
,types
,period
match the notification conditions? - Are there any notification
begin
andend
times configured? - Make sure the notification feature is enabled.
- Does the referenced NotificationCommand work when executed as Icinga user on the shell?
If notifications are to be sent via mail, make sure that the mail program specified inside the NotificationCommand object exists. The name and location depends on the distribution so the preconfigured setting might have to be changed on your system.
Examples:
# icinga2 feature enable notification
The feature 'notification' is already enabled.
# icinga2 feature enable debuglog
# systemctl restart icinga2
# grep Notification /var/log/icinga2/debug.log > /root/analyze_notification_problem.log
You can use the Icinga 2 API event streams to receive live notification streams:
$ curl -k -s -u root:icinga -H 'Accept: application/json' -X POST 'https://localhost:5665/v1/events?queue=debugnotifications&types=Notification'
Feature Troubleshooting
Feature is not working
- Make sure that the feature configuration is enabled by symlinking from
features-available/
tofeatures-enabled
and that the latter is included in icinga2.conf. - Are the feature attributes set correctly according to the documentation?
- Any errors on the logs?
Look up the object type for the required feature and verify it is enabled:
# icinga2 object list --type <feature object type>
Example for the graphite
feature:
# icinga2 object list --type GraphiteWriter
Look into the log and check whether the feature logs anything specific for this matter.
grep GraphiteWriter /var/log/icinga2/icinga2.log
Certificate Troubleshooting
Certificate Verification
If the TLS handshake fails when a client connects to the cluster or the REST API, ensure to verify the used certificates.
Print the CA and client certificate and ensure that the following attributes are set:
- Version must be 3.
- Serial number is a hex-encoded string.
- Issuer should be your certificate authority (defaults to
Icinga CA
for all CLI commands). - Validity, meaning to say the certificate is not expired.
- Subject with the common name (CN) matches the client endpoint name and its FQDN.
- v3 extensions must set the basic constraint for
CA:TRUE
(ca.crt) orCA:FALSE
(client certificate). - Subject Alternative Name is set to a proper DNS name (required for REST API and browsers).
# cd /var/lib/icinga2/certs/
CA certificate:
# openssl x509 -in ca.crt -text
Certificate:
Data:
Version: 3 (0x2)
Serial Number: 1 (0x1)
Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
Issuer: CN=Icinga CA
Validity
Not Before: Feb 23 14:45:32 2016 GMT
Not After : Feb 19 14:45:32 2031 GMT
Subject: CN=Icinga CA
Subject Public Key Info:
Public Key Algorithm: rsaEncryption
Public-Key: (4096 bit)
Modulus:
...
Exponent: 65537 (0x10001)
X509v3 extensions:
X509v3 Basic Constraints: critical
CA:TRUE
Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
...
Client public certificate:
# openssl x509 -in icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt -text
Certificate:
Data:
Version: 3 (0x2)
Serial Number:
86:47:44:65:49:c6:65:6b:5e:6d:4f:a5:fe:6c:76:05:0b:1a:cf:34
Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
Issuer: CN=Icinga CA
Validity
Not Before: Aug 20 16:20:05 2016 GMT
Not After : Aug 17 16:20:05 2031 GMT
Subject: CN=icinga2-client1.localdomain
Subject Public Key Info:
Public Key Algorithm: rsaEncryption
Public-Key: (4096 bit)
Modulus:
...
Exponent: 65537 (0x10001)
X509v3 extensions:
X509v3 Basic Constraints: critical
CA:FALSE
X509v3 Subject Alternative Name:
DNS:icinga2-client1.localdomain
Signature Algorithm: sha256WithRSAEncryption
...
Make sure to verify the client's certificate and its received ca.crt
in /var/lib/icinga2/certs
and ensure that
both instances are signed by the same CA.
# openssl verify -verbose -CAfile /var/lib/icinga2/certs/ca.crt /var/lib/icinga2/certs/icinga2-master1.localdomain.crt
icinga2-master1.localdomain.crt: OK
# openssl verify -verbose -CAfile /var/lib/icinga2/certs/ca.crt /var/lib/icinga2/certs/icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt
icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt: OK
Fetch the ca.crt
file from the client node and compare it to your master's ca.crt
file:
# scp icinga2-client1:/var/lib/icinga2/certs/ca.crt test-client-ca.crt
# diff -ur /var/lib/icinga2/certs/ca.crt test-client-ca.crt
On SLES11 you'll need to use the openssl1
command instead of openssl
.
Certificate Problems with OpenSSL 1.1.0
Users have reported problems with SSL certificates inside a distributed monitoring setup when they
- updated their Icinga 2 package to 2.7.0 on Windows or
- upgraded their distribution which included an update to OpenSSL 1.1.0.
Example during startup on a Windows client:
critical/SSL: Error loading and verifying locations in ca key file 'C:\ProgramData\icinga2\etc/icinga2/pki/ca.crt': 219029726, "error:0D0E20DE:asn1 encoding routines:c2i_ibuf:illegal zero content"
critical/config: Error: Cannot make SSL context for cert path: 'C:\ProgramData\icinga2\etc/icinga2/pki/client.crt' key path: 'C:\ProgramData\icinga2\etc/icinga2/pki/client.key' ca path: 'C:\ProgramData\icinga2\etc/icinga2/pki/ca.crt'.
A technical analysis and solution for re-creating the public CA certificate is available in this advisory.
Cluster and Clients Troubleshooting
This applies to any Icinga 2 node in a distributed monitoring setup.
You should configure the cluster health checks if you haven't done so already.
Note
Some problems just exist due to wrong file permissions or applied packet filters. Make sure to check these in the first place.
Cluster Troubleshooting Connection Errors
General connection errors could be one of the following problems:
- Incorrect network configuration
- Packet loss
- Firewall rules preventing traffic
Use tools like netstat
, tcpdump
, nmap
, etc. to make sure that the cluster communication
works (default port is 5665
).
# tcpdump -n port 5665 -i any
# netstat -tulpen | grep icinga
# nmap icinga2-client1.localdomain
Cluster Troubleshooting SSL Errors
If the cluster communication fails with SSL error messages, make sure to check the following
- File permissions on the SSL certificate files
- Does the used CA match for all cluster endpoints?
- Verify the
Issuer
being your trusted CA - Verify the
Subject
containing your endpoint's common name (CN) - Check the validity of the certificate itself
- Verify the
Try to manually connect from icinga2-client1.localdomain
to the master node icinga2-master1.localdomain
:
# openssl s_client -CAfile /var/lib/icinga2/certs/ca.crt -cert /var/lib/icinga2/certs/icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt -key /var/lib/icinga2/certs/icinga2-client1.localdomain.key -connect icinga2-master1.localdomain:5665
CONNECTED(00000003)
---
...
If the connection attempt fails or your CA does not match, verify the certificates.
Cluster Troubleshooting Unauthenticated Clients
Unauthenticated nodes are able to connect. This is required for client setups.
Master:
[2015-07-13 18:29:25 +0200] information/ApiListener: New client connection for identity 'icinga2-client1.localdomain' (unauthenticated)
Client as command execution bridge:
[2015-07-13 18:29:26 +1000] notice/ClusterEvents: Discarding 'execute command' message from 'icinga2-master1.localdomain': Invalid endpoint origin (client not allowed).
If these messages do not go away, make sure to verify the master and client certificates.
Cluster Troubleshooting Message Errors
When the network connection is broken or gone, the Icinga 2 instances will be disconnected. If the connection can't be re-established between endpoints in the same HA zone, they remain in a Split-Brain-mode and history may differ.
Although the Icinga 2 cluster protocol stores historical events in a replay log for later synchronisation, you should make sure to check why the network connection failed.
Ensure to setup cluster health checks to monitor all endpoints and zones connectivity.
Cluster Troubleshooting Command Endpoint Errors
Command endpoints can be used for clients as well as inside an High-Availability cluster.
There is no cli command for manually executing the check, but you can verify the following (e.g. by invoking a forced check from the web interface):
-
/var/log/icinga2/icinga2.log
contains connection and execution errors. -
The ApiListener is not enabled to accept commands.
-
CheckCommand
definition not found on the remote client. -
Referenced check plugin not found on the remote client.
-
Runtime warnings and errors, e.g. unresolved runtime macros or configuration problems.
-
Specific error messages are also populated into
UNKNOWN
check results including a detailed error message in their output. -
Verify the
check_source
object attribute. This is populated by the node executing the check. -
More verbose logs are found inside the debug log.
-
Use the Icinga 2 API event streams to receive live check result streams.
Fetch all check result events matching the event.service
name remote-client
:
$ curl -k -s -u root:icinga -H 'Accept: application/json' -X POST 'https://localhost:5665/v1/events?queue=debugcommandendpoint&types=CheckResult&filter=match%28%22remote-client*%22,event.service%29'
Cluster Troubleshooting Config Sync
If the cluster zones do not sync their configuration, make sure to check the following:
- Within a config master zone, only one configuration master is allowed to have its config in
/etc/icinga2/zones.d
. ** The master syncs the configuration to/var/lib/icinga2/api/zones/
during startup and only syncs valid configuration to the other nodes. ** The other nodes receive the configuration into/var/lib/icinga2/api/zones/
. - The
icinga2.log
log file in/var/log/icinga2
will indicate whether this ApiListener accepts config, or not.
Verify the object's version attribute on all nodes to check whether the config update and reload was successful or not.
Cluster Troubleshooting Overdue Check Results
If your master does not receive check results (or any other events) from the child zones (satellite, clients, etc.), make sure to check whether the client sending in events is allowed to do so.
Tip
General troubleshooting hints on late check results are documented here.
The distributed monitoring conventions apply. So, if there's a mismatch between your client node's endpoint name and its provided certificate's CN, the master will deny all events.
Tip
Icinga Web 2 provides a dashboard view for overdue check results.
Enable the debug log on the master for more verbose insights.
If the client cannot authenticate, it's a more general problem.
The client's endpoint is not configured on nor trusted by the master node:
Discarding 'check result' message from 'icinga2-client1.localdomain': Invalid endpoint origin (client not allowed).
The check result message sent by the client does not belong to the zone the checkable object is in on the master:
Discarding 'check result' message from 'icinga2-client1.localdomain': Unauthorized access.
Cluster Troubleshooting Replay Log
If your /var/lib/icinga2/api/log
directory grows, it generally means that your cluster
cannot replay the log on connection loss and re-establishment. A master node for example
will store all events for not connected endpoints in the same and child zones.
Check the following:
- All clients are connected? (e.g. cluster health check).
- Check your connection in general.
- Does the log replay work, e.g. are all events processed and the directory gets cleared up over time?
- Decrease the
log_duration
attribute value for that specific endpoint.