7.3 KiB
Configuring IDO
The IDO (Icinga Data Output) modules for Icinga 2 take care of exporting all configuration and status information into a database. The IDO database is used by a number of projects including Icinga Web.
There is a separate module for each database back-end. At present support for both MySQL and PostgreSQL is implemented.
Icinga 2 uses the Icinga 1.x IDOUtils database schema starting with version
1.11.0
. Icinga 2 may require additional features not yet released with
Icinga 1.x and therefore require manual upgrade steps during pre-final
milestone releases.
Tip
Only install the IDO feature if your web interface or reporting tool requires you to do so (for example, Icinga Web or Icinga Web 2). Icinga Classic UI does not use IDO as backend.
Configuring IDO MySQL
Setting up the MySQL database
First of all you have to install the icinga2-ido-mysql
package using your
distribution's package manager. Once you have done that you can proceed with
setting up a MySQL database for Icinga 2:
Note
The Debian packages can optionally create and maintain the database for you using Debian's
dbconfig
framework. This is the recommended way of setting up the database.
# mysql -u root -p
mysql> CREATE DATABASE icinga;
mysql> GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, DROP, CREATE VIEW, INDEX, EXECUTE ON icinga.* TO 'icinga'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'icinga';
mysql> quit
After creating the database you can import the Icinga 2 IDO schema using the following command:
# mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/doc/icinga2-ido-mysql-*/schema/mysql.sql
The Icinga 2 RPM packages install the schema files into
/usr/share/doc/icinga2-ido-mysql-*/schema
(*
means package version).
On SuSE-based distributions the schema files are installed in
/usr/share/doc/packages/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema
.
The Debian/Ubuntu packages put the schema files into
/usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema
.
Upgrading the MySQL database
If the database has been installed and requires an upgrade, verify the current schema version first:
# mysql -u root -p icinga -e 'SELECT version FROM icinga_dbversion;'
+---------+
| version |
+---------+
| 1.11.0 |
+---------+
Check the schema/upgrade
directory for an incremental schema upgrade file, e.g.
if your database schema version is 1.11.0
look for mysql-upgrade-1.12.0.sql
and newer. If there isn't an upgrade file available there's nothing to do.
Note
During pre release status (0.x.y releases) small snippets called for example
0.0.8.sql
will ship the required schema updates.
Apply all database schema upgrade files incrementially.
# mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/doc/icinga2-ido-mysql-*/schema/upgrade/mysql-upgrade-1.12.0.sql
The Icinga 2 IDO module will check for the required database schema version on startup and generate an error message if not satisfied.
Installing the IDO MySQL module
The package provides a new configuration file that is installed in
/etc/icinga2/features-available/ido-mysql.conf
. You will need to update the
database credentials in this file.
You can enable the ido-mysql
feature configuration file using icinga2-enable-feature
:
# icinga2-enable-feature ido-mysql
Module 'ido-mysql' was enabled.
Make sure to restart Icinga 2 for these changes to take effect.
After enabling the ido-mysql feature you have to restart Icinga 2:
# /etc/init.d/icinga2 restart
Configuring IDO PostgreSQL
Setting up the PostgreSQL database
First of all you have to install the icinga2-ido-pgsql
package using your
distribution's package manager. Once you have done that you can proceed with
setting up a PostgreSQL database for Icinga 2:
Note
The Debian packages can optionally create and maintain the database for you using Debian's
dbconfig
framework. This is the recommended way of setting up the database.
# cd /tmp
# sudo -u postgres psql -c "CREATE ROLE icinga WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'icinga'";
# sudo -u postgres createdb -O icinga -E UTF8 icinga
# sudo -u postgres createlang plpgsql icinga
Locate your pg_hba.conf (Debian: /etc/postgresql/*/main/pg_hba.conf
,
RHEL/SUSE: /var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
), add the icinga user with md5
authentification method and restart the postgresql server.
# vim /var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
# icinga
local icinga icinga md5
host icinga icinga 127.0.0.1/32 md5
host icinga icinga ::1/128 md5
# "local" is for Unix domain socket connections only
local all all ident
# IPv4 local connections:
host all all 127.0.0.1/32 ident
# IPv6 local connections:
host all all ::1/128 ident
# /etc/init.d/postgresql restart
After creating the database and permissions you can import the Icinga 2 IDO schema using the following command:
# export PGPASSWORD=icinga
# psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/doc/icinga2-ido-pgsql-*/schema/pgsql.sql
The Icinga 2 RPM packages install the schema files into
/usr/share/doc/icinga2-ido-pgsql-*/schema
(*
means package version).
On SuSE-based distributions the schema files are installed in
/usr/share/doc/packages/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema
.
The Debian/Ubuntu packages put the schema files into
/usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema
.
Upgrading the PostgreSQL database
If the database has been installed and requires an upgrade, verify the current schema version first:
# export PGPASSWORD=icinga
# psql -U icinga -d icinga -c "SELECT version FROM icinga_dbversion;"
version
\---------
1.11.0
Check the schema/upgrade
directory for an incremental schema upgrade file, e.g.
if your database schema version is 1.11.0
look for pgsql-upgrade-1.12.0.sql
and newer. If there isn't an upgrade file available there's nothing to do.
Note
During pre release status (0.x.y releases) small snippets called for example
0.0.8.sql
will ship the required schema updates.
Apply all database schema upgrade files incrementially.
# export PGPASSWORD=icinga
# psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/doc/icinga2-ido-pgsql-*/schema/upgrade/pgsql-upgrade-1.12.0.sql
The Icinga 2 IDO module will check for the required database schema version on startup and generate an error message if not satisfied.
Installing the IDO PostgreSQL module
The package provides a new configuration file that is installed in
/etc/icinga2/features-available/ido-pgsql.conf
. You will need to update the
database credentials in this file.
You can enable the ido-pgsql
feature configuration file using icinga2-enable-feature
:
# icinga2-enable-feature ido-pgsql
Module 'ido-pgsql' was enabled.
Make sure to restart Icinga 2 for these changes to take effect.
After enabling the ido-pgsql feature you have to restart Icinga 2:
# /etc/init.d/icinga2 restart