26 KiB
Upgrading Icinga 2
Upgrading Icinga 2 is usually quite straightforward. Ordinarily the only manual steps involved are scheme updates for the IDO database.
Specific version upgrades are described below. Please note that version updates are incremental. An upgrade from v2.6 to v2.8 requires to follow the instructions for v2.7 too.
Upgrading to v2.11
Packages
EOL distributions where no packages are available with this release:
- SLES 11
- Ubuntu 14 LTS
- RHEL/CentOS 6 x86
Added: Boost 1.66+
The rewrite of our core network stack for cluster and REST API requires newer Boost versions, specifically >= 1.66. For technical details, please continue reading in this issue.
The package dependencies have been updated for RPM/DEB already. On platforms where EPEL or Backports cannot satisfy this dependency, we provide Boost as package on our package repository:
- SLES 12 (this replaces the SDK requirement)
- CentOS 6 x64
- Debian Jessie
- Ubuntu Xenial/Bionic
After upgrade, you may remove the old Boost packages (1.53 or anything above) if you don't need them anymore.
Removed: YAJL
Our JSON library, namely YAJL, isn't maintained anymore and may cause crashes.
It is replaced by JSON for Modern C++ by Niels Lohmann and compiled into the binary as header only include. It helps our way to C++11 and allows to fix additional UTF8 issues more easily. Read more about its design goals and benchmarks.
HA-aware Features
v2.11 introduces additional HA functionality similar to the DB IDO feature. This enables the feature being active only on one endpoint while the other endpoint is paused. When one endpoint is shut down, automatic failover happens.
This feature is turned off by default keeping the current behaviour. If you need
it active on just one endpoint, set enable_ha = true
on both endpoints in the
feature configuration.
This affects the following features:
HA Failover
The reconnect failover has been improved, and the default failover_timeout
for the DB IDO features has been lowered from 60 to 30 seconds.
Object authority updates (required for balancing in the cluster) happen
more frequenty (was 30, is 10 seconds).
Also the cold startup without object authority updates has been reduced
from 60 to 30 seconds. This is to allow cluster reconnects (lowered from 60s to 10s in 2.10)
before actually considering a failover/split brain scenario.
The IdoMysqlConnection and IdoPgsqlConnection
objects provide a new attribute named last_failover
which shows the last failover timestamp.
This value also is available in the ido CheckCommand output.
CLI Commands
CLI commands such as api setup
, node wizard/setup
, feature enable/disable/list
required root permissions previously. Since the file permissions allow
the Icinga user to change things already, and users kept asking to
run Icinga on their own webspace without root permissions, this is now possible
with 2.11.
If you are running the commands with a different user than the
compiled ICINGA_USER
and ICINGA_GROUP
CMake settings (icinga
everywhere,
except Debian with nagios
for historical reasons), ensure that this
user has the capabilities to change to a different user.
If you still encounter problems, run the aforementioned CLI commands as root, or with sudo.
Configuration
The deprecated concurrent_checks
attribute in the checker feature
has no effect anymore if set. Please use the MaxConcurrentChecks
constant in constants.conf instead.
Upgrading to v2.10
Path Constant Changes
During package upgrades you may see a notice that the configuration content of features has changed. This is due to a more general approach with path constants in v2.10.
The known constants SysconfDir
and LocalStateDir
stay intact and won't
break on upgrade.
If you are using these constants in your own custom command definitions
or other objects, you are advised to revise them and update them according
to the documentation.
Example diff:
object NotificationCommand "mail-service-notification" {
- command = [ SysconfDir + "/icinga2/scripts/mail-service-notification.sh" ]
+ command = [ ConfigDir + "/scripts/mail-service-notification.sh" ]
If you have the ICINGA2_RUN_DIR
environment variable configured in the
sysconfig file, you need to rename it to ICINGA2_INIT_RUN_DIR
. ICINGA2_STATE_DIR
has been removed and this setting has no effect.
Note
This is important if you rely on the sysconfig configuration in your own scripts.
New Constants
New Icinga constants have been added in this release.
Environment
for specifying the Icinga environment. Defaults to not set.ApiBindHost
andApiBindPort
to allow overriding the default ApiListener values. This will be used for an Icinga addon only.
Configuration: Namespaces
The keywords namespace
and using
are now reserved for the namespace functionality provided
with v2.10. Read more about how it works here.
Configuration: ApiListener
Anonymous JSON-RPC connections in the cluster can now be configured with max_anonymous_clients
attribute.
The corresponding REST API results from /v1/status/ApiListener
in json_rpc
have been renamed
from clients
to anonymous_clients
to better reflect their purpose. Authenticated clients
are counted as connected endpoints. A similar change is there for the performance data metrics.
The TLS handshake timeout defaults to 10 seconds since v2.8.2. This can now be configured
with the configuration attribute tls_handshake_timeout
. Beware of performance issues
with setting a too high value.
API: schedule-downtime Action
The attribute child_options
was previously accepting 0,1,2 for specific child downtime settings.
This behaviour stays intact, but the new proposed way are specific constants as values (DowntimeNoChildren
, DowntimeTriggeredChildren
, DowntimeNonTriggeredChildren
).
Notifications: Recovery and Acknowledgement
When a user should be notified on Problem
and Acknowledgement
, v2.10 now checks during
the Acknowledgement
notification event whether this user has been notified about a problem before.
types = [ Problem, Acknowledgement, Recovery ]
If no Problem
notification was sent, and the types filter includes problems for this user,
the Acknowledgement
notification is not sent.
In contrast to that, the following configuration always sends Acknowledgement
notifications.
types = [ Acknowledgement, Recovery ]
This change also restores the old behaviour for Recovery
notifications. The above configuration
leaving out the Problem
type can be used to only receive recovery notifications. If Problem
is added to the types again, Icinga 2 checks whether it has notified a user of a problem when
sending the recovery notification.
More details can be found in this PR.
Stricter configuration validation
Some config errors are now fatal. While it never worked before, icinga2 refuses to start now!
For example the following started to give a fatal error in 2.10:
object Zone "XXX" {
endpoints = [ "master-server" ]
parent = "global-templates"
}
critical/config: Error: Zone 'XXX' can not have a global zone as parent.
Package Changes
Debian/Ubuntu drops the libicinga2
package. apt-get upgrade icinga2
won't remove such packages leaving the upgrade in an unsatisfied state.
Please use apt-get full-upgrade
or apt-get dist-upgrade
instead, as explained here.
On RHEL/CentOS/Fedora, icinga2-libs
has been obsoleted. Unfortunately yum's dependency
resolver doesn't allow to install older versions than 2.10 then. Please
read here
for details.
RPM packages dropped the Classic UI package in v2.8, Debian/Ubuntu packages were forgotten. This is now the case with this release. Icinga 1.x is EOL by the end of 2018, plan your migration to Icinga Web 2.
Upgrading to v2.9
Deprecation and Removal Notes
- Deprecation of 1.x compatibility features:
StatusDataWriter
,CompatLogger
,CheckResultReader
. Their removal is scheduled for 2.11. Icinga 1.x is EOL and will be out of support by the end of 2018. - Removal of Icinga Studio. It always has been experimental and did not satisfy our high quality standards. We've therefore removed it.
Sysconfig Changes
The security fixes in v2.8.2 required moving specific runtime settings into the Sysconfig file and environment. This included that Icinga 2 would itself parse this file and read the required variables. This has generated numerous false-positive log messages and led to many support questions. v2.9.0 changes this in the standard way to read these variables from the environment, and use sane compile-time defaults.
Note
In order to upgrade, remove everything in the sysconfig file and re-apply your changes.
There is a bug with existing sysconfig files where path variables are not expanded because systemd does not support shell variable expansion. This worked with SysVInit though.
Edit the sysconfig file and either remove everything, or edit this line on RHEL 7. Modify the path for other distributions.
vim /etc/sysconfig/icinga2
-ICINGA2_PID_FILE=$ICINGA2_RUN_DIR/icinga2/icinga2.pid
+ICINGA2_PID_FILE=/run/icinga2/icinga2.pid
If you want to adjust the number of open files for the Icinga application for example, you would just add this setting like this on RHEL 7:
vim /etc/sysconfig/icinga2
ICINGA2_RLIMIT_FILES=50000
Restart Icinga 2 afterwards, the systemd service file automatically puts the value into the application's environment where this is read on startup.
Setup Wizard Changes
Client and satellite setups previously had the example configuration in conf.d
included
by default. This caused trouble on config sync, or with locally executed checks generating
wrong check results for command endpoint clients.
In v2.9.0 node wizard
, node setup
and the graphical Windows wizard will disable
the inclusion by default. You can opt-out and explicitly enable it again if needed.
In addition to the default global zones global-templates
and director-global
,
the setup wizards also offer to specify your own custom global zones and generate
the required configuration automatically.
The setup wizards also use full qualified names for Zone and Endpoint object generation,
either the default values (FQDN for clients) or the user supplied input. This removes
the dependency on the NodeName
and ZoneName
constant and helps to immediately see
the parent-child relationship. Those doing support will also see the benefit in production.
CLI Command Changes
The node setup
parameter --master_host
was deprecated and replaced with --parent_host
.
This parameter is now optional to allow connection-less client setups similar to the node wizard
CLI command. The parent_zone
parameter has been added to modify the parent zone name e.g.
for client-to-satellite setups.
The api user
command which was released in v2.8.2 turned out to cause huge problems with
configuration validation, windows restarts and OpenSSL versions. It is therefore removed in 2.9,
the password_hash
attribute for the ApiUser object stays intact but has no effect. This is to ensure
that clients don't break on upgrade. We will revise this feature in future development iterations.
Configuration Changes
The CORS attributes access_control_allow_credentials
, access_control_allow_headers
and
access_control_allow_methods
are now controlled by Icinga 2 and cannot be changed anymore.
Unique Generated Names
With the removal of RHEL 5 as supported platform, we can finally use real unique IDs. This is reflected in generating names for e.g. API stage names. Previously it was a handcrafted mix of local FQDN, timestamps and random numbers.
Custom Vars not updating
A rare issue preventing the custom vars of objects created prior to 2.9.0 being updated when changed may occur. To remedy this, truncate the customvar tables and restart Icinga 2. The following is an example of how to do this with mysql:
$ mysql -uroot -picinga icinga
MariaDB [icinga]> truncate icinga_customvariables;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.05 sec)
MariaDB [icinga]> truncate icinga_customvariablestatus;
Query OK, 0 rows affected (0.03 sec)
MariaDB [icinga]> exit
Bye
$ sudo systemctl restart icinga2
Custom vars should now stay up to date.
Upgrading to v2.8.2
With version 2.8.2 the location of settings formerly found in /etc/icinga2/init.conf
has changed. They are now
located in the sysconfig, /etc/sysconfig/icinga2
(RPM) or /etc/default/icinga2
(DPKG) on most systems. The
init.conf
file has been removed and its settings will be ignored. These changes are only relevant if you edited the
init.conf
. Below is a table displaying the new names for the affected settings.
Old init.conf |
New sysconfig/icinga2 |
---|---|
RunAsUser | ICINGA2_USER |
RunAsGroup | ICINGA2_GROUP |
RLimitFiles | ICINGA2_RLIMIT_FILES |
RLimitProcesses | ICINGA2_RLIMIT_PROCESSES |
RLimitStack | ICINGA2_RLIMIT_STACK |
Upgrading to v2.8
DB IDO Schema Update to 2.8.0
There are additional indexes and schema fixes which require an update.
Please proceed here for MySQL or PostgreSQL.
Note
2.8.1.sql
fixes a unique constraint problem with fresh 2.8.0 installations. You don't need this update if you are upgrading from an older version.
Changed Certificate Paths
The default certificate path was changed from /etc/icinga2/pki
to
/var/lib/icinga2/certs
.
Old Path | New Path |
---|---|
/etc/icinga2/pki/icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt |
/var/lib/icinga2/certs/icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt |
/etc/icinga2/pki/icinga2-client1.localdomain.key |
/var/lib/icinga2/certs/icinga2-client1.localdomain.key |
/etc/icinga2/pki/ca.crt |
/var/lib/icinga2/certs/ca.crt |
This applies to Windows clients in the same way: %ProgramData%\etc\icinga2\pki
was moved to %ProgramData%\var\lib\icinga2\certs
.
Old Path | New Path |
---|---|
%ProgramData%\etc\icinga2\pki\icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt |
%ProgramData%\var\lib\icinga2\certs\icinga2-client1.localdomain.crt |
%ProgramData%\etc\icinga2\pki\icinga2-client1.localdomain.key |
%ProgramData%\var\lib\icinga2\certs\icinga2-client1.localdomain.key |
%ProgramData%\etc\icinga2\pki\ca.crt |
%ProgramData%\var\lib\icinga2\certs\ca.crt |
Note
The default expected path for client certificates is
/var/lib/icinga2/certs/ + NodeName + {.crt,.key}
. TheNodeName
constant is usually the FQDN and certificate common name (CN). Check the conventions section inside the Distributed Monitoring chapter.
The setup CLI commands and the default ApiListener configuration have been adjusted to these paths too.
The ApiListener object attributes cert_path
, key_path
and ca_path
have been deprecated and removed from the example configuration.
Migration Path
Note
Icinga 2 automatically migrates the certificates to the new default location if they are configured and detected in
/etc/icinga2/pki
.
During startup, the migration kicks in and ensures to copy the certificates to the new
location. This will also happen if someone updates the certificate files in /etc/icinga2/pki
to ensure that the new certificate location always has the latest files.
This has been implemented in the Icinga 2 binary to ensure it works on both Linux/Unix and the Windows platform.
If you are not using the built-in CLI commands and setup wizards to deploy the client certificates, please ensure to update your deployment tools/scripts. This mainly affects
- Puppet modules
- Ansible playbooks
- Chef cookbooks
- Salt recipes
- Custom scripts, e.g. Windows Powershell or self-made implementations
In order to support a smooth migration between versions older than 2.8 and future releases,
the built-in certificate migration path is planned to exist as long as the deprecated
ApiListener
object attributes exist.
You are safe to use the existing configuration paths inside the api
feature.
Example
Look at the following example taken from the Director Linux deployment script for clients.
- Ensure that the default certificate path is changed from
/etc/icinga2/pki
to/var/lib/icinga2/certs
.
-ICINGA2_SSL_DIR="${ICINGA2_CONF_DIR}/pki"
+ICINGA2_SSL_DIR="${ICINGA2_STATE_DIR}/lib/icinga2/certs"
- Remove the ApiListener configuration attributes.
object ApiListener "api" {
- cert_path = SysconfDir + "/icinga2/pki/${ICINGA2_NODENAME}.crt"
- key_path = SysconfDir + "/icinga2/pki/${ICINGA2_NODENAME}.key"
- ca_path = SysconfDir + "/icinga2/pki/ca.crt"
accept_commands = true
accept_config = true
}
Test the script with a fresh client installation before putting it into production.
Tip
Please support module and script developers in their migration. If you find any project which would require these changes, create an issue or a patchset in a PR and help them out. Thanks in advance!
On-Demand Signing and CA Proxy
Icinga 2 v2.8 supports the following features inside the cluster:
- Forward signing requests from clients through a satellite instance to a signing master ("CA Proxy").
- Signing requests without a ticket. The master instance allows to list and sign CSRs ("On-Demand Signing").
In order to use these features, all instances must be upgraded to v2.8.
More details in this chapter.
Windows Client
Windows versions older than Windows 10/Server 2016 require the Universal C Runtime for Windows.
Removed Bottom Up Client Mode
This client mode was deprecated in 2.6 and was removed in 2.8.
The node CLI command does not provide list
or update-config
anymore.
Note
The old migration guide can be found on GitHub.
The clients don't need to have a local conf.d
directory included.
Icinga 2 continues to run with the generated and imported configuration. You are advised to migrate any existing configuration to the "top down" mode with the help of the Icinga Director or config management tools such as Puppet, Ansible, etc.
Removed Classic UI Config Package
The config meta package classicui-config
and the configuration files
have been removed. You need to manually configure
this legacy interface. Create a backup of the configuration
before upgrading and re-configure it afterwards.
Flapping Configuration
Icinga 2 v2.8 implements a new flapping detection algorithm which splits the threshold configuration into low and high settings.
flapping_threshold
is deprecated and does not have any effect when flapping
is enabled. Please remove flapping_threshold
from your configuration. This
attribute will be removed in v2.9.
Instead you need to use the flapping_threshold_low
and flapping_threshold_high
attributes. More details can be found here.
Deprecated Configuration Attributes
Object | Attribute |
---|---|
ApiListener | cert_path (migration happens) |
ApiListener | key_path (migration happens) |
ApiListener | ca_path (migration happens) |
Host, Service | flapping_threshold (has no effect) |
Upgrading to v2.7
v2.7.0 provided new notification scripts and commands. Please ensure to update your configuration accordingly. An advisory has been published here.
In case are having troubles with OpenSSL 1.1.0 and the public CA certificates, please read this advisory and check the troubleshooting chapter.
If Icinga 2 fails to start with an empty reference to $ICINGA2_CACHE_DIR
ensure to set it inside /etc/sysconfig/icinga2
(RHEL) or /etc/default/icinga2
(Debian).
RPM packages will put a file called /etc/sysconfig/icinga2.rpmnew
if you have modified the original file.
Example on CentOS 7:
vim /etc/sysconfig/icinga2
ICINGA2_CACHE_DIR=/var/cache/icinga2
systemctl restart icinga2
Upgrading the MySQL database
If you want to upgrade an existing Icinga 2 instance, check the
/usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/upgrade
directory for incremental schema upgrade file(s).
Note
If there isn't an upgrade file for your current version available, there's nothing to do.
Apply all database schema upgrade files incrementally.
# mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/upgrade/<version>.sql
The Icinga 2 DB IDO feature checks the required database schema version on startup and generates an log message if not satisfied.
Example: You are upgrading Icinga 2 from version 2.4.0
to 2.8.0
. Look into
the upgrade
directory:
$ ls /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/upgrade/
2.0.2.sql 2.1.0.sql 2.2.0.sql 2.3.0.sql 2.4.0.sql 2.5.0.sql 2.6.0.sql 2.8.0.sql
There are two new upgrade files called 2.5.0.sql
, 2.6.0.sql
and 2.8.0.sql
which must be applied incrementally to your IDO database.
# mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/upgrade/2.5.0.sql
# mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/upgrade/2.6.0.sql
# mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/upgrade/2.8.0.sql
Upgrading the PostgreSQL database
If you want to upgrade an existing Icinga 2 instance, check the
/usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/upgrade
directory for incremental schema upgrade file(s).
Note
If there isn't an upgrade file for your current version available, there's nothing to do.
Apply all database schema upgrade files incrementally.
# export PGPASSWORD=icinga
# psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/upgrade/<version>.sql
The Icinga 2 DB IDO feature checks the required database schema version on startup and generates an log message if not satisfied.
Example: You are upgrading Icinga 2 from version 2.4.0
to 2.8.0
. Look into
the upgrade
directory:
$ ls /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/upgrade/
2.0.2.sql 2.1.0.sql 2.2.0.sql 2.3.0.sql 2.4.0.sql 2.5.0.sql 2.6.0.sql 2.8.0.sql
There are two new upgrade files called 2.5.0.sql
, 2.6.0.sql
and 2.8.0.sql
which must be applied incrementally to your IDO database.
# export PGPASSWORD=icinga
# psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/upgrade/2.5.0.sql
# psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/upgrade/2.6.0.sql
# psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/upgrade/2.8.0.sql