31 KiB
Getting Started
This tutorial is a step-by-step introduction to installing Icinga 2 and Icinga Web 2. It assumes that you are familiar with the operating system you're using to install Icinga 2.
In case you are upgrading an existing setup, please ensure to follow the upgrade documentation.
Setting up Icinga 2
First off you have to install Icinga 2. The preferred way of doing this is to use the official package repositories depending on which operating system and distribution you are running.
Distribution | Repository |
---|---|
Debian | Icinga Repository |
Ubuntu | Icinga Repository |
RHEL/CentOS | Icinga Repository |
openSUSE | Icinga Repository |
SLES | Icinga Repository |
Gentoo | Upstream |
FreeBSD | Upstream |
OpenBSD | Upstream |
ArchLinux | Upstream |
Alpine Linux | Upstream |
Packages for distributions other than the ones listed above may also be available. Please contact your distribution packagers.
Package Repositories
You need to add the Icinga repository to your package management configuration.
The following commands must be executed with root
permissions unless noted otherwise.
Debian:
apt-get -y install apt-transport-https
wget -O - https://packages.icinga.com/icinga.key | apt-key add -
echo 'deb https://packages.icinga.com/debian icinga-stretch main' >/etc/apt/sources.list.d/icinga.list
apt-get update
Ubuntu:
apt-get -y install apt-transport-https
wget -O - https://packages.icinga.com/icinga.key | apt-key add -
echo 'deb https://packages.icinga.com/ubuntu icinga-xenial main' >/etc/apt/sources.list.d/icinga.list
apt-get update
RHEL/CentOS 7:
yum install https://packages.icinga.com/epel/icinga-rpm-release-7-latest.noarch.rpm
RHEL/CentOS 6:
yum install https://packages.icinga.com/epel/icinga-rpm-release-6-latest.noarch.rpm
Fedora 27:
dnf install https://packages.icinga.com/fedora/icinga-rpm-release-27-latest.noarch.rpm
Fedora 26:
dnf install https://packages.icinga.com/fedora/icinga-rpm-release-26-latest.noarch.rpm
SLES 12:
zypper ar https://packages.icinga.com/SUSE/ICINGA-release.repo
zypper ref
SLES 11:
zypper ar https://packages.icinga.com/SUSE/ICINGA-release-11.repo
zypper ref
openSUSE:
zypper ar https://packages.icinga.com/openSUSE/ICINGA-release.repo
zypper ref
Alpine Linux:
echo "http://dl-cdn.alpinelinux.org/alpine/edge/community" >> /etc/apk/repositories
apk update
RHEL/CentOS EPEL Repository
The packages for RHEL/CentOS depend on other packages which are distributed as part of the EPEL repository.
CentOS 7/6:
yum install epel-release
If you are using RHEL you need to enable the optional
repository and then install
the EPEL rpm package.
subscription-manager repos --enable rhel-7-server-optional-rpms
# or
subscription-manager repos --enable rhel-6-server-optional-rpms
SLES Security Repository
The packages for SLES 11 depend on the openssl1
package which is distributed
as part of the SLES 11 Security Module.
SLES 12 SDK
Icinga 2 requires the libboost_chrono1_54_0
package from the SLES 12 SDK
repository. Refer to the SUSE Enterprise
Linux documentation for further information.
Alpine Linux Notes
The example provided assumes that you are running Alpine edge, which is the -dev branch and is a rolling release. If you are using a stable version please "pin" the edge repository on the latest Icinga 2 package version. In order to correctly manage your repository, please follow these instructions
Installing Icinga 2
You can install Icinga 2 by using your distribution's package manager
to install the icinga2
package. The following commands must be executed
with root
permissions unless noted otherwise.
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install icinga2
RHEL/CentOS 6:
yum install icinga2
chkconfig icinga2 on
service icinga2 start
RHEL/CentOS 7 and Fedora:
yum install icinga2
systemctl enable icinga2
systemctl start icinga2
SLES/openSUSE:
zypper install icinga2
FreeBSD:
pkg install icinga2
Alpine Linux:
apk add icinga2
Enabled Features during Installation
The default installation will enable three features required for a basic Icinga 2 installation:
checker
for executing checksnotification
for sending notificationsmainlog
for writing theicinga2.log
file
You can verify that by calling icinga2 feature list
CLI command to see which features are
enabled and disabled.
# icinga2 feature list
Disabled features: api command compatlog debuglog gelf graphite icingastatus ido-mysql ido-pgsql influxdb livestatus opentsdb perfdata statusdata syslog
Enabled features: checker mainlog notification
Installation Paths
By default Icinga 2 uses the following files and directories:
Path | Description |
---|---|
/etc/icinga2 | Contains Icinga 2 configuration files. |
/usr/lib/systemd/system/icinga2.service | The Icinga 2 Systemd service file on systems using Systemd. |
/etc/systemd/system/icinga2.service.d/limits.conf | On distributions with Systemd >227, additional service limits are required. |
/etc/init.d/icinga2 | The Icinga 2 init script on systems using SysVinit or OpenRC. |
/usr/sbin/icinga2 | Shell wrapper for the Icinga 2 binary. |
/usr/lib*/icinga2 | Libraries and the Icinga 2 binary (use find /usr -type f -name icinga2 to locate the binary path). |
/usr/share/doc/icinga2 | Documentation files that come with Icinga 2. |
/usr/share/icinga2/include | The Icinga Template Library and plugin command configuration. |
/var/lib/icinga2 | Icinga 2 state file, cluster log, master CA, node certificates and configuration files (cluster, api). |
/var/run/icinga2 | PID file. |
/var/run/icinga2/cmd | Command pipe and Livestatus socket. |
/var/cache/icinga2 | status.dat/objects.cache, icinga2.debug files. |
/var/spool/icinga2 | Used for performance data spool files. |
/var/log/icinga2 | Log file location and compat/ directory for the CompatLogger feature. |
FreeBSD uses slightly different paths:
By default Icinga 2 uses the following files and directories:
Path | Description |
---|---|
/usr/local/etc/icinga2 | Contains Icinga 2 configuration files. |
/usr/local/etc/rc.d/icinga2 | The Icinga 2 init script. |
/usr/local/sbin/icinga2 | Shell wrapper for the Icinga 2 binary. |
/usr/local/lib/icinga2 | Libraries and the Icinga 2 binary. |
/usr/local/share/doc/icinga2 | Documentation files that come with Icinga 2. |
/usr/local/share/icinga2/include | The Icinga Template Library and plugin command configuration. |
/var/lib/icinga2 | Icinga 2 state file, cluster log, master CA, node certificates and configuration files (cluster, api). |
/var/run/icinga2 | PID file. |
/var/run/icinga2/cmd | Command pipe and Livestatus socket. |
/var/cache/icinga2 | status.dat/objects.cache, icinga2.debug files. |
/var/spool/icinga2 | Used for performance data spool files. |
/var/log/icinga2 | Log file location and compat/ directory for the CompatLogger feature. |
Setting up Check Plugins
Without plugins Icinga 2 does not know how to check external services. The Monitoring Plugins Project provides an extensive set of plugins which can be used with Icinga 2 to check whether services are working properly.
These plugins are required to make the example configuration work out-of-the-box.
For your convenience here is a list of package names for some of the more popular operating systems/distributions:
OS/Distribution | Package Name | Repository | Installation Path |
---|---|---|---|
RHEL/CentOS | nagios-plugins-all | EPEL | /usr/lib/nagios/plugins or /usr/lib64/nagios/plugins |
SLES/OpenSUSE | monitoring-plugins | server:monitoring | /usr/lib/nagios/plugins |
Debian/Ubuntu | monitoring-plugins | - | /usr/lib/nagios/plugins |
FreeBSD | monitoring-plugins | - | /usr/local/libexec/nagios |
Alpine Linux | monitoring-plugins | - | /usr/lib/monitoring-plugins |
OS X | nagios-plugins | MacPorts, Homebrew | /opt/local/libexec or /usr/local/sbin |
The recommended way of installing these standard plugins is to use your distribution's package manager.
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install monitoring-plugins
RHEL/CentOS:
yum install nagios-plugins-all
The packages for RHEL/CentOS depend on other packages which are distributed as part of the EPEL repository. Please make sure to enable this repository by following these instructions.
Fedora:
dnf install nagios-plugins-all
SLES/openSUSE:
zypper install monitoring-plugins
The packages for SLES/OpenSUSE depend on other packages which are distributed as part of the server:monitoring repository. Please make sure to enable this repository beforehand.
FreeBSD:
pkg install monitoring-plugins
Alpine Linux:
apk add monitoring-plugins
Note: For Alpine you don't need to explicitly add the monitoring-plugins
package since it is a dependency of
icinga2
and is pulled automatically.
Depending on which directory your plugins are installed into you may need to
update the global PluginDir
constant in your Icinga 2 configuration.
This constant is used by the check command definitions contained in the Icinga Template Library
to determine where to find the plugin binaries.
Note
Please refer to the service monitoring chapter for details about how to integrate additional check plugins into your Icinga 2 setup.
Running Icinga 2
Systemd Service
Some distributions (e.g. Fedora, openSUSE and RHEL/CentOS 7) use Systemd. The Icinga 2 packages automatically install the necessary Systemd unit files.
The Icinga 2 Systemd service can be (re-)started, reloaded, stopped and also queried for its current status.
# systemctl status icinga2
icinga2.service - Icinga host/service/network monitoring system
Loaded: loaded (/usr/lib/systemd/system/icinga2.service; disabled)
Active: active (running) since Mi 2014-07-23 13:39:38 CEST; 15s ago
Process: 21692 ExecStart=/usr/sbin/icinga2 -c ${ICINGA2_CONFIG_FILE} -d -e ${ICINGA2_ERROR_LOG} -u ${ICINGA2_USER} -g ${ICINGA2_GROUP} (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Process: 21674 ExecStartPre=/usr/sbin/icinga2-prepare-dirs /etc/sysconfig/icinga2 (code=exited, status=0/SUCCESS)
Main PID: 21727 (icinga2)
CGroup: /system.slice/icinga2.service
21727 /usr/sbin/icinga2 -c /etc/icinga2/icinga2.conf -d -e /var/log/icinga2/error.log -u icinga -g icinga --no-stack-rlimit
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 309 Service(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 1 User(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 15 Notification(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 4 ScheduledDowntime(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 1 UserGroup(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 1 IcingaApplication(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif icinga2[21692]: [2014-07-23 13:39:38 +0200] information/ConfigItem: Checked 8 Dependency(s).
Jul 23 13:39:38 nbmif systemd[1]: Started Icinga host/service/network monitoring system.
The systemctl
command supports the following actions:
Command | Description |
---|---|
start | The start action starts the Icinga 2 daemon. |
stop | The stop action stops the Icinga 2 daemon. |
restart | The restart action is a shortcut for running the stop action followed by start . |
reload | The reload action sends the HUP signal to Icinga 2 which causes it to restart. Unlike the restart action reload does not wait until Icinga 2 has restarted. |
status | The status action checks if Icinga 2 is running. |
enable | The enable action enables the service being started at system boot time (similar to chkconfig ) |
Examples:
# systemctl enable icinga2
# systemctl restart icinga2
Job for icinga2.service failed. See 'systemctl status icinga2.service' and 'journalctl -xn' for details.
If you're stuck with configuration errors, you can manually invoke the configuration validation.
Tip
If you are running into fork errors with Systemd enabled distributions, please check the troubleshooting chapter.
Init Script
Icinga 2's init script is installed in /etc/init.d/icinga2
(/usr/local/etc/rc.d/icinga2
on FreeBSD) by default:
# /etc/init.d/icinga2
Usage: /etc/init.d/icinga2 {start|stop|restart|reload|checkconfig|status}
The init script supports the following actions:
Command | Description |
---|---|
start | The start action starts the Icinga 2 daemon. |
stop | The stop action stops the Icinga 2 daemon. |
restart | The restart action is a shortcut for running the stop action followed by start . |
reload | The reload action sends the HUP signal to Icinga 2 which causes it to restart. Unlike the restart action reload does not wait until Icinga 2 has restarted. |
checkconfig | The checkconfig action checks if the /etc/icinga2/icinga2.conf configuration file contains any errors. |
status | The status action checks if Icinga 2 is running. |
By default, the Icinga 2 daemon is running as icinga
user and group
using the init script. Using Debian packages the user and group are set to
nagios
for historical reasons.
FreeBSD
On FreeBSD you need to enable icinga2 in your rc.conf
# sysrc icinga2_enable=yes
# service icinga2 restart
SELinux
SELinux is a mandatory access control (MAC) system on Linux which adds a fine-grained permission system for access to all system resources such as files, devices, networks and inter-process communication.
Icinga 2 provides its own SELinux policy. icinga2-selinux
is a policy package
for Red Hat Enterprise Linux 7 and derivatives. The package runs the targeted policy
which confines Icinga 2 including enabled features and running commands.
RHEL/CentOS 7:
yum install icinga2-selinux
Fedora:
dnf install icinga2-selinux
Read more about SELinux in this chapter.
Configuration Syntax Highlighting
Icinga 2 provides configuration examples for syntax highlighting using the vim
and nano
editors.
The RHEL and SUSE package icinga2-common
installs these files into /usr/share/doc/icinga2-common-[x.x.x]/syntax
(where [x.x.x]
is the version number, e.g. 2.4.3
or 2.4.4
). Sources provide these files in tools/syntax
.
On Debian systems the icinga2-common
package provides only the Nano configuration file (/usr/share/nano/icinga2.nanorc
);
to obtain the Vim configuration, please install the extra package vim-icinga2
. The files are located in /usr/share/vim/addons
.
Configuration Syntax Highlighting using Vim
Install the package vim-icinga2
with your distribution's package manager.
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install vim-icinga2 vim-addon-manager
vim-addon-manager -w install icinga2
Info: installing removed addon 'icinga2' to /var/lib/vim/addons
RHEL/CentOS/Fedora:
yum install vim-icinga2
SLES/openSUSE:
zypper install vim-icinga2
Alpine Linux:
apk add icinga2-vim
Ensure that syntax highlighting is enabled e.g. by editing the user's vimrc
configuration file:
# vim ~/.vimrc
syntax on
Test it:
# vim /etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf
Configuration Syntax Highlighting using Nano
Install the package nano-icinga2
with your distribution's package manager.
Debian/Ubuntu:
Note: The syntax files are installed with the icinga2-common
package already.
RHEL/CentOS/Fedora:
yum install nano-icinga2
SLES/openSUSE:
zypper install nano-icinga2
Copy the /etc/nanorc
sample file to your home directory.
$ cp /etc/nanorc ~/.nanorc
Include the icinga2.nanorc
file.
$ vim ~/.nanorc
## Icinga 2
include "/usr/share/nano/icinga2.nanorc"
Test it:
$ nano /etc/icinga2/conf.d/templates.conf
Setting up Icinga Web 2
Icinga 2 can be used with Icinga Web 2 and a variety of modules. This chapter explains how to set up Icinga Web 2.
The DB IDO (Database Icinga Data Output) feature for Icinga 2 take care of exporting all configuration and status information into a database.
Please choose whether to install MySQL or PostgreSQL.
Configuring DB IDO MySQL
Installing MySQL database server
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install mysql-server mysql-client
mysql_secure_installation
RHEL/CentOS 7 and Fedora:
yum install mariadb-server mariadb
systemctl enable mariadb
systemctl start mariadb
mysql_secure_installation
RHEL/CentOS 6:
yum install mysql-server mysql
chkconfig mysqld on
service mysqld start
mysql_secure_installation
SUSE:
zypper install mysql mysql-client
chkconfig mysqld on
service mysqld start
FreeBSD:
pkg install mysql56-server
sysrc mysql_enable=yes
service mysql-server restart
mysql_secure_installation
Alpine Linux:
apk add mariadb
rc-service mariadb setup
rc-update add mariadb default
rc-service mariadb start
Installing the IDO modules for MySQL
The next step is to install the icinga2-ido-mysql
package using your
distribution's package manager.
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install icinga2-ido-mysql
RHEL/CentOS:
yum install icinga2-ido-mysql
SUSE:
zypper install icinga2-ido-mysql
FreeBSD:
On FreeBSD the IDO modules for MySQL are included with the icinga2 package
and located at /usr/local/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/mysql.sql
.
Alpine Linux:
On Alpine Linux the IDO modules for MySQL are included with the icinga2
package
and located at /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/mysql.sql
.
Note
The Debian/Ubuntu packages provide a database configuration wizard by default. You can skip the automated setup and install/upgrade the database manually if you prefer.
Setting up the MySQL database
Set up a MySQL database for Icinga 2:
# mysql -u root -p
CREATE DATABASE icinga;
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, DROP, CREATE VIEW, INDEX, EXECUTE ON icinga.* TO 'icinga'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'icinga';
quit
After creating the database you can import the Icinga 2 IDO schema using the following command. Enter the root password into the prompt when asked.
mysql -u root -p icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-mysql/schema/mysql.sql
Enabling the IDO MySQL module
The package provides a new configuration file that is installed in
/etc/icinga2/features-available/ido-mysql.conf
. You can update
the database credentials in this file.
All available attributes are explained in the IdoMysqlConnection object chapter.
You can enable the ido-mysql
feature configuration file using
icinga2 feature enable
:
# icinga2 feature enable ido-mysql
Module 'ido-mysql' was enabled.
Make sure to restart Icinga 2 for these changes to take effect.
Restart Icinga 2.
systemctl restart icinga2
Alpine Linux:
rc-service icinga2 restart
Continue with the webserver setup.
Configuring DB IDO PostgreSQL
Installing PostgreSQL database server
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install postgresql
RHEL/CentOS 6:
yum install postgresql-server postgresql
chkconfig postgresql on
service postgresql initdb
service postgresql start
RHEL/CentOS 7:
yum install postgresql-server postgresql
postgresql-setup initdb
systemctl enable postgresql
systemctl start postgresql
SUSE:
zypper install postgresql postgresql-server
chkconfig postgresql on
service postgresql initdb
service postgresql start
FreeBSD:
pkg install postgresql93-server
sysrc postgresql_enable=yes
service postgresql initdb
service postgresql start
Alpine Linux:
apk add postgresql
rc-update add postgresql default
rc-service postgresql setup
rc-service postgresql start
Installing the IDO modules for PostgreSQL
The next step is to install the icinga2-ido-pgsql
package using your
distribution's package manager.
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install icinga2-ido-pgsql
RHEL/CentOS:
yum install icinga2-ido-pgsql
SUSE:
zypper install icinga2-ido-pgsql
FreeBSD:
On FreeBSD the IDO modules for PostgreSQL are included with the icinga2 package
and located at /usr/local/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/pgsql.sql
.
Alpine Linux:
On Alpine Linux the IDO modules for PostgreSQL are included with the icinga2
package
and located at /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/pgsql.sql
.
Note
Upstream Debian packages provide a database configuration wizard by default. You can skip the automated setup and install/upgrade the database manually if you prefer that.
Setting up the PostgreSQL database
Set up a PostgreSQL database for Icinga 2:
cd /tmp
sudo -u postgres psql -c "CREATE ROLE icinga WITH LOGIN PASSWORD 'icinga'"
sudo -u postgres createdb -O icinga -E UTF8 icinga
Note
It is assumed here that your locale is set to utf-8, you may run into problems otherwise.
Locate your pg_hba.conf
configuration file (Debian: /etc/postgresql/*/main/pg_hba.conf
,
RHEL/SUSE: /var/lib/pgsql/data/pg_hba.conf
), add the icinga user with md5
as authentication method and restart the postgresql server.
# 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
systemctl restart postgresql
After creating the database and permissions you need to import the IDO database schema using the following command:
export PGPASSWORD=icinga
psql -U icinga -d icinga < /usr/share/icinga2-ido-pgsql/schema/pgsql.sql
Enabling the IDO PostgreSQL module
The package provides a new configuration file that is installed in
/etc/icinga2/features-available/ido-pgsql.conf
. You can update
the database credentials in this file.
All available attributes are explained in the IdoPgsqlConnection object chapter.
You can enable the ido-pgsql
feature configuration file using
icinga2 feature enable
:
# icinga2 feature enable ido-pgsql
Module 'ido-pgsql' was enabled.
Make sure to restart Icinga 2 for these changes to take effect.
Restart Icinga 2.
systemctl restart icinga2
Alpine Linux:
rc-service icinga2 restart
Continue with the webserver setup.
Webserver
The preferred way of installing Icinga Web 2 is to use Apache as webserver in combination with PHP-FPM. If you prefer Nginx, please refer to the Icinga Web 2 documentation.
Debian/Ubuntu:
apt-get install apache2
RHEL/CentOS 7, Fedora:
yum install httpd
systemctl enable httpd
systemctl start httpd
RHEL/CentOS 6:
yum install httpd
chkconfig httpd on
service httpd start
SUSE:
zypper install apache2
chkconfig on
service apache2 start
FreeBSD (Nginx, but you could also use the apache24
package):
pkg install nginx php56-gettext php56-ldap php56-openssl php56-mysql php56-pdo_mysql php56-pgsql php56-pdo_pgsql php56-sockets php56-gd pecl-imagick pecl-intl
sysrc php_fpm_enable=yes
sysrc nginx_enable=yes
sed -i '' "s/listen\ =\ 127.0.0.1:9000/listen\ =\ \/var\/run\/php5-fpm.sock/" /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.conf
sed -i '' "s/;listen.owner/listen.owner/" /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.conf
sed -i '' "s/;listen.group/listen.group/" /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.conf
sed -i '' "s/;listen.mode/listen.mode/" /usr/local/etc/php-fpm.conf
service php-fpm start
service nginx start
Alpine Linux:
apk add apache2 php7-apache2
sed -i -e "s/^#LoadModule rewrite_module/LoadModule rewrite_module/" /etc/apache2/httpd.conf
rc-update add apache2 default
rc-service apache2 start
Firewall Rules
Enable port 80 (http). Best practice is to only enable port 443 (https) and use TLS certificates.
firewall-cmd:
firewall-cmd --add-service=http
firewall-cmd --permanent --add-service=http
iptables:
iptables -A INPUT -p tcp -m tcp --dport 80 -j ACCEPT
service iptables save
FreeBSD: Please consult the FreeBSD Handbook how to configure one of FreeBSD's firewalls.
Setting Up Icinga 2 REST API
Icinga Web 2 and other web interfaces require the REST API to send actions (reschedule check, etc.) and query object details.
You can run the CLI command icinga2 api setup
to enable the
api
feature and set up
certificates as well as a new API user root
with an auto-generated password in the
/etc/icinga2/conf.d/api-users.conf
configuration file:
icinga2 api setup
Edit the api-users.conf
file and add a new ApiUser object. Specify the permissions
attribute with minimal permissions required by Icinga Web 2.
vim /etc/icinga2/conf.d/api-users.conf
object ApiUser "icingaweb2" {
password = "Wijsn8Z9eRs5E25d"
permissions = [ "status/query", "actions/*", "objects/modify/*", "objects/query/*" ]
}
Restart Icinga 2 to activate the configuration.
systemctl restart icinga2
Alpine Linux:
rc-service icinga2 restart
Installing Icinga Web 2
Please consult the installation documentation for further instructions on how to install Icinga Web 2.
The Icinga 2 API can be defined as command transport in Icinga Web 2 >= 2.4.
Addons
A number of additional features are available in the form of addons. A list of popular addons is available in the Addons and Plugins chapter.
Backup
Ensure to include the following in your backups:
- Configuration files in
/etc/icinga2
- Certificate files in
/var/lib/icinga2/ca
(Master CA key pair) and/var/lib/icinga2/certs
(node certificates) - Runtime files in
/var/lib/icinga2
- Optional: IDO database backup
Backup: Database
MySQL/MariaDB:
PostgreSQL: