##################################################################### # IDO2DB DAEMON CONFIG FILE ##################################################################### # LOCK FILE # This is the lockfile that IDO2DB will use to store its PID number # in when it is running in daemon mode. lock_file=/usr/local/icinga-pgsql/var/ido2db.lock # USER/GROUP PRIVILIGES # These options determine the user/group that the daemon should run as. # You can specify a number (uid/gid) or a name for either option. ido2db_user=icinga ido2db_group=icinga # SOCKET TYPE # This option determines what type of socket the daemon will create # an accept connections from. # Value: # unix = Unix domain socket (default) # tcp = TCP socket socket_type=unix #socket_type=tcp # SOCKET NAME # This option determines the name and path of the UNIX domain # socket that the daemon will create and accept connections from. # This option is only valid if the socket type specified above # is "unix". socket_name=/usr/local/icinga-pgsql/var/ido.sock # SOCKET PERMISSIONS # This option determines the permissions of the Unix domain # socket. This option is only valid if the socket type specified # above is "unix". Default permissions are set to 0755. socket_perm=0755 # TCP PORT # This option determines what port the daemon will listen for # connections on. This option is only vlaid if the socket type # specified above is "tcp". tcp_port=5668 # ENCRYPTION # This option determines if the ido2db daemon will accept SSL to encrypt the # network traffic between module and ido2db daemon. # Both sides have to enable this feature which depends on SSL Libraries # like openssl or kerberos # This option is only valid if the output type # option specified above is "tcpsocket". # # A value of '1' will enable this feature use_ssl=0 # LIBDBI DRIVER DIRECTORY !!!EXPERIMENTAL!!! # This option is only valid when using libdbi as database abstraction layer # (so not oracle) on compile time. By default, libdbi will figure out the # correct path itsself. If you want to change it, enable and change the value. # # Default: not in use, enable and change to e.g. /usr/local/lib/dbd #libdbi_driver_dir=/usr/local/lib/dbd # DATABASE SERVER TYPE # This option determines what type of DB server the daemon should # connect to. # Values: # mysql = MySQL # pgsql = PostgreSQL # db2 = DB2 # firebird = Firebird # freetds = FreeTDS # ingres = Ingres # msql = MSSQL # oracle = Oracle # sqlite = SQLite # sqlite3 = SQLite3 # Currently supported: # libdbi: mysql, pgsql # ocilib: oracle db_servertype=pgsql # DATABASE HOST # This option specifies what host the DB server is running on. # Note: Oracle will ignore this setting db_host=127.0.0.1 # DATABASE PORT # This option specifies the port that the DB server is running on. # Values: # 3306 = Default MySQL port # 5432 = Default PostgreSQL port # 1521 = Default Oracle port # # Note: ocilib will ignore this, you have to modify your tnsnames.ora db_port=5432 # DATABASE SOCKET # Optional db_socket allows to specify a different socket location. # This will be passed to libdbi MySQL as mysql_unix_socket, while # PostgeSQL overrides the port, ocilib Oracle ignores this setting. # # Note: This setting overrules db_port, making it useless! #db_socket=/var/lib/mysql/mysql.sock # DATABASE NAME # This option specifies the name of the database that should be used. # # Note: Oracle with ocilib requires tnsnames.ora filled with host, port # and database information. you can use the SID then with ocilib and # one of the following: # //DBSERVER/SID # SID db_name=icinga # DATABASE TABLE PREFIX # Determines the prefix (if any) that should be prepended to table names. # If you modify the table prefix, you'll need to modify the SQL script for # creating the database! # # Note: Oracle will ignore this prefix since the tablename length will exceed # 30 characters. db_prefix=icinga_ # DATABASE USERNAME/PASSWORD # This is the username/password that will be used to authenticate to the DB. # The user needs at least SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE privileges on # the database. db_user=icinga db_pass=icinga ## TABLE TRIMMING OPTIONS # Several database tables containing Icinga event data can become quite large # over time. Most admins will want to trim these tables and keep only a # certain amount of data in them. The options below are used to specify the # age (in MINUTES) that data should be allowd to remain in various tables # before it is deleted. Using a value of zero (0) for any value means that # that particular table should NOT be automatically trimmed. # # Remember: There are no optimized settings, it depends on your rdbm install, # number/checkinterval of host/service-checks and your desired time of data # savings - historical vs live-data. Please keep in mind that low delete # intervals may interfere with insert/update data from Icinga. # ***DEFAULT*** # Keep timed events for 1 hour max_timedevents_age=60 # Keep system commands for 1 day max_systemcommands_age=1440 # Keep service checks for 1 day max_servicechecks_age=1440 # Keep host checks for 1 day max_hostchecks_age=1440 # Keep event handlers for 1 week max_eventhandlers_age=10080 # Keep external commands for 1 week max_externalcommands_age=10080 # Keep logentries for 31 days max_logentries_age=44640 # Keep acknowledgements for 31 days max_acknowledgements_age=44640 # Keep notifications for 31 days max_notifications_age=44640 # Keep contactnotifications for 31 days max_contactnotifications_age=44640 # Keep contactnotificationmethods for 31 days max_contactnotificationmethods_age=44640 ## CLEAN REALTIME TABLES AT CORE STARTUP !!!EXPERIMENTAL!!! # If you don't want to clean all those tables, set this option to 0. # This can be useful if the deletes slow down the normal data # processing. # Values: 0 - don't clean # 1 - clean (default) clean_realtime_tables_on_core_startup=1 ## CLEAN CONFIG TABLES AT CORE STARTUP !!!EXPERIMENTAL!!! # If you don't want to clean all those tables, set this option to 0. # This can be useful if the deletes slow down the normal data # processing. # Furthermore if you need to keep e.g. the state of customvariables # or any other tables not directly linked to the objects table. # Values: 0 - don't clean # 1 - clean (default) clean_config_tables_on_core_startup=1 # ***EXPERIMENTAL*** DB TRIMMING INTERVAL # ido2db default db trimming interval is set to 3600 SECONDS. # Some environments will require higher or lower values. This setting is # highly experimental!!! # Modify at your own risk to set the interval DB trimming interval # to an appropriate value. If left blank, it defaults to 3600 seconds. trim_db_interval=3600 # DB TRIMMING THREAD DELAY ON STARTUP # ido2db spawns a thread for parallel db trimming. This option can be # modified to extend/minimize the initial wait delay at startup. # Default is set to 300 seconds in order to allow startup routines. # 300 seconds is also the minimum value, lower ones will be overwritten. housekeeping_thread_startup_delay=300 # DEBUG LEVEL # This option determines how much (if any) debugging information will # be written to the debug file. OR values together to log multiple # types of information. # Values: -1 = Everything # 0 = Nothing # 1 = Process info # 2 = SQL queries debug_level=0 # DEBUG VERBOSITY # This option determines how verbose the debug log out will be. # Values: 0 = Brief output # 1 = More detailed # 2 = Very detailed debug_verbosity=2 # DEBUG FILE # This option determines where the daemon should write debugging information. debug_file=/usr/local/icinga-pgsql/var/ido2db.debug # MAX DEBUG FILE SIZE # This option determines the maximum size (in bytes) of the debug file. If # the file grows larger than this size, it will be renamed with a .old # extension. If a file already exists with a .old extension it will # automatically be deleted. This helps ensure your disk space usage doesn't # get out of control when debugging. # 100M max_debug_file_size=100000000 # DEBUG READABLE TIMESTAMP # This option will allow you to set a readable timestamp instead of the # default unix timestamp. # Values: 0 = disabled, 1 = enabled debug_readable_timestamp=0 # OCI ERRORS TO SYSLOG # ido2db registers an error handler in ocilib which spits all msg # into debug and syslog by default. Setting this option to 0, # syslog output will be disabled, only debug log will be used (if # appropriate debug_level is set). oci_errors_to_syslog=1 # ORACLE TRACE LEVEL # This setting activates oracle session trace for each ido2db connection using trace event # Level value must be one of the currently supported values (1,4,8,12) or 0 for off # this requires explicit "alter session" privilege # select rights to v$session and v$process are recommanded # 0 - pseudo level TRACE OFF # 1 – standard SQL trace, no wait events, or bind variables. # 4 – Bind variables only # 8 – Wait events only # 12 – Bind Variables and Wait Events oracle_trace_level=0 # ENABLE SLA - DEPRECATED! # This setting enables collection of SLA data in the slahistory table # Values: 0 = disabled, 1 = enabled # # WARNING: This setting will be deprecated in 1.9 and not developed # anymore, as it has never been used by any Icinga application. enable_sla=0