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Advanced Topics
This chapter provides details for advanced Icinga Web 2 topics.
Global URL Parameters
Parameters starting with _
are for development purposes only.
Parameter | Value | Description |
---|---|---|
showFullscreen | - | Hides the left menu and optimizes the layout for full screen resolution. |
showCompact | - | Provides a compact view. Hides the title and upper menu. This is helpful to embed a dashboard item into an external iframe. |
format | json/csv/sql | Selected views can be exported as JSON or CSV. This also is available in the upper menu. You can also export the SQL queries for manual analysis. |
_dev | 0/1 | Whether the server should return compressed or full JS/CSS files. This helps debugging browser console errors. |
Examples for showFullscreen
:
http://localhost/icingaweb2/dashboard?showFullscreen http://localhost/icingaweb2/monitoring/list/services?service_problem=1&sort=service_severity&showFullscreen
Examples for showCompact
:
http://localhost/icingaweb2/dashboard?showCompact&showFullscreen http://localhost/icingaweb2/monitoring/list/services?service_problem=1&sort=service_severity&showCompact
Examples for format
:
http://localhost/icingaweb2/monitoring/list/services?format=json http://localhost/icingaweb2/monitoring/list/services?service_problem=1&sort=service_severity&dir=desc&format=csv
VirtualHost Configuration
This describes how to run Icinga Web 2 on your FQDN's /
entry point without
any redirect to /icingaweb2
.
VirtualHost Configuration for Apache
Use the setup CLI commands to generate the default Apache configuration which serves
Icinga Web 2 underneath /icingaweb2
.
The next steps are to create the VirtualHost configuration:
- Copy the
<Directory "/usr/share/icingaweb2/public">
into the main VHost configuration. Don't forget to correct the indent. - Set the
DocumentRoot
variable to look into/usr/share/icingaweb2/public
- Modify the
RewriteBase
variable to use/
instead of/icingaweb2
Example on RHEL/CentOS:
vim /etc/httpd/conf.d/web.icinga.com.conf
<VirtualHost *:80>
ServerName web.icinga.com
## Vhost docroot
# modified for Icinga Web 2
DocumentRoot "/usr/share/icingaweb2/public"
## Rewrite rules
RewriteEngine On
<Directory "/usr/share/icingaweb2/public">
Options SymLinksIfOwnerMatch
AllowOverride None
<IfModule mod_authz_core.c>
# Apache 2.4
<RequireAll>
Require all granted
</RequireAll>
</IfModule>
<IfModule !mod_authz_core.c>
# Apache 2.2
Order allow,deny
Allow from all
</IfModule>
SetEnv ICINGAWEB_CONFIGDIR "/etc/icingaweb2"
EnableSendfile Off
<IfModule mod_rewrite.c>
RewriteEngine on
# modified base
RewriteBase /
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -s [OR]
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -l [OR]
RewriteCond %{REQUEST_FILENAME} -d
RewriteRule ^.*$ - [NC,L]
RewriteRule ^.*$ index.php [NC,L]
</IfModule>
<IfModule !mod_rewrite.c>
DirectoryIndex error_norewrite.html
ErrorDocument 404 /error_norewrite.html
</IfModule>
</Directory>
</VirtualHost>
Reload Apache and open the FQDN in your web browser.
systemctl reload httpd
Advanced Authentication Tips
Manual User Creation for Database Authentication Backend
Icinga Web 2 uses the MD5 based BSD password algorithm. For generating a password hash, please use the following command:
openssl passwd -1 password
Note: The switch to
openssl passwd
is the number one (-1
) for using the MD5 based BSD password algorithm.
Insert the user into the database using the generated password hash:
INSERT INTO icingaweb_user (name, active, password_hash) VALUES ('icingaadmin', 1, 'hash from openssl');
Installing Icinga Web 2 from Source
Although the preferred way of installing Icinga Web 2 is to use packages, it is also possible to install Icinga Web 2 directly from source.
Getting the Source
First of all, you need to download the sources.
Git clone:
cd /usr/share/
git clone https://github.com/Icinga/icingaweb2.git icingaweb2
Tarball download (latest release):
cd /usr/share
wget https://github.com/Icinga/icingaweb2/archive/v2.4.1.zip
unzip v2.4.1.zip
mv icingaweb2-2.4.1 icingaweb2
Installing Requirements from Source
You will need to install certain dependencies depending on your setup listed here.
The following example installs Apache2 as web server, MySQL as RDBMS and uses the PHP adapter for MySQL. Adopt the package requirements to your needs (e.g. adding ldap for authentication) and distribution.
Example for RHEL/CentOS/Fedora:
yum install httpd mysql-server
yum install php php-gd php-intl php-ZendFramework php-ZendFramework-Db-Adapter-Pdo-Mysql
The setup wizard will check the pre-requisites later on.
Installing Icinga Web 2
Choose a target directory and move Icinga Web 2 there.
mv icingaweb2 /usr/share/icingaweb2
Configuring the Web Server
Use icingacli
to generate web server configuration for either Apache or nginx.
Apache:
./bin/icingacli setup config webserver apache --document-root /usr/share/icingaweb2/public
nginx:
./bin/icingacli setup config webserver nginx --document-root /usr/share/icingaweb2/public
Save the output as new file in your webserver's configuration directory.
Example for Apache on RHEL or CentOS:
./bin/icingacli setup config webserver apache --document-root /usr/share/icingaweb2/public > /etc/httpd/conf.d/icingaweb2.conf
Example for Apache on SUSE:
./bin/icingacli setup config webserver apache --document-root /usr/share/icingaweb2/public > /etc/apache2/conf.d/icingaweb2.conf
Example for Apache on Debian Jessie:
./bin/icingacli setup config webserver apache --document-root /usr/share/icingaweb2/public > /etc/apache2/conf-available/icingaweb2.conf
a2enconf icingaweb2
Example for Apache on Alpine Linux:
icingacli setup config webserver apache --document-root /usr/share/webapps/icingaweb2/public > /etc/apache2/conf.d/icingaweb2.conf
Preparing Icinga Web 2 Setup
You can set up Icinga Web 2 quickly and easily with the Icinga Web 2 setup wizard which is available the first time you visit Icinga Web 2 in your browser. Please follow the steps listed below for preparing the web setup.
Because both web and CLI must have access to configuration and logs, permissions will be managed using a special system group. The web server user and CLI user have to be added to this system group.
Add the system group icingaweb2
in the first place.
Fedora, RHEL, CentOS, SLES and OpenSUSE:
groupadd -r icingaweb2
Debian and Ubuntu:
addgroup --system icingaweb2
Add your web server's user to the system group icingaweb2
and restart the web server:
Fedora, RHEL and CentOS:
usermod -a -G icingaweb2 apache
service httpd restart
SLES and OpenSUSE:
usermod -A icingaweb2 wwwrun
service apache2 restart
Debian and Ubuntu:
usermod -a -G icingaweb2 www-data
service apache2 restart
Alpine Linux:
gpasswd -a apache icingaweb2
rc-service apache2 restart
Use icingacli
to create the configuration directory which defaults to /etc/icingaweb2:
./bin/icingacli setup config directory
When using the web setup you are required to authenticate using a token. In order to generate a token use the
icingacli
:
./bin/icingacli setup token create
In case you do not remember the token you can show it using the icingacli
:
./bin/icingacli setup token show
Icinga Web 2 Setup Wizard
Finally visit Icinga Web 2 in your browser to access the setup wizard and complete the installation:
/icingaweb2/setup
.
Paste the previously generated token and follow the steps on-screen. Then you are done here.
Icinga Web 2 Manual Setup
If you have chosen not to run the setup wizard, you will need further knowledge about
- manual creation of the Icinga Web 2 database
icingaweb2
including a default user (optional as authentication and session backend) - additional configuration for the application
- additional configuration for the monitoring module (e.g. the IDO database and external command pipe from Icinga 2)
This comes in handy if you are planning to deploy Icinga Web 2 automatically using Puppet, Ansible, Chef, etc.
Warning
Read the documentation on the respective linked configuration sections before deploying the configuration manually.
If you are unsure about certain settings, use the setup wizard once and then collect the generated configuration as well as sql dumps.
Icinga Web 2 Manual Database Setup
Create the database and add a new user as shown below for MySQL/MariaDB:
sudo mysql -p
CREATE DATABASE icingaweb2;
GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, DROP, CREATE VIEW, INDEX, EXECUTE ON icingaweb2.* TO 'icingaweb2'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'icingaweb2';
quit
mysql -p icingaweb2 < /usr/share/doc/icingaweb2/schema/mysql.schema.sql
Then generate a new password hash as described in the authentication docs
and use it to insert a new user called icingaadmin
into the database.
mysql -p icingaweb2
INSERT INTO icingaweb_user (name, active, password_hash) VALUES ('icingaadmin', 1, '$1$EzxLOFDr$giVx3bGhVm4lDUAw6srGX1');
quit
Icinga Web 2 Manual Configuration
resources.ini providing the details for the Icinga Web 2 and Icinga 2 IDO database configuration. Example for MySQL:
vim /etc/icingaweb2/resources.ini
[icingaweb2]
type = "db"
db = "mysql"
host = "localhost"
port = "3306"
dbname = "icingaweb2"
username = "icingaweb2"
password = "icingaweb2"
[icinga2]
type = "db"
db = "mysql"
host = "localhost"
port = "3306"
dbname = "icinga"
username = "icinga"
password = "icinga"
config.ini defining general application settings.
vim /etc/icingaweb2/config.ini
[logging]
log = "syslog"
level = "ERROR"
application = "icingaweb2"
[preferences]
type = "db"
resource = "icingaweb2"
authentication.ini for e.g. using the previously created database.
vim /etc/icingaweb2/authentication.ini
[icingaweb2]
backend = "db"
resource = "icingaweb2"
roles.ini granting the previously added icingaadmin
user all permissions.
vim /etc/icingaweb2/roles.ini
[admins]
users = "icingaadmin"
permissions = "*"
Icinga Web 2 Manual Configuration Monitoring Module
config.ini defining additional security settings.
vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/config.ini
[security]
protected_customvars = "*pw*,*pass*,community"
backends.ini referencing the Icinga 2 DB IDO resource.
vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/backends.ini
[icinga2]
type = "ido"
resource = "icinga2"
commandtransports.ini defining the Icinga 2 API command transport.
vim /etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/commandtransports.ini
[icinga2]
transport = "api"
host = "localhost"
port = "5665"
username = "api"
password = "api"
Icinga Web 2 Manual Setup Login
Finally visit Icinga Web 2 in your browser to login as icingaadmin
user: /icingaweb2
.
Automating the Installation of Icinga Web 2
If you are automating the installation of Icinga Web 2, you may want to skip the wizard and do things yourself. These are the steps you'd need to take assuming you are using MySQL/MariaDB. If you are using PostgreSQL please adapt accordingly. Note you need to have successfully completed the Icinga 2 installation, installed the Icinga Web 2 packages and all the other steps described above first.
- Install PHP dependencies:
php
,php-intl
,php-imagick
,php-gd
,php-mysql
,php-curl
,php-mbstring
used by Icinga Web 2. - Set a timezone in
php.ini
configuration file. - Create a database for Icinga Web 2, i.e.
icingaweb2
. - Import the database schema:
mysql -D icingaweb2 < /usr/share/icingaweb2/etc/schema/mysql.schema.sql
. - Insert administrator user in the
icingaweb2
database:INSERT INTO icingaweb_user (name, active, password_hash) VALUES ('admin', 1, '<hash>')
, where<hash>
is the output ofopenssl passwd -1 <password>
. - Make sure the
ido-mysql
andapi
features are enabled in Icinga 2:icinga2 feature enable ido-mysql
andicinga2 feature enable api
. - Generate Apache/nginx config. This command will print an apacahe config for you on stdout:
icingacli setup config webserver apache
. Similarly for nginx. You need to place that configuration in the right place, for example/etc/apache2/sites-enabled/icingaweb2.conf
. - Add
www-data
user toicingaweb2
group if not done already (usermod -a -G icingaweb2 www-data
). - Create the Icinga Web 2 configuration in
/etc/icingaweb2
. The directory can be easily created with:icingacli setup config webserver
. This command ensures that the directory has the appropriate ownership and permissions. If you want to create the directory manually, make sure to chown the group toicingaweb2
and set the access mode to2770
.
The structure of the configurations looks like the following:
/etc/icingaweb2/
/etc/icingaweb2/authentication.ini
/etc/icingaweb2/modules
/etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring
/etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/config.ini
/etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/instances.ini
/etc/icingaweb2/modules/monitoring/backends.ini
/etc/icingaweb2/roles.ini
/etc/icingaweb2/config.ini
/etc/icingaweb2/enabledModules
/etc/icingaweb2/enabledModules/monitoring
/etc/icingaweb2/enabledModules/doc
/etc/icingaweb2/resources.ini
Have a look here for the contents of the files.