pandorafms/pandora_plugins/EC2/CloudWatch
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README.TXT

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Amazon CloudWatch (Monitoring) Command Line Tools

=================================================



Installation:

-------------



1. Ensure that JAVA version 1.5 or higher is installed on your system: (java -version)

2. Unzip the deployment zip file

3. Set the following environment variables:

3.1 AWS_CLOUDWATCH_HOME - The directory where the deployment files were copied to

        check with:

           Unix: ls ${AWS_CLOUDWATCH_HOME}/bin should list mon-list-metrics ...)

           Windows: dir %AWS_CLOUDWATCH_HOME%\bin should list mon-list-metrics ...)

3.2 JAVA_HOME - Java Installation home directory

4. Add ${AWS_CLOUDWATCH_HOME}/bin (in Windows: %AWS_CLOUDWATCH_HOME%\bin) to your path



Configuration:

--------------



Provide the command line tool with your AWS user credentials.  There

are two ways you can provide credentails: AWS keys, or using X.509

certificates.



Using AWS Keys

--------------



1. Create a credential file: The deployment includes a template file ${AWS_CLOUDWATCH_HOME}/credential-file-path.template.

     Edit a copy of this file to add your information.

     On UNIX, limit permissions to the owner of the credential file: $ chmod 600 <the file created above>.

2. There are several ways to provide your credential information:

      a. Set the following environment variable: AWS_CREDENTIAL_FILE=<the file created in 1>

      b. Alternatively, provide the following option with every command --aws-credential-file <the file created in 1>

      c. Explicitly specify credentials on the command line: --I ACCESS_KEY --S SECRET_KEY

      

Using X.509 Certs

-----------------



1. Save your cetificate and private keys to files: e.g. my-cert.pem

and my-pk.pem.



2. There are two ways to provide the certificate information to the

command line tool

    a.  Set the following environment variables:

        EC2_CERT=/path/to/cert/file

        EC2_PRIVATE_KEY=/path/to/key/file

    b.  Specify the files directly on command-line for every command

        <command> --ec2-cert-file-path=/path/to/cert/file --ec2-private-key-file-path=/path/to/key/file



Setting custom JVM properties

-----------------------------



By setting the environment variable SERVICE_JVM_ARGS, you can pass arbitrary JVM properties to the command line.

For example, the following line sets proxy server properties in Linux/UNIX

  export SERVICE_JVM_ARGS="-Dhttp.proxyHost=http://my.proxy.com -Dhttp.proxyPort=8080" 





Running:

---------



1. Check that your setup works properly, run the following command:

   $ mon-cmd --help

      You should see the usage page for all Monitoring commands



   $ mon-list-metrics --headers

      You should see a header line. If you have any metrics defined, you should see them as well.