NAME
Monit - utility for monitoring services on a Unix system
SYNOPSIS
monit [options] {arguments}
DESCRIPTION
monit is a utility for managing and monitoring processes, files,
directories and filesystems on a Unix system. Monit conducts automatic
maintenance and repair and can execute meaningful causal actions in
error situations. E.g. Monit can start a process if it does not run,
restart a process if it does not respond and stop a process if it uses
too much resources. You may use Monit to monitor files, directories and
filesystems for changes, such as timestamps changes, checksum changes
or size changes.
Monit is controlled via an easy to configure control file based on a
free-format, token-oriented syntax. Monit logs to syslog or to its own
log file and notifies you about error conditions via customizable alert
messages. Monit can perform various TCP/IP network checks, protocol
checks and can utilize SSL for such checks. Monit provides a http(s)
interface and you may use a browser to access the Monit program.
GENERAL OPERATION
The behavior of Monit is controlled by command-line options and a run
control file, ~/.monitrc, the syntax of which we describe in a later
section. Command-line options override .monitrc declarations.
The following options are recognized by monit. However, it is
recommended that you set options (when applicable) directly in the
.monitrc control file.
General Options and Arguments
-c file
Use this control file
-d n
Run as a daemon once per n seconds
-g
Set group name for start, stop, restart, monitor and
unmonitor.
-l logfile
Print log information to this file
-p pidfile
Use this lock file in daemon mode
-s statefile
Write state information to this file
-I
Do not run in background (needed for run from init)
-t
Run syntax check for the control file
-v
Verbose mode, work noisy (diagnostic output)
-H [filename]
Print MD5 and SHA1 hashes of the file or of stdin if the
filename is omitted; Monit will exit afterwards
-V
Print version number and patch level
-h
Print a help text
In addition to the options above, Monit can be started with one of the
following action arguments; Monit will then execute the action and exit
without transforming itself to a daemon.
start all
Start all services listed in the control file and
enable monitoring for them. If the group option is
set, only start and enable monitoring of services in
the named group (no "all" verb is required in this
case).
start name
Start the named service and enable monitoring for
it. The name is a service entry name from the
monitrc file.
stop all
Stop all services listed in the control file and
disable their monitoring. If the group option is
set, only stop and disable monitoring of the services
in the named group (no "all" verb is required in this
case).
stop name
Stop the named service and disable its monitoring.
The name is a service entry name from the monitrc
file.
restart all
Stop and start all services. If the group option
is set, only restart the services in the named group
(no "all" verb is required in this case).
restart name
Restart the named service. The name is a service entry
name from the monitrc file.
monitor all
Enable monitoring of all services listed in the
control file. If the group option is set, only start
monitoring of services in the named group (no "all"
verb is required in this case).
monitor name
Enable monitoring of the named service. The name is
a service entry name from the monitrc file. Monit will
also enable monitoring of all services this service
depends on.
unmonitor all
Disable monitoring of all services listed in the
control file. If the group option is set, only disable
monitoring of services in the named group (no "all"
verb is required in this case).
unmonitor name
Disable monitoring of the named service. The name is
a service entry name from the monitrc file. Monit
will also disable monitoring of all services that
depends on this service.
status
Print full status information for each service.
summary
Print short status information for each service.
reload
Reinitialize a running Monit daemon, the daemon will
reread its configuration, close and reopen log files.
quit
Kill a Monit daemon process
validate
Check all services listed in the control file. This
action is also the default behavior when Monit runs
in daemon mode.
WHAT TO MONITOR
You may use Monit to monitor daemon processes or similar programs
running on localhost. Monit is particular useful for monitoring daemon
processes, such as those started at system boot time from /etc/init.d/.
For instance sendmail, sshd, apache and mysql. In difference to many
monitoring systems, Monit can act if an error situation should occur,
e.g.; if sendmail is not running, monit can start sendmail or if apache
is using too much resources (e.g. if a DoS attack is in progress)
Monit can stop or restart apache and send you an alert message. Monit
can also monitor process characteristics, such as; if a process has
become a zombie and how much memory or cpu cycles a process is using.
You may also use Monit to monitor files, directories and filesystems on
localhost. Monit can monitor these items for changes, such as
timestamps changes, checksum changes or size changes. This is also
useful for security reasons - you can monitor the md5 checksum of files
that should not change.
You may even use Monit to monitor remote hosts. First and foremost
Monit is a utility for monitoring and mending services on localhost,
but if a service depends on a remote service, e.g. a database server
or an application server, it might by useful to be able to test a
remote host as well.
You may monitor the general system-wide resources such as cpu usage,
memory and load average.
HOW TO MONITOR
Monit is configured and controlled via a control file called monitrc.
The default location for this file is ~/.monitrc. If this file does not
exist, Monit will try /etc/monit/monitrc, then @sysconfdir@/monitrc and
finally ./monitrc.
A Monit control file consists of a series of service entries and global
option statements in a free-format, token-oriented syntax. Comments
begin with a # and extend through the end of the line. There are three
kinds of tokens in the control file: grammar keywords, numbers and
strings.
On a semantic level, the control file consists of three types of
statements:
1. Global set-statements
A global set-statement starts with the keyword set and the item to
configure.
2. Global include-statement
The include statement consists of the keyword include and a glob
string.
3. One or more service entry statements.
A service entry starts with the keyword check followed by the
service type.
A Monit control file example:
#
# Monit control file
#
set daemon 120 # Poll at 2-minute intervals
set logfile syslog facility log_daemon
set alert foo@bar.baz
set httpd port 2812 and use address localhost
allow localhost # Allow localhost to connect
allow admin:Monit # Allow Basic Auth
check system myhost.mydomain.tld
if loadavg (1min) > 4 then alert
if loadavg (5min) > 2 then alert
if memory usage > 75% then alert
if cpu usage (user) > 70% then alert
if cpu usage (system) > 30% then alert
if cpu usage (wait) > 20% then alert
check process apache
with pidfile "/usr/local/apache/logs/httpd.pid"
start program = "/etc/init.d/httpd start" with timeout 60 seconds
stop program = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if 2 restarts within 3 cycles then timeout
if totalmem > 100 Mb then alert
if children > 255 for 5 cycles then stop
if cpu usage > 95% for 3 cycles then restart
if failed port 80 protocol http then restart
group server
depends on httpd.conf, httpd.bin
check file httpd.conf
with path /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf
# Reload apache if the httpd.conf file was changed
if changed checksum
then exec "/usr/local/apache/bin/apachectl graceful"
check file httpd.bin
with path /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd
# Run /watch/dog in the case that the binary was changed
# and alert in the case that the checksum value recovered
# later
if failed checksum then exec "/watch/dog"
else if recovered then alert
include /etc/monit/mysql.monitrc
include /etc/monit/mail/*.monitrc
The above example illustrates a service entry for monitoring the apache
web server process as well as related files. The meaning of the various
statements will be explained in the following sections.
LOGGING
Monit will log status and error messages to a log file. Use the set
logfile statement in the monitrc control file. To setup Monit to log to
its own logfile, use e.g. set logfile /var/log/monit.log. If syslog is
given as a value for the -l command-line switch (or the keyword set
logfile syslog is found in the control file) Monit will use the syslog
system daemon to log messages with a priority assigned to each message
based on the context. To turn off logging, simply do not set the
logfile in the control file (and of course, do not use the -l switch)
DAEMON MODE
The -d interval command-line switch runs Monit in daemon mode. You must
specify a numeric argument which is a polling interval in seconds.
In daemon mode, Monit detaches from the console, puts itself in the
background and runs continuously, monitoring each specified service and
then goes to sleep for the given poll interval.
Simply invoking
Monit -d 300
will poll all services described in your ~/.monitrc file every 5
minutes.
It is strongly recommended to set the poll interval in your ~/.monitrc
file instead, by using set daemon n, where n is an integer number of
seconds. If you do this, Monit will always start in daemon mode (as
long as no action arguments are given). Example (check every 5
minutes):
set daemon 300
If you need Monit to wait some time at startup before it start checking
services you can use the delay statement. Example (check every 5
minutes, wait 1 minute on start before first monitoring cycle):
set daemon 300 with start delay 60
Monit makes a per-instance lock-file in daemon mode. If you need more
Monit instances, you will need more configuration files, each pointing
to its own lock-file.
Calling monit with a Monit daemon running in the background sends a
wake-up signal to the daemon, forcing it to check services immediately.
The quit argument will kill a running daemon process instead of waking
it up.
INIT SUPPORT
Monit can run and be controlled from init. If Monit should crash, init
will re-spawn a new Monit process. Using init to start Monit is
probably the best way to run Monit if you want to be certain that you
always have a running Monit daemon on your system. (It’s obvious, but
never the less worth to stress; Make sure that the control file does
not have any syntax errors before you start Monit from init. Also, make
sure that if you run monit from init, that you do not start Monit from
a startup scripts as well).
To setup Monit to run from init, you can either use the ’set init’
statement in monit’s control file or use the -I option from the command
line and here is what you must add to /etc/inittab:
# Run Monit in standard run-levels
mo:2345:respawn:/usr/sbin/monit -Ic /etc/monitrc
After you have modified init’s configuration file, you can run the
following command to re-examine /etc/inittab and start monit:
telinit q
For systems without telinit:
kill -1 1
If Monit is used to monitor services that are also started at boot time
(e.g. services started via SYSV init rc scripts or via inittab) then,
in some cases, a race condition could occur. That is; if a service is
slow to start, Monit can assume that the service is not running and
possibly try to start it and raise an alert, while, in fact the service
is already about to start or already in its startup sequence. Please
see the FAQ for solutions to this problem.
INCLUDE FILES
The Monit control file, monitrc, can include additional configuration
files. This feature helps to maintain a certain structure or to place
repeating settings into one file. Include statements can be placed at
virtually any spot. The syntax is the following:
INCLUDE globstring
The globstring is any kind of string as defined in glob(7). Thus, you
can refer to a single file or you can load several files at once. In
case you want to use whitespace in your string the globstring need to
be embedded into quotes (’) or double quotes ("). For example,
INCLUDE "/etc/monit/Monit configuration files/printer.*.monitrc"
loads any file matching the single globstring. If the globstring
matches a directory instead of a file, it is silently ignored.
INCLUDE statements in included files are parsed as in the main control
file.
If the globstring matches several results, the files are included in a
non sorted manner. If you need to rely on a certain order, you might
need to use single include statements.
GROUP SUPPORT
Service entries in the control file, monitrc, can be grouped together
by the group statement. The syntax is simply (keyword in capital):
GROUP groupname
With this statement it is possible to group similar service entries
together and manage them as a whole. Monit provides functions to start,
stop, restart, monitor and unmonitor a group of services, like so:
To start a group of services from the console:
Monit -g <groupname> start
To stop a group of services:
Monit -g <groupname> stop
To restart a group of services:
Monit -g <groupname> restart
Note: the status and summary commands don’t support the -g option and
will print the state of all services.
Service can be added to multiple groups by adding group statement
multiple times:
group www
group filesystem
MONITORING MODE
Monit supports three monitoring modes per service: active, passive and
manual. See also the example section below for usage of the mode
statement.
In active mode, Monit will monitor a service and in case of problems
Monit will act and raise alerts, start, stop or restart the service.
Active mode is the default mode.
In passive mode, Monit will passively monitor a service and
specifically not try to fix a problem, but it will still raise alerts
in case of a problem.
For use in clustered environments there is also a manual mode. In this
mode, Monit will enter active mode only if a service was brought under
monit’s control, for example by executing the following command in the
console:
Monit start sybase
(Monit will call sybase’s start method and enable monitoring)
If a service was not started by Monit or was stopped or disabled for
example by:
Monit stop sybase
(Monit will call sybase’s stop method and disable monitoring)
Monit will then not monitor the service. This allows for having
services configured in monitrc and start it with Monit only if it
should run. This feature can be used to build a simple failsafe
cluster. To see how, read more about how to setup a cluster with Monit
using the heartbeat system in the examples sections below.
A service’s monitoring state is persistent across Monit restart. This
means that you probably would like to make certain that services in
manual mode are stopped or in unmonitored mode at server shutdown. Do
for instance the following in a server shutdown script:
Monit stop sybase
or
Monit unmonitor sybase
If you use Monit in a HA-cluster you should place the state file in a
temporary filesystem so if the machine should crash and the stand-by
machine take over services, any manual monitoring mode services that
were started on the crashed machine won’t be started on reboot. Use for
example:
set statefile /tmp/monit.state
ALERT MESSAGES
Monit will raise an email alert in the following situations:
o A service timed out
o A service does not exist
o A service related data access problem
o A service related program execution problem
o A service is of invalid object type
o A icmp problem
o A port connection problem
o A resource statement match
o A file checksum problem
o A file size problem
o A file/directory timestamp problem
o A file/directory/filesystem permission problem
o A file/directory/filesystem uid problem
o A file/directory/filesystem gid problem
o An action is done per administrator’s request
Monit will send an alert each time a monitored object changed. This
involves:
o Monit started, stopped or reloaded
o A file checksum changed
o A file size changed
o A file content match
o A file/directory timestamp changed
o A filesystem mount flags changed
o A process PID changed
o A process PPID changed
You use the alert statement to notify Monit that you want alert
messages sent to an email address. If you do not specify an alert
statement, Monit will not send alert messages.
There are two forms of alert statement:
o Global - common for all services
o Local - per service
In both cases you can use more than one alert statement. In other
words, you can send many different emails to many different addresses.
Recipients in the global and in the local lists are alerted when a
service failed, recovered or changed. If the same email address is in
the global and in the local list, Monit will only send one alert. Local
(per service) defined alert email addresses override global addresses
in case of a conflict. Finally, you may choose to only use a global
alert list (recommended), a local per service list or both.
It is also possible to disable the global alerts locally for particular
service(s) and recipients.
Setting a global alert statement
If a change occurred on a monitored services, Monit will send an alert
to all recipients in the global list who has registered interest for
the event type. Here is the syntax for the global alert statement:
SET ALERT mail-address [ [NOT] {events}] [MAIL-FORMAT {mail-format}]
[REMINDER number]
Simply using the following in the global section of monitrc:
set alert foo@bar
will send a default email to the address foo@bar whenever an event
occurred on any service. Such an event may be that a service timed out,
a service doesn’t exist and so on. If you want to send alert messages
to more email addresses, add a set alert email statement for each
address.
For explanations of the events, MAIL-FORMAT and REMINDER keywords
above, please see below.
You can also use the NOT option ahead of the events list which will
reverse the meaning of the list. That is, only send alerts for events
not in the list. This can save you some configuration bytes if you are
interested in most events except a few.
Setting a local alert statement
Each service can also have its own recipient list.
ALERT mail-address [ [NOT] {events}] [MAIL-FORMAT {mail-format}]
[REMINDER number]
or
NOALERT mail-address
If you only want an alert message sent for certain events and for
certain service(s), for example only for timeout events or only if a
service died, then postfix the alert-statement with a filter block:
check process myproc with pidfile /var/run/my.pid
alert foo@bar only on { timeout, nonexist }
...
(only and on are noise keywords, ignored by Monit. As a side note;
Noise keywords are used in the control file grammar to make an entry
resemble English and thus make it easier to read (or, so goes the
philosophy). The full set of available noise keywords are listed below
in the Control File section).
You can also setup to send alerts for all events except some by putting
the word not ahead of the list. For example, if you want to receive
alerts for all events except Monit instance events, you can write (note
that the noise words ’but’ and ’on’ are optional):
check system myserver
alert foo@bar but not on { instance }
...
instead of:
alert foo@bar on { action
checksum
content
data
exec
gid
icmp
invalid
fsflags
nonexist
permission
pid
ppid
size
timeout
timestamp }
This will send alerts for all events to foo@bar, except Monit instance
events. An instance event BTW, is an event fired whenever the Monit
program start or stop.
Event filtering can be used to send an email to different email
addresses depending on the events that occurred. For instance:
alert foo@bar { nonexist, timeout, resource, icmp, connection }
alert security@bar on { checksum, permission, uid, gid }
alert manager@bar
This will send an alert message to foo@bar whenever a nonexist,
timeout, resource or connection problem occurs and a message to
security@bar if a checksum, permission, uid or gid problem occurs. And
finally, a message to manager@bar whenever any error event occurs.
Here is the list of events you can use in a mail-filter: uid, gid,
size, nonexist, data, icmp, instance, invalid, exec, content, timeout,
resource, checksum, fsflags, timestamp, connection, permission, pid,
ppid, action
You can also disable the alerts localy using the NOALERT statement.
This is useful if you have lots of services monitored and are using the
global alert statement, but don’t want to receive alerts for some minor
subset of services:
noalert appadmin@bar
For example, if you stick the noalert statement in a ’check system’
entry, you won’t receive system related alerts (such as Monit instance
started/stopped/reloaded alert, system overloaded alert, etc.) but will
receive alerts for all other monitored services.
The following example will alert foo@bar on all events on all services
by default, except the service mybar which will send an alert only on
timeout. The trick is based on the fact that local definition of the
same recipient overrides the global setting (including registered
events and mail format):
set alert foo@bar
check process myfoo with pidfile /var/run/myfoo.pid
...
check process mybar with pidfile /var/run/mybar.pid
alert foo@bar only on { timeout }
Alert message layout
Monit provides a default mail message layout that is short and to the
point. Here’s an example of a standard alert mail sent by monit:
From: monit@tildeslash.com
Subject: Monit alert -- Does not exist apache
To: hauk@tildeslash.com
Date: Thu, 04 Sep 2003 02:33:03 +0200
Does not exist Service apache
Date: Thu, 04 Sep 2003 02:33:03 +0200
Action: restart
Host: www.tildeslash.com
Your faithful employee,
monit
If you want to, you can change the format of this message with the
optional mail-format statement. The syntax for this statement is as
follows:
mail-format {
from: monit@localhost
subject: $SERVICE $EVENT at $DATE
message: Monit $ACTION $SERVICE at $DATE on $HOST: $DESCRIPTION.
Yours sincerely,
monit
}
Where the keyword from: is the email address Monit should pretend it is
sending from. It does not have to be a real mail address, but it must
be a proper formated mail address, on the form: name@domain. The
keyword subject: is for the email subject line. The subject must be on
only one line. The message: keyword denotes the mail body. If used,
this keyword should always be the last in a mail-format statement. The
mail body can be as long as you want, but must not contain the ’}’
character.
All of these format keywords are optional, but if used, you must
provide at least one. Thus if you only want to change the from address
Monit is using you can do:
set alert foo@bar with mail-format { from: bofh@bar.baz }
From the previous example you will notice that some special $XXX
variables were used. If used, they will be substituted and expanded
into the text with these values:
* $EVENT
A string describing the event that occurred. The values are
fixed and are:
Event: │ Failure state: │ Success state:
-------------------------------------------------------------------
ACTION │ "Action done" │ "Action done"
CHECKSUM │ "Checksum failed" │ "Checksum succeeded"
CONNECTION│ "Connection failed" │ "Connection succeeded"
CONTENT │ "Content failed", │ "Content succeeded"
DATA │ "Data access error" │ "Data access succeeded"
EXEC │ "Execution failed" │ "Execution succeeded"
FSFLAG │ "Filesystem flags failed"│ "Filesystem flags succeeded"
GID │ "GID failed" │ "GID succeeded"
ICMP │ "ICMP failed" │ "ICMP succeeded"
INSTANCE │ "Monit instance changed" │ "Monit instance changed not"
INVALID │ "Invalid type" │ "Type succeeded"
NONEXIST │ "Does not exist" │ "Exists"
PERMISSION│ "Permission failed" │ "Permission succeeded"
PID │ "PID failed" │ "PID succeeded"
PPID │ "PPID failed" │ "PPID succeeded"
RESOURCE │ "Resource limit matched" │ "Resource limit succeeded"
SIZE │ "Size failed" │ "Size succeeded"
TIMEOUT │ "Timeout" │ "Timeout recovery"
TIMESTAMP │ "Timestamp failed" │ "Timestamp succeeded"
UID │ "UID failed" │ "UID succeeded"
* $SERVICE
The service entry name in monitrc
* $DATE
The current time and date (RFC 822 date style).
* $HOST
The name of the host Monit is running on
* $ACTION
The name of the action which was done. Action names are fixed
and are:
Action: │ Name:
--------------------
ALERT │ "alert"
EXEC │ "exec"
MONITOR │ "monitor"
RESTART │ "restart"
START │ "start"
STOP │ "stop"
UNMONITOR│ "unmonitor"
* $DESCRIPTION
The description of the error condition
Setting a global mail format
It is possible to set a standard mail format with the following global
set-statement (keywords are in capital):
SET MAIL-FORMAT {mail-format}
Format set with this statement will apply to every alert statement that
does not have its own specified mail-format. This statement is most
useful for setting a default from address for messages sent by monit,
like so:
set mail-format { from: monit@foo.bar.no }
Setting an error reminder
Monit by default sends just one error notification if a service failed
and another when it recovered. If you want to be notified more then
once if a service remains in a failed state, you can use the reminder
option to the alert statement (keywords are in capital):
ALERT ... [WITH] REMINDER [ON] number [CYCLES]
For example if you want to be notified each tenth cycle if a service
remains in a failed state, you can use:
alert foo@bar with reminder on 10 cycles
Likewise if you want to be notified on each failed cycle, you can use:
alert foo@bar with reminder on 1 cycle
Setting a mail server for alert messages
The mail server Monit should use to send alert messages is defined with
a global set statement (keywords are in capital and optional statements
in [brackets]):
SET MAILSERVER {hostname│ip-address [PORT port]
[USERNAME username] [PASSWORD password]
[using SSLV2│SSLV3│TLSV1] [CERTMD5 checksum]}+
[with TIMEOUT X SECONDS]
[using HOSTNAME hostname]
The port statement allows to use SMTP servers other then those
listening on port 25. If omitted, port 25 is used unless ssl or tls is
used, in which case port 465 is used by default.
Monit support plain smtp authentication - you can set a username and a
password using the USERNAME and PASSWORD options.
To use secure communication, use the SSLV2, SSLV3 or TLSV1 options, you
can also specify the server certificate checksum using CERTMD5 option.
As you can see, it is possible to set several SMTP servers. If Monit
cannot connect to the first server in the list it will try the second
server and so on. Monit has a default 5 seconds connection timeout and
if the SMTP server is slow, Monit could timeout when connecting or
reading from the server. If this is the case, you can use the optional
timeout statement to explicit set the timeout to a higher value if
needed. Here is an example for setting several mail servers:
set mailserver mail.tildeslash.com, mail.foo.bar port 10025
username "Rabbi" password "Loewe" using tlsv1, localhost
with timeout 15 seconds
Here Monit will first try to connect to the server
"mail.tildeslash.com", if this server is down Monit will try
"mail.foo.bar" on port 10025 using the given credentials via tls and
finally "localhost". We also set an explicit connect and read timeout;
If Monit cannot connect to the first SMTP server in the list within 15
seconds it will try the next server and so on. The set mailserver ..
statement is optional and if not defined Monit will not send email
alerts. Not setting a mail server is recommended only if alert
notification is delegated to M/Monit.
Monit, by default, use the local host name in SMTP HELO/EHLO and in the
Message-ID header. Some mail servers check this information against DNS
for spam protection and can reject the email if the DNS and the
hostname used in the transaction does not match. If this is the case,
you can override the default local host name by using the HOSTNAME
option:
set mailserver mail.tildeslash.com using hostname
"myhost.example.org"
Event queue
If the MTA (mail server) for sending alerts is not available, Monit can
queue events on the local file-system until the MTA recover. Monit will
then post queued events in order with their original timestamp so the
events are not lost. This feature is most useful if Monit is used
together with M/Monit and when event history is important.
The event queue is persistent across monit restarts and provided that
the back-end filesystem is persistent too, across system restart as
well.
By default, the queue is disabled and if the alert handler fails, Monit
will simply drop the alert message. To enable the event queue, add the
following statement to the Monit control file:
SET EVENTQUEUE BASEDIR <path> [SLOTS <number>]
The <path> is the path to the directory where events will be stored.
Optionally if you want to limit the queue size, use the slots option to
only store up to number event messages. If the slots option is not
used, Monit will store as many events as the backend filesystem allows.
Example:
set eventqueue
basedir /var/monit
slots 5000
Events are stored in a binary format, with one file per event. The
file size is ca. 130 bytes or a bit more (depending on the message
length). The file name is composed of the unix timestamp, underscore
and the service name, for example:
/var/monit/1131269471_apache
If you are running more then one Monit instance on the same machine,
you must use separated event queue directories to avoid sending wrong
alerts to the wrong addresses.
If you want to purge the queue by hand, that is, remove queued
event-files, Monit should be stopped before the removal.
SERVICE TIMEOUT
monit provides a service timeout mechanism for situations where a
service simply refuses to start or respond over a longer period.
The timeout mechanism is based on number if service restarts and number
of poll-cycles. For example, if a service had x restarts within y poll-
cycles (where x <= y) then Monit will perform an action (for example
unmonitor the service). If a timeout occurs Monit will send an alert
message if you have register interest for this event.
The syntax for the timeout statement is as follows (keywords are in
capital):
IF <number> RESTART <number> CYCLE(S) THEN <action>
Here is an example where Monit will unmonitor the service if it was
restarted 2 times within 3 cycles:
if 2 restarts within 3 cycles then unmonitor
To have Monit check the service again after a monitoring was disabled,
run ’monit monitor <servicename>’ from the command line.
Example for setting custom exec on timeout:
if 5 restarts within 5 cycles then exec "/foo/bar"
Example for stopping the service:
if 7 restarts within 10 cycles then stop
SERVICE TESTS
Monit provides several tests you may utilize in a service entry to test
a service. There are two classes of tests: variable and constant tests.
That is, the condition we test is either constant e.g. a number or it
can vary.
A constant test has this general format:
IF <TEST> [[<X>] [TIMES WITHIN] <Y> CYCLES] THEN ACTION [ELSE IF
SUCCEEDED [[<X>] [TIMES WITHIN] <Y> CYCLES] THEN ACTION]
If the <TEST> condition should evaluate to true, then the selected
action is executed each cycle the test condition remains true. The
comparison value is constant. Recovery action is evaluated only once
(on a failed to succeeded state change only). The ’ELSE IF SUCCEEDED’
part is optional, if omitted, Monit will send an alert on recovery. The
alert is sent only once on each state change unless overridden by the
’reminder’ alert option.
A variable test has this general format:
IF CHANGED <TEST> [[<X>] [TIMES WITHIN] <Y> CYCLES] THEN ACTION
If the <TEST> should evaluate to true, then the selected action is
executed once. The comparison value is a variable where the last result
becomes the new value and is compared in future cycles. The alert is
delivered each time the condition becomes true.
You can use this test for alerts or for some automatic action, for
example to reload monitored process after its configuration file was
changed. Variable tests are supported for ’checksum’, ’size’, ’pid,
’ppid’ and ’timestamp’ tests only.
... [[<X>] [TIMES WITHIN] <Y> CYCLES] ...
If a test match, its action is executed at once. This behaviour can
optionally be changed and you can for instance require that a test must
match over several poll cycles before the action is executed by using
the statement above. You can use this in several ways. For example:
if failed port 80 for 3 times within 5 cycles then alert
or
if failed port 80 for 10 cycles then unmonitor
If you don’t specify <X> times, it equals <Y> by default, thus the test
match if it evaluate to true for <Y> consecutive cycles.
It is possible to use this option for failed, succeeded, recovered or
changed rules. Here is a more complex example:
check filesystem rootfs with path /dev/hda1
if space usage > 80% for 5 times within 15 cycles
then alert else if succeeded for 10 cycles then alert
if space usage > 90% for 5 cycles then
exec ’/try/to/free/the/space’
if space usage > 99% then exec ’/stop/processess’
In each test you must select the action to be executed from this list:
· ALERT sends the user an alert event on each state change (for
constant tests) or on each change (for variable tests).
· RESTART restarts the service and sends an alert. Restart is
conducted by first calling the service’s registered stop method and
then the service’s start method.
· START starts the service by calling the service’s registered start
method and send an alert.
· STOP stops the service by calling the service’s registered stop
method and send an alert. If Monit stops a service it will not be
checked by Monit anymore nor restarted again later. To reactivate
monitoring of the service again you must explicitly enable
monitoring from the web interface or from the console, e.g. ’monit
monitor apache’.
· EXEC can be used to execute an arbitrary program and send an alert.
If you choose this action you must state the program to be executed
and if the program require arguments you must enclose the program
and its arguments in a quoted string. You may optionally specify
the uid and gid the executed program should switch to upon start.
For instance:
exec "/usr/local/tomcat/bin/startup.sh"
as uid nobody and gid nobody
The uid and gid switch can be useful if the program to be started
cannot change to a lesser privileged user and group. This is
typically needed for Java Servers. Remember, if Monit is run by the
superuser, then all programs executed by Monit will be started with
superuser privileges unless the uid and gid extension was used.
· MONITOR will enable monitoring of the service and send an alert.
· UNMONITOR will disable monitoring of the service and send an alert.
The service will not be checked by Monit anymore nor restarted
again later. To reactivate monitoring of the service you must
explicitly enable monitoring from monit’s web interface or from the
console using the monitor argument.
RESOURCE TESTING
Monit can examine how much system resources a service are using. This
test can only be used within a system or process service entry in the
Monit control file.
Depending on system or process characteristics, services can be stopped
or restarted and alerts can be generated. Thus it is possible to
utilize systems which are idle and to spare system under high load.
The full syntax for the resource-statements used for resource testing
is as follows (keywords are in capital and optional statements in
[brackets]),
IF resource operator value [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE IF
SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
resource is a choice of "CPU", "TOTALCPU", "CPU([user│system│wait])",
"MEMORY", "CHILDREN", "TOTALMEMORY", "LOADAVG([1min│5min│15min])". Some
resource tests can be used inside a check system entry, some in a check
process entry and some in both:
System only resource tests:
CPU([user│system│wait]) is the percent of time the system spend in user
or system/kernel space. Some systems such as linux 2.6 supports a
’wait’ indicator as well.
Process only resource tests:
CPU is the CPU usage of the process itself (percent).
TOTALCPU is the total CPU usage of the process and its children in
(percent). You will want to use TOTALCPU typically for services like
Apache webserver where one master process forks the child processes as
workers.
CHILDREN is the number of child processes of the process.
TOTALMEMORY is the memory usage of the process and its child processes
in either percent or as an amount (Byte, kB, MB, GB).
System and process resource tests:
MEMORY is the memory usage of the system or of a process (without
children) in either percent (of the systems total) or as an amount
(Byte, kB, MB, GB).
LOADAVG([1min│5min│15min]) refers to the system’s load average. The
load average is the number of processes in the system run queue,
averaged over the specified time period.
operator is a choice of "<", ">", "!=", "==" in C notation, "gt", "lt",
"eq", "ne" in shell sh notation and "greater", "less", "equal",
"notequal" in human readable form (if not specified, default is EQUAL).
value is either an integer or a real number (except for CHILDREN). For
CPU, TOTALCPU, MEMORY and TOTALMEMORY you need to specify a unit. This
could be "%" or if applicable "B" (Byte), "kB" (1024 Byte), "MB" (1024
KiloByte) or "GB" (1024 MegaByte).
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
To calculate the cycles, a counter is raised whenever the expression
above is true and it is lowered whenever it is false (but not below 0).
All counters are reset in case of a restart.
The following is an example to check that the CPU usage of a service is
not going beyond 50% during five poll cycles. If it does, Monit will
restart the service:
if cpu is greater than 50% for 5 cycles then restart
See also the example section below.
FILE CHECKSUM TESTING
The checksum statement may only be used in a file service entry. If
specified in the control file, Monit will compute a md5 or sha1
checksum for a file.
The checksum test in constant form is used to verify that a file does
not change. Syntax (keywords are in capital):
IF FAILED [MD5│SHA1] CHECKSUM [EXPECT checksum] [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN
action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
The checksum test in variable form is used to watch for file changes.
Syntax (keywords are in capital):
IF CHANGED [MD5│SHA1] CHECKSUM [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
The choice of MD5 or SHA1 is optional. MD5 features a 256 bit and SHA1
a 320 bit checksum. If this option is omitted Monit tries to guess the
method from the EXPECT string or uses MD5 as default.
expect is optional and if used it specifies a md5 or sha1 string Monit
should expect when testing a file’s checksum. If expect is used, Monit
will not compute an initial checksum for the file, but instead use the
string you submit. For example:
if failed checksum and
expect the sum 8f7f419955cefa0b33a2ba316cba3659
then alert
You can, for example, use the GNU utility md5sum(1) or sha1sum(1) to
create a checksum string for a file and use this string in the
expect-statement.
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
The checksum statement in variable form may be used to check a file for
changes and if changed, do a specified action. For instance to reload a
server if its configuration file was changed. The following illustrates
this for the apache web server:
check file httpd.conf path /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf
if changed sha1 checksum
then exec "/usr/local/apache/bin/apachectl graceful"
If you plan to use the checksum statement for security reasons, (a very
good idea, by the way) and to monitor a file or files which should not
change, then please use the constant form and also read the DEPENDENCY
TREE section below to see a detailed example on how to do this
properly.
Monit can also test the checksum for files on a remote host via the
HTTP protocol. See the CONNECTION TESTING section below.
TIMESTAMP TESTING
The timestamp statement may only be used in a file, fifo or directory
service entry.
The timestamp test in constant form is used to verify various timestamp
conditions. Syntax (keywords are in capital):
IF TIMESTAMP [[operator] value [unit]] [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
[ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
The timestamp statement in variable form is simply to test an existing
file or directory for timestamp changes and if changed, execute an
action. Syntax (keywords are in capital):
IF CHANGED TIMESTAMP [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
operator is a choice of "<", ">", "!=", "==" in C notation, "GT", "LT",
"EQ", "NE" in shell sh notation and "GREATER", "LESS", "EQUAL",
"NOTEQUAL" in human readable form (if not specified, default is EQUAL).
value is a time watermark.
unit is either "SECOND", "MINUTE", "HOUR" or "DAY" (it is also possible
to use "SECONDS", "MINUTES", "HOURS", or "DAYS").
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
The variable timestamp statement is useful for checking a file for
changes and then execute an action. This version was written
particularly with configuration files in mind. For instance, if you
monitor the apache web server you can use this statement to reload
apache if the httpd.conf (apache’s configuration file) was changed.
Like so:
check file httpd.conf with path /usr/local/apache/conf/httpd.conf
if changed timestamp
then exec "/usr/local/apache/bin/apachectl graceful"
The constant timestamp version is useful for monitoring systems able to
report its state by changing the timestamp of certain state files. For
instance the iPlanet Messaging server stored process system updates the
timestamp of the following files:
o stored.ckp
o stored.lcu
o stored.per
If a task should fail, the system keeps the timestamp. To report stored
problems you can use the following statements:
check file stored.ckp with path /msg-foo/config/stored.ckp
if timestamp > 1 minute then alert
check file stored.lcu with path /msg-foo/config/stored.lcu
if timestamp > 5 minutes then alert
check file stored.per with path /msg-foo/config/stored.per
if timestamp > 1 hour then alert
As mentioned above, you can also use the timestamp statement for
monitoring directories for changes. If files are added or removed from
a directory, its timestamp is changed:
check directory mydir path /foo/directory
if timestamp > 1 hour then alert
or
check directory myotherdir path /foo/secure/directory
if timestamp < 1 hour then alert
The following example is a hack for restarting a process after a
certain time. Sometimes this is a necessary workaround for some third-
party applications, until the vendor fix a problem:
check file server.pid path /var/run/server.pid
if timestamp > 7 days
then exec "/usr/local/server/restart-server"
FILE SIZE TESTING
The size statement may only be used in a file service entry. If
specified in the control file, Monit will compute a size for a file.
The size test in constant form is used to verify various size
conditions. Syntax (keywords are in capital):
IF SIZE [[operator] value [unit]] [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE
IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
The size statement in variable form is simply to test an existing file
for size changes and if changed, execute an action. Syntax (keywords
are in capital):
IF CHANGED SIZE [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
operator is a choice of "<", ">", "!=", "==" in C notation, "GT", "LT",
"EQ", "NE" in shell sh notation and "GREATER", "LESS", "EQUAL",
"NOTEQUAL" in human readable form (if not specified, default is EQUAL).
value is a size watermark.
unit is a choice of "B","KB","MB","GB" or long alternatives "byte",
"kilobyte", "megabyte", "gigabyte". If it is not specified, "byte" unit
is assumed by default.
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
The variable size test form is useful for checking a file for changes
and send an alert or execute an action. Monit will register the size of
the file at startup and monitor the file for changes. As soon as the
value changes, Monit will perform the specified action, reset the
registered value to the new value and continue monitoring and test if
the size changes again.
One example of use for this statement is to conduct security checks,
for instance:
check file su with path /bin/su
if changed size then exec "/sbin/ifconfig eth0 down"
which will "cut the cable" and stop a possible intruder from
compromising the system further. This test is just one of many you may
use to increase the security awareness on a system. If you plan to use
Monit for security reasons we recommend that you use this test in
combination with other supported tests like checksum, timestamp, and so
on.
The constant form of this test can be useful in similar or different
contexts. It can, for instance, be used to test if a certain file size
was exceeded and then alert you or Monit may execute a certain action
specified by you. An example is to use this statement to rotate log
files after they have reached a certain size or to check that a
database file does not grow beyond a specified threshold.
To rotate a log file:
check file myapp.log with path /var/log/myapp.log
if size > 50 MB then
exec "/usr/local/bin/rotate /var/log/myapp.log myapp"
where /usr/local/bin/rotate may be a simple script, such as:
#/bin/bash
/bin/mv $1 $1.‘date +%y-%m-%d‘
/usr/bin/pkill -HUP $2
Or you may use this statement to trigger the logrotate(8) program, to
do an "emergency" rotate. Or to send an alert if a file becomes a known
bottleneck if it grows behind a certain size because of limits in a
database engine:
check file mydb with path /data/mydatabase.db
if size > 1 GB then alert
This is a more restrictive form of the first example where the size is
explicitly defined (note that the real su size is system dependent):
check file su with path /bin/su
if size != 95564 then exec "/sbin/ifconfig eth0 down"
FILE CONTENT TESTING
The match statement allows you to test the content of a text file by
using regular expressions. This is a great feature if you need to
periodically test files, such as log files, for certain patterns. If a
pattern match, Monit defaults to raise an alert, other actions are also
possible.
The syntax (keywords in capital) for using this test is:
IF [NOT] MATCH {regex│path} [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
regex is a string containing the extended regular expression. See also
regex(7).
path is an absolute path to a file containing extended regular
expression on every line. See also regex(7).
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
You can use the NOT statement to invert a match.
The content is only being checked every cycle. If content is being
added and removed between two checks they are unnoticed.
On startup the read position is set to the end of the file and Monit
continue to scan to the end of file on each cycle. But if the file
size should decrease or inode change the read position is set to the
start of the file.
Only lines ending with a newline character are inspected. Thus, lines
are being ignored until they have been completed with this character.
Also note that only the first 511 characters of a line are inspected.
IGNORE [NOT] MATCH {regex│path}
Lines matching an IGNORE are not inspected during later evaluations.
IGNORE MATCH has always precedence over IF MATCH.
All IGNORE MATCH statements are evaluated first, in the order of their
appearance. Thereafter, all the IF MATCH statements are evaluated.
A real life example might look like this:
check file syslog with path /var/log/syslog
ignore match
"^\w{3} [ :0-9]{11} [._[:alnum:]-]+ monit\[[0-9]+\]:"
ignore match /etc/monit/ignore.regex
if match
"^\w{3} [ :0-9]{11} [._[:alnum:]-]+ mrcoffee\[[0-9]+\]:"
if match /etc/monit/active.regex then alert
FILESYSTEM FLAGS TESTING
Monit can test the flags of a filesystem for changes. This test is
implicit and Monit will send alert in case of failure by default.
This test is useful for detecting changes of the filesystem flags such
as when the filesystem became read-only based on disk errors or the
mount flags were changed (such as nosuid). Each platform provides
different set of flags. POSIX define the RDONLY and NOSUID flags which
should work on all platforms. Some platforms (such as FreeBSD) has
additonal flags.
The syntax for the fsflags statement is:
IF CHANGED FSFLAGS [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
Example:
check filesystem rootfs with path /
if changed fsflags then exec "/my/script"
alert root@localhost
SPACE TESTING
Monit can test file systems for space usage. This test may only be used
within a filesystem service entry in the Monit control file.
Monit will check a filesystem’s total space usage. If you only want to
check available space for non-superuser, you must set the watermark
appropriately (i.e. total space minus reserved blocks for the
superuser).
You can obtain (and set) the superuser’s reserved blocks size, for
example by using the tune2fs utility on Linux. On Linux 5% of available
blocks are reserved for the superuser by default. On solaris 10% of the
blocks are reserved. You can also use tunefs on solaris to change
values on a live filesystem.
The full syntax for the space statement is:
IF SPACE operator value unit [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE IF
SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
operator is a choice of "<",">","!=","==" in c notation, "gt", "lt",
"eq", "ne" in shell sh notation and "greater", "less", "equal",
"notequal" in human readable form (if not specified, default is EQUAL).
unit is a choice of "B","KB","MB","GB", "%" or long alternatives
"byte", "kilobyte", "megabyte", "gigabyte", "percent".
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
INODE TESTING
If supported by the file-system, you can use Monit to test for inodes
usage. This test may only be used within a filesystem service entry in
the Monit control file.
If the filesystem becomes unavailable, Monit will call the service’s
registered start method, if it is defined and if Monit is running in
active mode. If Monit runs in passive mode or the start methods is not
defined, Monit will just send an error alert.
The syntax for the inode statement is:
IF INODE(S) operator value [unit] [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE
IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
operator is a choice of "<",">","!=","==" in c notation, "gt", "lt",
"eq", "ne" in shell sh notation and "greater", "less", "equal",
"notequal" in human readable form (if not specified, default is EQUAL).
unit is optional. If not specified, the value is an absolute count of
inodes. You can use the "%" character or the longer alternative
"percent" as a unit.
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
PERMISSION TESTING
Monit can monitor the permission of file objects. This test may only be
used within a file, fifo, directory or filesystem service entry in the
Monit control file.
The syntax for the permission statement is:
IF FAILED PERM(ISSION) octalnumber [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE
IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
octalnumber defines permissions for a file, a directory or a filesystem
as four octal digits (0-7). Valid range: 0000 - 7777 (you can omit the
leading zeros, Monit will add the zeros to the left thus for example
"640" is valid value and matches "0640").
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
The web interface will show a permission warning if the test failed.
We recommend that you use the UNMONITOR action in a permission
statement. The rationale for this feature is security and that Monit
does not start a possible cracked program or script. Example:
check file monit.bin with path "/usr/sbin/monit"
if failed permission 0555 then unmonitor
If the test fails, Monit will simply send an alert and stop monitoring
the file and propagate an unmonitor action upward in a depend tree.
UID TESTING
Monit can monitor the owner user id (uid) of a file object. This test
may only be used within a file, fifo, directory or filesystem service
entry in the Monit control file.
The syntax for the uid statement is:
IF FAILED UID user [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED
[[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
user defines a user id either in numeric or in string form.
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
The web interface will show a uid warning if the test should fail.
We recommend that you use the UNMONITOR action in a uid statement. The
rationale for this feature is security and that Monit does not start a
possible cracked program or script. Example:
check file passwd with path /etc/passwd
if failed uid root then unmonitor
If the test fails, Monit will simply send an alert and stop monitoring
the file and propagate an unmonitor action upward in a depend tree.
GID TESTING
Monit can monitor the owner group id (gid) of file objects. This test
may only be used within a file, fifo, directory or filesystem service
entry in the Monit control file.
The syntax for the gid statement is:
IF FAILED GID user [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED
[[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
user defines a group id either in numeric or in string form.
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
The web interface will show a gid warning if the test should fail.
We recommend that you use the UNMONITOR action in a gid statement. The
rationale for this feature is security and that Monit does not start a
possible cracked program or script. Example:
check file shadow with path /etc/shadow
if failed gid root then unmonitor
If the test fails, Monit will simply send an alert and stop monitoring
the file and propagate an unmonitor action upward in a depend tree.
PID TESTING
Monit can test the process identification number (pid) of a process for
changes. This test is implicit and Monit will send a alert in the case
of failure by default.
The syntax for the pid statement is:
IF CHANGED PID [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
This test is useful to detect possible process restarts which has
occurred in the timeframe between two Monit testing cycles. In the case
that the restart was fast and the process provides expected service
(i.e. all tests succeeded) you will be notified that the process was
replaced.
For example sshd daemon can restart very quickly, thus if someone
changes its configuration and do sshd restart outside of Monit’s
control you will be notified that the process was replaced by a new
instance (or you can optionally do some other action such as
preventively stop sshd).
Another example is a MySQL Cluster which has its own watchdog with
process restart ability. You can use Monit for redundant monitoring.
Example:
check process sshd with pidfile /var/run/sshd.pid
if changed pid then exec "/my/script"
PPID TESTING
Monit can test the process parent process identification number (ppid)
of a process for changes. This test is implicit and Monit will send
alert in the case of failure by default.
The syntax for the ppid statement is:
IF CHANGED PPID [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
This test is useful for detecting changes of a process parent.
Example:
check process myproc with pidfile /var/run/myproc.pid
if changed ppid then exec "/my/script"
CONNECTION TESTING
Monit is able to perform connection testing via networked ports or via
Unix sockets. A connection test may only be used within a process or
within a host service entry in the Monit control file.
If a service listens on one or more sockets, Monit can connect to the
port (using either tcp or udp) and verify that the service will accept
a connection and that it is possible to write and read from the socket.
If a connection is not accepted or if there is a problem with socket
i/o, Monit will assume that something is wrong and execute a specified
action. If Monit is compiled with openssl, then ssl based network
services can also be tested.
The full syntax for the statement used for connection testing is as
follows (keywords are in capital and optional statements in
[brackets]),
IF FAILED [host] port [type] [protocol│{send/expect}+] [timeout] [[<X>]
<Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN
action]
or for Unix sockets,
IF FAILED [unixsocket] [type] [protocol│{send/expect}+] [timeout]
[[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES]
THEN action]
host:HOST hostname. Optionally specify the host to connect to. If the
host is not given then localhost is assumed if this test is used inside
a process entry. If this test was used inside a remote host entry then
the entry’s remote host is assumed. Although host is intended for
testing name based virtual host in a HTTP server running on local or
remote host, it does allow the connection statement to be used to test
a server running on another machine. This may be useful; For instance
if you use Apache httpd as a front-end and an application-server as the
back-end running on another machine, this statement may be used to test
that the back-end server is running and if not raise an alert.
port:PORT number. The port number to connect to
unixsocket:UNIXSOCKET PATH. Specifies the path to a Unix socket.
Servers based on Unix sockets, always runs on the local machine and
does not use a port.
type:TYPE {TCP│UDP│TCPSSL}. Optionally specify the socket type Monit
should use when trying to connect to the port. The different socket
types are; TCP, UDP or TCPSSL, where TCP is a regular stream based
socket, UDP is a datagram socket and TCPSSL specify that Monit should
use a TCP socket with SSL when connecting to a port. The default socket
type is TCP. If TCPSSL is used you may optionally specify the SSL/TLS
protocol to be used and the md5 sum of the server’s certificate. The
TCPSSL options are:
TCPSSL [SSLAUTO│SSLV2│SSLV3│TLSV1] [CERTMD5 md5sum]
proto(col):PROTO {protocols}. Optionally specify the protocol Monit
should speak when a connection is established. At the moment Monit
knows how to speak:
APACHE-STATUS
DNS
DWP
FTP
GPS
HTTP
IMAP
CLAMAV
LDAP2
LDAP3
LMTP
MYSQL
NNTP
NTP3
POP
POSTFIX-POLICY
RADIUS
RDATE
RSYNC
SIP
SMTP
SSH
TNS
PGSQL If you have compiled Monit with ssl support, Monit can also
speak the SSL variants such as:
HTTPS
FTPS
POPS
IMAPS To use the SSL protocol support you need to define the socket as
SSL and use the general protocol name (for example in the case of
HTTPS) :
TYPE TCPSSL PROTOCOL HTTP If the server’s protocol is not found in
this list, simply do not specify the protocol and Monit will utilize a
default test, including test if it is possible to read and write to the
port. This default test is in most cases more than good enough to
deduce if the server behind the port is up or not.
The protocol statement is:
PROTO(COL) {name}
HTTP protocol supports additional options:
o REQUEST
o HOSTHEADER
o CHECKSUM
PROTO(COL) HTTP [REQUEST {"/path"} [with HOSTHEADER "string"] [with CHECKSUM checksum]
When the Host header option is not specified, for HTTP protocol, by
default the content of host option which specifies the target host to
connect to is used. The Host header can be used when you need to test
Examples:
if failed host 192.168.1.100 port 8080 protocol http and request ’/testing’ hostheader ’example.com’ with timeout 20 seconds for 2 cycles then alert
if failed host 192.168.1.101 port 8080 protocol http and request ’/testing’ hostheader ’example.com’ with timeout 20 seconds for 2 cycles then alert
if failed host 192.168.1.102 port 8080 protocol http and request ’/testing’ hostheader ’example.com’ with timeout 20 seconds for 2 cycles then alert
In addition to the standard protocols, the APACHE-STATUS protocol is a
test of a specific server type, rather than a generic protocol. Server
performance is examined using the status page generated by Apache’s
mod_status, which is expected to be at its default address of
http://www.example.com/server-status. Currently the APACHE-STATUS
protocol examines the percentage of Apache child processes which are
o logging (loglimit)
o closing connections (closelimit)
o performing DNS lookups (dnslimit)
o in keepalive with a client (keepalivelimit)
o replying to a client (replylimit)
o receiving a request (requestlimit)
o initialising (startlimit)
o waiting for incoming connections (waitlimit)
o gracefully closing down (gracefullimit)
o performing cleanup procedures (cleanuplimit)
Each of these quantities can be compared against a value relative to
the total number of active Apache child processes. If the comparison
expression is true the chosen action is performed.
The apache-status protocol statement is formally defined as (keywords
in uppercase):
PROTO(COL) {limit} OP PERCENT [OR {limit} OP PERCENT]*
where {limit} is one or more of: loglimit, closelimit, dnslimit,
keepalivelimit, replylimit, requestlimit, startlimit, waitlimit
gracefullimit or cleanuplimit. The operator OP is one of: [<│=│>].
You can combine all of these test into one expression or you can choose
to test a certain limit. If you combine the limits you must or’ them
together using the OR keyword.
Here’s an example were we test for a loglimit more than 10 percent, a
dnslimit over 25 percent and a wait limit less than 20 percent of
processes. See also more examples below in the example section.
protocol apache-status
loglimit > 10% or
dnslimit > 50% or
waitlimit < 20%
then alert
Obviously, do not use this test unless the httpd server you are testing
is Apache Httpd and mod_status is activated on the server.
send/expect: {SEND│EXPECT} "string" .... If Monit does not support the
protocol spoken by the server, you can write your own protocol-test
using send and expect strings. The SEND statement sends a string to the
server port and the EXPECT statement compares a string read from the
server with the string given in the expect statement. If your system
supports POSIX regular expressions, you can use regular expressions in
the expect string, see regex(7) to learn more about the types of
regular expressions you can use in an expect string. Otherwise the
string is used as it is. The send/expect statement is:
[{SEND│EXPECT} "string"]+
Note that Monit will send a string as it is, and you must remember to
include CR and LF in the string sent to the server if the protocol
expect such characters to terminate a string (most text based protocols
used over Internet does). Likewise monit will read up to 256 bytes from
the server and use this string when comparing the expect string. If the
server sends strings terminated by CRLF, (i.e. "\r\n") you may remember
to add the same terminating characters to the string you expect from
the server.
As mentioned above, Monit limits the expect input to 255 bytes. You
can override the default value by using this set statement at the top
of the Monit configuration file:
SET EXPECTBUFFER <number> ["b"│"kb"│"mb"]
For example, to set the expect buffer to read 10 kilobytes:
set expectbuffer 10 kb
Note, if you want to test the number of bytes returned from the server
you need to work around a bound check limit in POSIX regex. You cannot
use something like expect ".{5000}" as the max number in a boundary
check usually is {255}. However this should work, expect "(.{250}){20}"
You can use non-printable characters in a send string if needed. Use
the hex notation, \0xHEXHEX to send any char in the range \0x00-\0xFF,
that is, 0-255 in decimal. This may be useful when testing some network
protocols, particularly those over UDP. For example, to test a quake 3
server you can use the following,
send "\0xFF\0xFF\0xFF\0xFFgetstatus"
expect "sv_floodProtect│sv_maxPing"
Finally, send/expect can be used with any socket type, such as TCP
sockets, UNIX sockets and UDP sockets.
timeout:with TIMEOUT x SECONDS. Optionally specifies the connect and
read timeout for the connection. If Monit cannot connect to the server
within this time it will assume that the connection failed and execute
the specified action. The default connect timeout is 5 seconds.
action is a choice of "ALERT", "RESTART", "START", "STOP", "EXEC",
"MONITOR" or "UNMONITOR".
Connection testing using the URL notation
You can test a HTTP server using the compact URL syntax. This test also
allow you to use POSIX regular expressions to test the content returned
by the HTTP server.
The full syntax for the URL statement is as follows (keywords are in
capital and optional statements in [brackets]):
IF FAILED URL ULR-spec
[CONTENT {==│!=} "regular-expression"]
[TIMEOUT number SECONDS] [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES]
THEN action
[ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
Where URL-spec is an URL on the standard form as specified in RFC 2396:
<protocol>://<authority><path>?<query>
Here is an example of an URL where all components are used:
http://user:password@www.foo.bar:8080/document/?querystring#ref
If a username and password is included in the URL Monit will attempt to
login at the server using Basic Authentication.
Testing the content returned by the server is optional. If used, you
can test if the content match or does not match a regular expression.
Here’s an example on how the URL statement can be used in a check
service:
check host FOO with address www.foo.bar
if failed url
http://user:password@www.foo.bar:8080/?querystring
and content == ’action="j_security_check"’
then ...
Monit will look at the content-length header returned by the server and
download this amount before testing the content. That is, if the
content-length is more than 1Mb or this header is not set by the server
Monit will default to download up to 1 Mb and not more.
Only the http(s) protocol is supported in an URL statement. If the
protocol is https Monit will use SSL when connecting to the server.
Remote host ping test
In addition Monit can perform ICMP Echo tests in remote host checks.
The icmp test may only be used in a check host entry and Monit must run
with super user privileges, that is, the root user must run monit. The
reason is that the icmp test utilize a raw socket to send the icmp
packet and only the super user is allowed to create a raw socket.
The full syntax for the ICMP Echo statement used for ping testing is as
follows (keywords are in capital and optional statements in
[brackets]):
IF FAILED ICMP TYPE ECHO
[COUNT number] [WITH] [TIMEOUT number SECONDS]
[[<X>] <Y> CYCLES]
THEN action
[ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
The rules for action and timeout are the same as those mentioned above
in the CONNECTION TESTING section. The count parameter specifies how
many consecutive echo requests will be send to the host in one cycle.
In the case that no reply came within timeout frame, Monit reports
error. When at least one reply was received, the test will pass. Monit
sends by default three echo requests in one cycle to prevent the random
packet loss from generating false alarm (i.e. up to 66% packet loss is
tolerated). You can set the count option to a value between 1 and 20,
which can serve as an error ratio. For example if you require 100% ping
success, set the count to 1 (i.e. just one request will be sent, and if
the packet was lost an error will be reported).
An icmp ping test is useful for testing if a host is up, before testing
ports at the host. If an icmp ping test is used in a check host entry,
this test is run first and if the ping test should fail we assume that
the connection to the host is down and Monit does not continue to test
any ports. Here’s an example:
check host xyzzy with address xyzzy.org
if failed icmp type echo count 5 with timeout 15 seconds
then alert
if failed port 80 proto http then alert
if failed port 443 type TCPSSL proto http then alert
alert foo@bar
In this case, if the icmp test should fail you will get one alert and
only one alert as long as the host is down, and equally important,
Monit will not test port 80 and port 443. Likewise if the icmp ping
test should succeed (again) Monit will continue to test both port 80
and 443.
Keep in mind though that some firewalls can block icmp packages and
thus render the test useless.
Examples
To check a port connection and receive an alert if Monit cannot connect
to the port, use the following statement:
if failed port 80 then alert
In this case the machine in question is assumed to be the default host.
For a process entry it’s localhost and for a remote host entry it’s the
address of the remote host. Monit will conduct a tcp connection to the
host at port 80 and use tcp by default. If you want to connect with
udp, you can specify this after the port-statement;
if failed port 53 type udp protocol dns then alert
Monit will stop trying to connect to the port after 5 seconds and
assume that the server behind the port is down. You may increase or
decrease the connect timeout by explicit add a connection timeout. In
the following example the timeout is increased to 15 seconds and if
Monit cannot connect to the server within 15 seconds the test will fail
and an alert message is sent.
if failed port 80 with timeout 15 seconds then alert
If a server is listening to a Unix socket the following statement can
be used:
if failed unixsocket /var/run/sophie then alert
A Unix socket is used by some servers for fast (interprocess)
communication on localhost only. A Unix socket is specified by a path
and in the example above the path, /var/run/sophie, specifies a Unix
socket.
If your machine answers for several virtual hosts you can prefix the
port statement with a host-statement like so:
if failed host www.sol.no port 80 then alert
if failed host 80.69.226.133 port 443 then alert
if failed host kvasir.sol.no port 80 then alert
And as mentioned above, if you do not specify a host-statement,
localhost or address is assumed.
Monit also knows how to speak some of the more popular Internet
protocols. So, besides testing for connections, Monit can also speak
with the server in question to verify that the server works. For
example, the following is used to test a http server:
if failed host www.tildeslash.com port 80 proto http
then restart
Some protocols also support a request statement. This statement can be
used to ask the server for a special document entity.
Currently only the HTTP protocol module supports the request statement,
such as:
if failed host www.myhost.com port 80 protocol http
and request "/data/show.php?a=b&c=d"
then restart
The request must contain an URI string specifying a document from the
http server. The string will be URL encoded by Monit before it sends
the request to the http server, so it’s okay to use URL unsafe
characters in the request. If the request statement isn’t specified,
the default web server page will be requested.
You can override default Host header in HTTP request:
if failed host 192.168.1.100 port 80 protocol http
hostheader "example.com"
then alert
You can also test the checksum for documents returned by a http server.
You can use either MD5 sums:
if failed port 80 protocol http
and request "/page.html"
with checksum 8f7f419955cefa0b33a2ba316cba3659
then alert
Or you can use SHA1 sums:
if failed port 80 protocol http
and request "/page.html"
with checksum e428302e260e0832007d82de853aa8edf19cd872
then alert
Monit will compute a checksum (either MD5 or SHA1 is used, depending on
length of the hash) for the document (in the above case, /page.html)
and compare the computed checksum with the expected checksum. If the
sums does not match then the if-tests action is performed, in this case
alert. Note that Monit will not test the checksum for a document if the
server does not set the HTTP Content-Length header. A HTTP server
should set this header when it server a static document (i.e. a file).
A server will often use chunked transfer encoding instead when serving
dynamic content (e.g. a document created by a CGI-script or a Servlet),
but to test the checksum for dynamic content is not very useful. There
are no limitation on the document size, but keep in mind that Monit
will use time to download the document over the network so it’s
probably smart not to ask monit to compute a checksum for documents
larger than 1Mb or so, depending on you network connection of course.
Tip; If you get a checksum error even if the document has the correct
sum, the reason may be that the download timed out. In this case,
explicit set a longer timeout than the default 5 seconds.
As mentioned above, if the server protocol is not supported by Monit
you can write your own protocol test using send/expect strings. Here we
show a protocol test using send/expect for an imaginary "Ali Baba and
the Forty Thieves" protocol:
if failed host cave.persia.ir port 4040
send "Open, Sesame!\r\n"
expect "Please enter the cave\r\n"
send "Shut, Sesame!\r\n"
expect "See you later [A-Za-z ]+\r\n"
then restart
The TCPSSL statement can optionally test the md5 sum of the server’s
certificate. You must state the md5 certificate string you expect the
server to deliver and upon a connect to the server, the server’s actual
md5 sum certificate string is tested. Any other symbol but [A-Fa-f0-9]
is being ignored in that sting. Thus it is possible to copy and paste
the output of e.g. openssl. If they do not match, the connection test
fails. If the ssl version handshake does not work properly you can also
force a specific ssl version, as we demonstrate in this example:
if failed host shop.sol.no port 443
type TCPSSL SSLV3 # Force Monit to use ssl version 3
# We expect the server to return this md5 certificate sum
# as either 12-34-56-78-90-AB-CD-EF-12-34-56-78-90-AB-CD-EF
# or e.g. 1234567890ABCDEF1234567890ABCDEF
# or e.g. 1234567890abcdef1234567890abcdef
# what ever come in more handy (see text above)
CERTMD5 12-34-56-78-90-AB-CD-EF-12-34-56-78-90-AB-CD-EF
protocol http
then restart
Here’s an example where a connection test is used inside a process
entry:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/apache.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.tildeslash.com port 80 then restart
Here, a connection test is used in a remote host entry:
check host up2date with address ftp.redhat.com
if failed port 21 and protocol ftp then alert
Since we did not explicit specify a host in the above test, monit will
connect to port 21 at ftp.redhat.com. Apropos, the host address can be
specified as a dotted IP address string or as hostname in the DNS. The
following is exactly[*] the same test, but here an ip address is used
instead:
check host up2date with address 66.187.232.30
if failed port 21 and protocol ftp then alert
[*] Well, not quite, since we specify an ip-address directly we will
bypass any DNS round-robin setup, but that’s another story.
Testing the SIP protocol
The SIP protocol is used by communication platform servers such as
Asterisk and FreeSWITCH.
The SIP test is similar to the other protocol tests, but in addition
allows extra optional parameters.
IF FAILED [host] [port] [type] PROTOCOL sip [AND] [TARGET valid@uri]
[AND] [MAXFORWARD n] THEN action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES]
THEN action]
TARGET : you may specify an alternative recipient for the message, by
adding a valid sip uri after this keyword.
MAXFORWARD : Limit the number of proxies or gateways that can forward
the request to the next server. It’s value is an integer in the range
0-255, set by default to 70. If max-forward = 0, the next server may
respond 200 OK (test succeeded) or send a 483 Too Many Hops (test
failed)
SIP examples:
check host openser_all with address 127.0.0.1
if failed port 5060 type udp protocol sip
with target "localhost:5060" and maxforward 6
then alert
If sips is supported, that is, sip over ssl, specify tcpssl as the
connection type.
check host fwd.pulver.com with address fwd.pulver.com
if failed port 5060 type tcpssl protocol SIP
and target 613@fwd.pulver.com maxforward 10
then alert
For more examples, see the example section below.
Testing the RADIUS protocol
The SIP test is similar to the other protocol tests, but in addition
allows extra optional parameters.
IF FAILED [host] [port] [type] PROTOCOL radius [SECRET string] THEN
action [ELSE IF SUCCEEDED [[<X>] <Y> CYCLES] THEN action]
SECRET: you may specify an alternative secret, default is "testing123".
RADIUS example:
check process radiusd with pidfile /var/run/radiusd.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/freeradius start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/freeradius stop"
if failed host 127.0.0.1 port 1812 type udp protocol radius secret testing123 then alert
if 5 restarts within 5 cycles then timeout
MONIT HTTPD
If specified in the control file, Monit will start a Monit daemon with
http support. From a Browser you can then start and stop services,
disable or enable service monitoring as well as view the status of each
service. Also, if Monit logs to its own file, you can view the content
of this logfile in a Browser.
The control file statement for starting a Monit daemon with http
support is a global set-statement:
set httpd port 2812
And you can use this URL, http://localhost:2812/, to access the daemon
from a browser. The port number, in this case 2812, can be any number
that you are allowed to bind to.
If you have compiled Monit with openssl, you can also start the httpd
server with ssl support, using the following expression:
set httpd port 2812
ssl enable
pemfile /etc/certs/monit.pem
And you can use this URL, https://localhost:2812/, to access the Monit
web server over an ssl encrypted connection.
The pemfile, in the example above, holds both the server’s private key
and certificate. This file should be stored in a safe place on the
filesystem and should have strict permissions, that is, no more than
0700.
In addition, if you want to check for client certificates you can use
the CLIENTPEMFILE statement. In this case, a connecting client has to
provided a certificate known by Monit in order to connect. This file
also needs to have all necessary CA certificates. A configuration could
look like:
set httpd port 2812
ssl enable
pemfile /etc/certs/monit.pem
clientpemfile /etc/certs/monit-client.pem
By default self signed client certificates are not allowed. If you want
to use a self signed certificate from a client it has to be allowed
explicitly with the ALLOWSELFCERTIFICATION statement.
For more information on how to use Monit with SSL and for more
information about certificates and generating pem files, please consult
the README.SSL file accompanying the software.
If you only want the http server to accept connect requests to one host
addresses you can specify the bind address either as an IP number
string or as a hostname. In the following example we bind the http
server to the loopback device. In other words the http server will only
be reachable from localhost:
set httpd port 2812 and use the address 127.0.0.1
or
set httpd port 2812 and use the address localhost
If you do not use the ADDRESS statement the http server will accept
connections on any/all local addresses.
It is possible to hide monit’s httpd server version, which usually is
available in httpd header responses and in error pages.
set httpd port 2812
...
signature {enable│disable}
Use disable to hide the server signature - Monit will only report its
name (e.g. ’monit’ instead of for example ’monit 4.2’). By default the
version signature is enabled. It is worth to stress that this option
provides no security advantage and falls into the "security through
obscurity" category.
If you remove the httpd statement from the config file, monit will stop
the httpd server on configuration reload. Likewise if you change the
port number, Monit will restart the http server using the new specified
port number.
The status page displayed by the Monit web server is automatically
refreshed with the same poll time set for the monit daemon.
Note:
We strongly recommend that you start Monit with http support (and bind
the server to localhost, only, unless you are behind a firewall). The
built-in web-server is small and does not use much resources, and more
importantly, Monit can use the http server for interprocess
communication between a Monit client and a monit daemon.
For instance, you must start a Monit daemon with http support if you
want to be able to use most of the available console commands. I.e.
’Monit stop all’, ’Monit start all’ etc.
If a Monit daemon is running in the background we will ask the daemon
(via the HTTP protocol) to execute the above commands. That is, the
daemon is requested to start and stop the services. This ensures that
a daemon will not restart a service that you requested to stop and that
(any) timeout lock will be removed from a service when you start it.
Monit HTTPD Authentication
Monit supports two types of authentication schema’s for connecting to
the httpd server, (three, if you count SSL client certificate
validation). Both schema’s can be used together or by itself. You must
choose at least one.
Host and network allow list
The http server maintains an access-control list of hosts and networks
allowed to connect to the server. You can add as many hosts as you want
to, but only hosts with a valid domain name or its IP address are
allowed. Networks require a network IP and a netmask to be accepted.
The http server will query a name server to check any hosts connecting
to the server. If a host (client) is trying to connect to the server,
but cannot be found in the access list or cannot be resolved, the
server will shutdown the connection to the client promptly.
Control file example:
set httpd port 2812
allow localhost
allow my.other.work.machine.com
allow 10.1.1.1
allow 192.168.1.0/255.255.255.0
allow 10.0.0.0/8
Clients, not mentioned in the allow list, trying to connect to the
server are logged with their ip-address.
Basic Authentication
This authentication schema is HTTP specific and described in more
detail in RFC 2617.
In short; a server challenge a client (e.g. a Browser) to send
authentication information (username and password) and if accepted, the
server will allow the client access to the requested document.
The biggest weakness with Basic Authentication is that the username and
password is sent in clear-text (i.e. base64 encoded) over the network.
It is therefor recommended that you do not use this authentication
method unless you run the Monit http server with ssl support. With ssl
support it is completely safe to use Basic Authentication since all
http data, including Basic Authentication headers will be encrypted.
Monit will use Basic Authentication if an allow statement contains a
username and a password separated with a single ’:’ character, like so:
allow username:password. The username and password must be written in
clear-text. Special characters can be used but the password has to be
quoted.
PAM is supported as well on platforms which provide PAM (such as Linux,
Mac OS X, FreeBSD, NetBSD). The syntax is: allow @mygroup which
provides access to the user of group called mygroup. Monit uses PAM
service called monit for PAM authentication, see PAM manual page for
detailed instructions how to set the PAM service and PAM authentication
plugins. Example Monit PAM for Mac OS X - /etc/pam.d/monit:
# monit: auth account password session
auth sufficient pam_securityserver.so
auth sufficient pam_unix.so
auth required pam_deny.so
account required pam_permit.so
And configuration part for monitrc which allows only group admins
authenticated using via PAM to access the http interface:
set httpd port 2812 allow @admin
Alternatively you can use files in "htpasswd" format (one user:passwd
entry per line), like so: allow [cleartextcryptmd5] /path [users]. By
default cleartext passwords are read. In case the passwords are
digested it is necessary to specify the cryptographic method. If you do
not want all users in the password file to have access to Monit you can
specify only those users that should have access, in the allow
statement. Otherwise all users are added.
Example1:
set httpd port 2812
allow hauk:password
allow md5 /etc/httpd/htpasswd john paul ringo george
If you use this method together with a host list, then only clients
from the listed hosts will be allowed to connect to the Monit http
server and each client will be asked to provide a username and a
password.
Example2:
set httpd port 2812
allow localhost
allow 10.1.1.1
allow hauk:"password"
If you only want to use Basic Authentication, then just provide allow
entries with username and password or password files as in example 1
above.
Finally it is possible to define some users as read-only. A read-only
user can read the Monit web pages but will not get access to push-
buttons and cannot change a service from the web interface.
set httpd port 2812
allow admin:password
allow hauk:password read-only
allow @admins
allow @users read-only
A user is set to read-only by using the read-only keyword after
username:password. In the above example the user hauk is defined as a
read-only user, while the admin user has all access rights.
If you use Basic Authentication it is a good idea to set the access
permission for the control file (~/.monitrc) to only readable and
writable for the user running monit, because the password is written in
clear-text. (Use this command, /bin/chmod 600 ~/.monitrc). In fact,
since Monit version 3.0, Monit will complain and exit if the control
file is readable by others.
Clients trying to connect to the server but supply the wrong username
and/or password are logged with their ip-address.
If the Monit command line interface is being used, at least one
cleartext password is necessary. Otherwise, the Monit command line
interface will not be able to connect to the Monit daemon server.
DEPENDENCIES
If specified in the control file, Monit can do dependency checking
before start, stop, monitoring or unmonitoring of services. The
dependency statement may be used within any service entries in the
Monit control file.
The syntax for the depend statement is simply:
DEPENDS on service[, service [,...]]
Where service is a service entry name, for instance apache or datafs.
You may add more than one service name of any type or use more than one
depend statement in an entry.
Services specified in a depend statement will be checked during
stop/start/monitor/unmonitor operations. If a service is stopped or
unmonitored it will stop/unmonitor any services that depends on itself.
Likewise, if a service is started, it will first stop any services that
depends on itself and after it is started, start all depending services
again. If the service is to be monitored (enable monitoring), all
services which this service depends on will be monitored before
enabling monitoring of this service.
Here is an example where we set up an apache service entry to depend on
the underlying apache binary. If the binary should change an alert is
sent and apache is not monitored anymore. The rationale is security and
that Monit should not execute a possibly cracked apache binary.
(1) check process apache
(2) with pidfile "/usr/local/apache/logs/httpd.pid"
(3) ...
(4) depends on httpd
(5)
(6) check file httpd with path /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd
(7) if failed checksum then unmonitor
The first entry is the process entry for apache shown before
(abbreviated for clarity). The fourth line sets up a dependency between
this entry and the service entry named httpd in line 6. A depend tree
works as follows, if an action is conducted in a lower branch it will
propagate upward in the tree and for every dependent entry execute the
same action. In this case, if the checksum should fail in line 7 then
an unmonitor action is executed and the apache binary is not checked
anymore. But since the apache process entry depends on the httpd entry
this entry will also execute the unmonitor action. In short, if the
checksum test for the httpd binary file should fail, both the check
file httpd entry and the check process apache entry is set in un-
monitoring mode.
A dependency tree is a general construct and can be used between all
types of service entries and span many levels and propagate any
supported action (except the exec action which will not propagate
upward in a dependency tree for obvious reasons).
Here is another different example. Consider the following common server
setup:
WEB-SERVER -> APPLICATION-SERVER -> DATABASE -> FILESYSTEM
(a) (b) (c) (d)
You can set dependencies so that the web-server depends on the
application server to run before the web-server starts and the
application server depends on the database server and the database
depends on the file-system to be mounted before it starts. See also the
example section below for examples using the depend statement.
Here we describe how Monit will function with the above dependencies:
If no servers are running
Monit will start the servers in the following order: d, c, b, a
If all servers are running
When you run ’Monit stop all’ this is the stop order: a, b, c, d.
If you run ’Monit stop d’ then a, b and c are also stopped because
they depend on d and finally d is stopped.
If a does not run
When Monit runs it will start a
If b does not run
When Monit runs it will first stop a then start b and finally start
a again.
If c does not run
When Monit runs it will first stop a and b then start c and finally
start b then a.
If d does not run
When Monit runs it will first stop a, b and c then start d and
finally start c, b then a.
If the control file contains a depend loop.
A depend loop is for example; a->b and b->a or a->b->c->a.
When Monit starts it will check for such loops and complain and
exit if a loop was found. It will also exit with a complaint if a
depend statement was used that does not point to a service in the
control file.
THE RUN CONTROL FILE
The preferred way to set up Monit is to write a .monitrc file in your
home directory. When there is a conflict between the command-line
arguments and the arguments in this file, the command-line arguments
take precedence. To protect the security of your control file and
passwords the control file must have permissions no more than 0700
(u=xrw,g=,o=); Monit will complain and exit otherwise.
Run Control Syntax
Comments begin with a ’#’ and extend through the end of the line.
Otherwise the file consists of a series of service entries or global
option statements in a free-format, token-oriented syntax.
There are three kinds of tokens: grammar keywords, numbers (i.e.
decimal digit sequences) and strings. Strings can be either quoted or
unquoted. A quoted string is bounded by double quotes and may contain
whitespace (and quoted digits are treated as a string). An unquoted
string is any whitespace-delimited token, containing characters and/or
numbers.
On a semantic level, the control file consists of two types of entries:
1. Global set-statements
A global set-statement starts with the keyword set and the item to
configure.
2. One or more service entry statements.
Each service entry consists of the keywords ‘check’, followed by
the service type. Each entry requires a <unique> descriptive name,
which may be freely chosen. This name is used by monit to refer to
the service internally and in all interactions with the user.
Currently, six types of check statements are supported:
1. CHECK PROCESS <unique name> PIDFILE <path>
<path> is the absolute path to the program’s pidfile. If the
pidfile does not exist or does not contain the pid number of a
running process, Monit will call the entry’s start method if
defined, If Monit runs in passive mode or the start methods is not
defined, Monit will just send alerts on errors.
2. CHECK FILE <unique name> PATH <path>
<path> is the absolute path to the file. If the file does not exist
or disappeared, Monit will call the entry’s start method if
defined, if <path> does not point to a regular file type (for
instance a directory), Monit will disable monitoring of this entry.
If Monit runs in passive mode or the start methods is not defined,
Monit will just send alerts on errors.
3. CHECK FIFO <unique name> PATH <path>
<path> is the absolute path to the fifo. If the fifo does not exist
or disappeared, Monit will call the entry’s start method if
defined, if <path> does not point to a fifo type (for instance a
directory), Monit will disable monitoring of this entry. If Monit
runs in passive mode or the start methods is not defined, Monit
will just send alerts on errors.
4. CHECK FILESYSTEM <unique name> PATH <path>
<path> is the path to the filesystem block special device, mount
point, file or a directory which is part of a filesystem. It is
recommended to use a block special file directly (for example
/dev/hda1 on Linux or /dev/dsk/c0t0d0s1 on Solaris, etc.) If you
use a mount point (for example /data), be careful, because if the
filesystem is unmounted the test will still be true because the
mount point exist.
If the filesystem becomes unavailable, Monit will call the entry’s
start method if defined. if <path> does not point to a filesystem,
Monit will disable monitoring of this entry. If Monit runs in
passive mode or the start methods is not defined, Monit will just
send alerts on errors.
5. CHECK DIRECTORY <unique name> PATH <path>
<path> is the absolute path to the directory. If the directory does
not exist or disappeared, Monit will call the entry’s start method
if defined, if <path> does not point to a directory, monit will
disable monitoring of this entry. If Monit runs in passive mode or
the start methods is not defined, Monit will just send alerts on
errors.
6. CHECK HOST <unique name> ADDRESS <host address>
The host address can be specified as a hostname string or as an ip-
address string on a dotted decimal format. Such as, tildeslash.com
or "64.87.72.95".
7. CHECK SYSTEM <unique name>
The system name is usualy hostname, but any descriptive name can be
used. This test allows to check general system resources such as
CPU usage (percent of time spent in user, system and wait), total
memory usage or load average.
You can use noise keywords like ’if’, ‘and’, ‘with(in)’, ‘has’,
‘using’, ’use’, ’on(ly)’, ‘usage’ and ‘program(s)’ anywhere in an entry
to make it resemble English. They’re ignored, but can make entries much
easier to read at a glance. The punctuation characters ’;’ ’,’ and ’=’
are also ignored. Keywords are case insensitive.
Here are the legal global keywords:
Keyword Function
----------------------------------------------------------------
set daemon Set a background poll interval in seconds.
set init Set Monit to run from init. Monit will not
transform itself into a daemon process.
set logfile Name of a file to dump error- and status-
messages to. If syslog is specified as the
file, Monit will utilize the syslog daemon
to log messages. This can optionally be
followed by ’facility <facility>’ where
facility is ’log_local0’ - ’log_local7’ or
’log_daemon’. If no facility is specified,
LOG_USER is used.
set mailserver The mailserver used for sending alert
notifications. If the mailserver is not
defined, Monit will try to use ’localhost’
as the smtp-server for sending mail. You
can add more mail servers, if Monit cannot
connect to the first server it will try the
next server and so on.
set mail-format Set a global mail format for all alert
messages emitted by monit.
set idfile Explicit set the location of the Monit id
file. E.g. set idfile /var/monit/id.
set pidfile Explicit set the location of the Monit lock
file. E.g. set pidfile /var/run/xyzmonit.pid.
set statefile Explicit set the location of the file Monit
will write state data to. If not set, the
default is $HOME/.monit.state.
set httpd port Activates Monit http server at the given
port number.
ssl enable Enables ssl support for the httpd server.
Requires the use of the pemfile statement.
ssl disable Disables ssl support for the httpd server.
It is equal to omitting any ssl statement.
pemfile Set the pemfile to be used with ssl.
clientpemfile Set the pemfile to be used when client
certificates should be checked by monit.
address If specified, the http server will only
accept connect requests to this addresses
This statement is an optional part of the
set httpd statement.
allow Specifies a host or IP address allowed to
connect to the http server. Can also specify
a username and password allowed to connect
to the server. More than one allow statement
are allowed. This statement is also an
optional part of the set httpd statement.
read-only Set the user defined in username:password
to read only. A read-only user cannot change
a service from the Monit web interface.
include include a file or files matching the globstring
Here are the legal service entry keywords:
Keyword Function
----------------------------------------------------------------
check Starts an entry and must be followed by the type
of monitored service {filesystem│directory│file│host
process│system} and a descriptive name for the
service.
pidfile Specify the process pidfile. Every
process must create a pidfile with its
current process id. This statement should only
be used in a process service entry.
path Must be followed by a path to the block
special file for filesystem, regular
file, directory or a process’s pidfile.
group Specify a groupname for a service entry.
start The program used to start the specified
service. Full path is required. This
statement is optional, but recommended.
stop The program used to stop the specified
service. Full path is required. This
statement is optional, but recommended.
pid and ppid These keywords may be used as standalone
statements in a process service entry to
override the alert action for change of
process pid and ppid.
uid and gid These keywords are either 1) an optional part of
a start, stop or exec statement. They may be
used to specify a user id and a group id the
program (process) should switch to upon start.
This feature can only be used if the superuser
is running monit. 2) uid and gid may also be
used as standalone statements in a file service
entry to test a file’s uid and gid attributes.
host The hostname or IP address to test the port
at. This keyword can only be used together
with a port statement or in the check host
statement.
port Specify a TCP/IP service port number which
a process is listening on. This statement
is also optional. If this statement is not
prefixed with a host-statement, localhost is
used as the hostname to test the port at.
type Specifies the socket type Monit should use when
testing a connection to a port. If the type
keyword is omitted, tcp is used. This keyword
must be followed by either tcp, udp or tcpssl.
tcp Specifies that Monit should use a TCP
socket type (stream) when testing a port.
tcpssl Specifies that Monit should use a TCP socket
type (stream) and the secure socket layer (ssl)
when testing a port connection.
udp Specifies that Monit should use a UDP socket
type (datagram) when testing a port.
certmd5 The md5 sum of a certificate a ssl forged
server has to deliver.
proto(col) This keyword specifies the type of service
found at the port. See CONNECTION TESTING
for list of supported protocols.
You’re welcome to write new protocol test
modules. If no protocol is specified Monit will
use a default test which in most cases are good
enough.
request Specifies a server request and must come
after the protocol keyword mentioned above.
- for http it can contain an URL and an
optional query string.
- other protocols does not support this
statement yet
send/expect These keywords specify a generic protocol.
Both require a string whether to be sent or
to be matched against (as extended regex if
supported). Send/expect can not be used
together with the proto(col) statement.
unix(socket) Specifies a Unix socket file and used like
the port statement above to test a Unix
domain network socket connection.
URL Specify an URL string which Monit will use for
connection testing.
content Optional sub-statement for the URL statement.
Specifies that Monit should test the content
returned by the server against a regular
expression.
timeout x sec. Define a network port connection timeout. Must
be followed by a number in seconds and the
keyword, seconds.
timeout Define a service timeout. Must be followed by
two digits. The first digit is max number of
restarts for the service. The second digit
is the cycle interval to test restarts.
This statement is optional.
alert Specifies an email address for notification
if a service event occurs. Alert can also
be postfixed, to only send a message for
certain events. See the examples above. More
than one alert statement is allowed in an
entry. This statement is also optional.
noalert Specifies an email address which don’t want
to receive alerts. This statement is also
optional.
restart, stop These keywords may be used as actions for
unmonitor, various test statements. The exec statement is
start and special in that it requires a following string
exec specifying the program to be execute. You may
also specify an UID and GID for the exec
statement. The program executed will then run
using the specified user id and group id.
mail-format Specifies a mail format for an alert message
This statement is an optional part of the
alert statement.
checksum Specify that Monit should compute and monitor a
file’s md5/sha1 checksum. May only be used in a
check file entry.
expect Specifies a md5/sha1 checksum string Monit
should expect when testing the checksum. This
statement is an optional part of the checksum
statement.
timestamp Specifies an expected timestamp for a file
or directory. More than one timestamp statement
are allowed. May only be used in a check file or
check directory entry.
changed Part of a timestamp statement and used as an
operator to simply test for a timestamp change.
every Validate this entry only at every n poll cycle.
Useful in daemon mode when the cycle is short
and a service takes some time to start.
mode Must be followed either by the keyword active,
passive or manual. If active, Monit will restart
the service if it is not running (this is the
default behavior). If passive, Monit will not
(re)start the service if it is not running - it
will only monitor and send alerts (resource
related restart and stop options are ignored
in this mode also). If manual, Monit will enter
active mode only if a service was started under
monit’s control otherwise the service isn’t
monitored.
cpu Must be followed by a compare operator, a number
with "%" and an action. This statement is used
to check the cpu usage in percent of a process
with its children over a number of cycles. If
the compare expression matches then the
specified action is executed.
mem The equivalent to the cpu token for memory of a
process (w/o children!). This token must be
followed by a compare operator a number with
unit {B│KB│MB│GB│%│byte│kilobyte│megabyte│
gigabyte│percent} and an action.
loadavg Must be followed by [1min,5min,15min] in (), a
compare operator, a number and an action. This
statement is used to check the system load
average over a number of cycles. If the compare
expression matches then the specified action is
executed.
children This is the number of child processes spawn by a
process. The syntax is the same as above.
totalmem The equivalent of mem, except totalmem is an
aggregation of memory, not only used by a
process but also by all its child
processes. The syntax is the same as above.
space Must be followed by a compare operator, a
number, unit {B│KB│MB│GB│%│byte│kilobyte│
megabyte│gigabyte│percent} and an action.
inode(s) Must be followed by a compare operator, integer
number, optionally by percent sign (if not, the
limit is absolute) and an action.
perm(ission) Must be followed by an octal number describing
the permissions.
size Must be followed by a compare operator, a
number, unit {B│KB│MB│GB│byte│kilobyte│
megabyte│gigabyte} and an action.
depends (on) Must be followed by the name of a service this
service depends on.
Here’s the complete list of reserved keywords used by monit:
if, then, else, set, daemon, logfile, syslog, address, httpd, ssl,
enable, disable, pemfile, allow, read-only, check, init, count,
pidfile, statefile, group, start, stop, uid, gid, connection,
port(number), unix(socket), type, proto(col), tcp, tcpssl, udp, alert,
noalert, mail-format, restart, timeout, checksum, resource, expect,
send, mailserver, every, mode, active, passive, manual, depends, host,
default, http, ftp, smtp, pop, ntp3, nntp, imap, clamav, ssh, dwp,
ldap2, ldap3, tns, request, cpu, mem, totalmem, children, loadavg,
timestamp, changed, second(s), minute(s), hour(s), day(s), space,
inode, pid, ppid, perm(ission), icmp, process, file, directory,
filesystem, size, action, unmonitor, rdate, rsync, data, invalid, exec,
nonexist, policy, reminder, instance, eventqueue, basedir, slot(s),
system, idfile, gps, radius, secret, target, maxforward, hostheader and
failed
And here is a complete list of noise keywords ignored by monit:
is, as, are, on(ly), with(in), and, has, using, use, the, sum,
program(s), than, for, usage, was, but, of.
Note: If the start or stop programs are shell scripts, then the script
must begin with "#!" and the remainder of the first line must specify
an interpreter for the program. E.g. "#!/bin/sh"
It’s possible to write scripts directly into the start and stop entries
by using a string of shell-commands. Like so:
start="/bin/bash -c ’echo $$ > pidfile; exec program’"
stop="/bin/bash -c ’kill -s SIGTERM ‘cat pidfile‘’"
CONFIGURATION EXAMPLES
The simplest form is just the check statement. In this example we check
to see if the server is running and log a message if not:
check process resin with pidfile /usr/local/resin/srun.pid
To have Monit start the server if it’s not running, add a start
statement:
check process resin with pidfile /usr/local/resin/srun.pid
start program = "/usr/local/resin/bin/srun.sh start"
Here’s a more advanced example for monitoring an apache web-server
listening on the default port number for HTTP and HTTPS. In this
example Monit will restart apache if it’s not accepting connections at
the port numbers. The method Monit use for a process restart is to
first execute the stop-program, wait up to 30s for the process to stop
and then execute the start-program and wait up to 30s for it to start.
The length of start or stop timeout can be overriden using the
’timeout’ option. If Monit was unable to stop or start the service a
failed alert message will be sent if you have requested alert messages
to be sent.
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/httpd start" with timeout 60 seconds
stop program = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed port 80 then restart
if failed port 443 with timeout 15 seconds then restart
This example demonstrate how you can run a program as a specified user
(uid) and with a specified group (gid). Many daemon programs will do
the uid and gid switch by them self, but for those programs that does
not (e.g. Java programs), monit’s ability to start a program as a
certain user can be very useful. In this example we start the Tomcat
Java Servlet Engine as the standard nobody user and group. Please note
that Monit will only switch uid and gid for a program if the super-user
is running monit, otherwise Monit will simply ignore the request to
change uid and gid.
check process tomcat with pidfile /var/run/tomcat.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/tomcat start"
as uid nobody and gid nobody
stop program = "/etc/init.d/tomcat stop"
# You can also use id numbers instead and write:
as uid 99 and with gid 99
if failed port 8080 then alert
In this example we use udp for connection testing to check if the name-
server is running and also use timeout and alert:
check process named with pidfile /var/run/named.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/named start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/named stop"
if failed port 53 use type udp protocol dns then restart
if 3 restarts within 5 cycles then timeout
The following example illustrates how to check if the service ’sophie’
is answering connections on its Unix domain socket:
check process sophie with pidfile /var/run/sophie.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/sophie start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/sophie stop"
if failed unix /var/run/sophie then restart
In this example we check an apache web-server running on localhost that
answers for several IP-based virtual hosts or vhosts, hence the host
statement before port:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.sol.no port 80 then alert
if failed host shop.sol.no port 443 then alert
if failed host chat.sol.no port 80 then alert
if failed host www.tildeslash.com port 80 then alert
To make sure that Monit is communicating with a http server a protocol
test can be added:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.sol.no port 80
protocol HTTP
then alert
This example shows a different way to check a webserver using the
send/expect mechanism:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.sol.no port 80
send "GET / HTTP/1.0\r\nHost: www.sol.no\r\n\r\n"
expect "HTTP/[0-9\.]{3} 200 .*\r\n"
then alert
To make sure that Apache is logging successfully (i.e. no more than 60
percent of child servers are logging), use its mod_status page at
www.sol.no/server-status with this special protocol test:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.sol.no port 80
protocol apache-status loglimit > 60% then restart
This configuration can be used to alert you if 25 percent or more of
Apache child processes are stuck performing DNS lookups:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.sol.no port 80
protocol apache-status dnslimit > 25% then alert
Here we use an icmp ping test to check if a remote host is up and if
not send an alert:
check host www.tildeslash.com with address www.tildeslash.com
if failed icmp type echo count 5 with timeout 15 seconds
then alert
In the following example we ask Monit to compute and verify the
checksum for the underlying apache binary used by the start and stop
programs. If the the checksum test should fail, monitoring will be
disabled to prevent possibly starting a compromised binary:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if failed host www.tildeslash.com port 80 then restart
depends on apache_bin
check file apache_bin with path /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd
if failed checksum then unmonitor
In this example we ask Monit to test the checksum for a document on a
remote server. If the checksum was changed we send an alert:
check host tildeslash with address www.tildeslash.com
if failed port 80 protocol http
and request "/monit/dist/monit-4.0.tar.gz"
with checksum f9d26b8393736b5dfad837bb13780786
then alert
Here are a couple of tests for some popular communication servers,
using the SIP protocol. First we test a FreeSWITCH server and then an
Asterisk server
check process freeswitch
with pidfile /usr/local/freeswitch/log/freeswitch.pid
start program = /usr/local/freeswitch/bin/freeswitch -nc -hp
stop program = /usr/local/freeswitch/bin/freeswitch -stop
if totalmem > 1000.0 MB for 5 cycles then alert
if totalmem > 1500.0 MB for 5 cycles then alert
if totalmem > 2000.0 MB for 5 cycles then restart
if cpu > 60% for 5 cycles then alert
if failed port 5060 type udp protocol SIP
target me@foo.bar and maxforward 10
then restart
if 5 restarts within 5 cycles then timeout
check process asterisk
with pidfile /var/run/asterisk/asterisk.pid
start program = /usr/sbin/asterisk
stop program = /usr/sbin/asterisk -r -x shutdown now
if totalmem > 1000.0 MB for 5 cycles then alert
if totalmem > 1500.0 MB for 5 cycles then alert
if totalmem > 2000.0 MB for 5 cycles then restart
if cpu > 60% for 5 cycles then alert
if failed port 5060 type udp protocol SIP
and target me@foo.bar maxforward 10
then restart
if 5 restarts within 5 cycles then timeout
Some servers are slow starters, like for example Java based Application
Servers. So if we want to keep the poll-cycle low (i.e. < 60 seconds)
but allow some services to take its time to start, the every statement
is handy:
check process dynamo with pidfile /etc/dynamo.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/dynamo start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/dynamo stop"
if failed port 8840 then alert
every 2 cycles
Here is an example where we group together two database entries so you
can manage them together, e.g.; ’Monit -g database start all’. The mode
statement is also illustrated in the first entry and have the effect
that Monit will not try to (re)start this service if it is not running:
check process sybase with pidfile /var/run/sybase.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/sybase start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/sybase stop"
mode passive
group database
check process oracle with pidfile /var/run/oracle.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/oracle start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/oracle stop"
mode active # Not necessary really, since it’s the default
if failed port 9001 then restart
group database
Here is an example to show the usage of the resource checks. It will
send an alert when the CPU usage of the http daemon and its child
processes raises beyond 60% for over two cycles. Apache is restarted if
the CPU usage is over 80% for five cycles or the memory usage over
100Mb for five cycles or if the machines load average is more than 10
for 8 cycles:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if cpu > 40% for 2 cycles then alert
if totalcpu > 60% for 2 cycles then alert
if totalcpu > 80% for 5 cycles then restart
if mem > 100 MB for 5 cycles then stop
if loadavg(5min) greater than 10.0 for 8 cycles then stop
This examples demonstrate the timestamp statement with exec and how you
may restart apache if its configuration file was changed.
check file httpd.conf with path /etc/httpd/httpd.conf
if changed timestamp
then exec "/etc/init.d/httpd graceful"
In this example we demonstrate usage of the extended alert statement
and a file check dependency:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
alert admin@bar on {nonexist, timeout}
with mail-format {
from: bofh@$HOST
subject: apache $EVENT - $ACTION
message: This event occurred on $HOST at $DATE.
Your faithful employee,
monit
}
if failed host www.tildeslash.com port 80 then restart
if 3 restarts within 5 cycles then timeout
depend httpd_bin
group apache
check file httpd_bin with path /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd
alert security@bar on {checksum, timestamp,
permission, uid, gid}
with mail-format {subject: Alaaarrm! on $HOST}
if failed checksum
and expect 8f7f419955cefa0b33a2ba316cba3659
then unmonitor
if failed permission 755 then unmonitor
if failed uid root then unmonitor
if failed gid root then unmonitor
if changed timestamp then alert
group apache
In this example, we demonstrate usage of the depend statement. In this
case, we want to start oracle and apache. However, we’ve set up apache
to use oracle as a back end, and if oracle is restarted, apache must be
restarted as well.
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
depends on oracle
check process oracle with pidfile /var/run/oracle.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/oracle start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/oracle stop"
if failed port 9001 then restart
Next, we have 2 services, oracle-import and oracle-export that need to
be restarted if oracle is restarted, but are independent of each other.
check process oracle with pidfile /var/run/oracle.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/oracle start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/oracle stop"
if failed port 9001 then restart
check process oracle-import
with pidfile /var/run/oracle-import.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/oracle-import start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/oracle-import stop"
depends on oracle
check process oracle-export
with pidfile /var/run/oracle-export.pid
start = "/etc/init.d/oracle-export start"
stop = "/etc/init.d/oracle-export stop"
depends on oracle
Finally an example with all statements:
check process apache with pidfile /var/run/httpd.pid
start program = "/etc/init.d/httpd start"
stop program = "/etc/init.d/httpd stop"
if 3 restarts within 5 cycles then timeout
if failed host www.sol.no port 80 protocol http
and use the request "/login.cgi"
then alert
if failed host shop.sol.no port 443 type tcpssl
protocol http and with timeout 15 seconds
then restart
if cpu is greater than 60% for 2 cycles then alert
if cpu > 80% for 5 cycles then restart
if totalmem > 100 MB then stop
if children > 200 then alert
alert bofh@bar with mail-format {from: monit@foo.bar.no}
every 2 cycles
mode active
depends on weblogic
depends on httpd.pid
depends on httpd.conf
depends on httpd_bin
depends on datafs
group server
check file httpd.pid with path /usr/local/apache/logs/httpd.pid
group server
if timestamp > 7 days then restart
every 2 cycles
alert bofh@bar with mail-format {from: monit@foo.bar.no}
depends on datafs
check file httpd.conf with path /etc/httpd/httpd.conf
group server
if timestamp was changed
then exec "/usr/local/apache/bin/apachectl graceful"
every 2 cycles
alert bofh@bar with mail-format {from: monit@foo.bar.no}
depends on datafs
check file httpd_bin with path /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd
group server
if failed checksum and expect the sum
8f7f419955cefa0b33a2ba316cba3659 then unmonitor
if failed permission 755 then unmonitor
if failed uid root then unmonitor
if failed gid root then unmonitor
if changed size then alert
if changed timestamp then alert
every 2 cycles
alert bofh@bar with mail-format {from: monit@foo.bar.no}
alert foo@bar on { checksum, size, timestamp, uid, gid }
depends on datafs
check filesystem datafs with path /dev/sdb1
group server
start program = "/bin/mount /data"
stop program = "/bin/umount /data"
if failed permission 660 then unmonitor
if failed uid root then unmonitor
if failed gid disk then unmonitor
if space usage > 80 % then alert
if space usage > 94 % then stop
if inode usage > 80 % then alert
if inode usage > 94 % then stop
alert root@localhost
check host ftp.redhat.com with address ftp.redhat.com
if failed icmp type echo with timeout 15 seconds
then alert
if failed port 21 protocol ftp
then exec "/usr/X11R6/bin/xmessage -display
:0 ftp connection failed"
alert foo@bar.com
check host www.gnu.org with address www.gnu.org
if failed port 80 protocol http
and request "/pub/gnu/bash/bash-2.05b.tar.gz"
with checksum 8f7f419955cefa0b33a2ba316cba3659
then alert
alert rms@gnu.org with mail-format {
subject: The gnu server may be hacked again! }
Note; only the check statement is mandatory, the other statements are
optional and the order of the optional statements is not important.
FILES
~/.monitrc
Default run control file
/etc/monit/monitrc
If the control file is not found in the default
location and /etc/monit/ contains a monitrc file, this
file will be used instead.
./monitrc
If the control file is not found in either of the
previous two locations, and the current working
directory contains a monitrc file, this file is
used instead.
~/.monit.pid
Lock file to help prevent concurrent runs (non-root
mode).
/var/run/monit.pid
Lock file to help prevent concurrent runs (root mode,
Linux systems).
/etc/monit.pid
Lock file to help prevent concurrent runs (root mode,
systems without /var/run).
~/.monit.state
Monit save its state to this file and utilize
information found in this file to recover from
a crash. This is a binary file and its content is
only of interest to monit. You may set the location
of this file in the Monit control file or by using
the -s switch when Monit is started.
~/.monit.id
Monit save its unique id to this file.
ENVIRONMENT
No environment variables are used by Monit. However, when Monit execute
a script or a program Monit will set several environment variables
which can be utilized by the executable. The following and only the
following environment variables are available:
MONIT_EVENT
The event that occurred on the service
MONIT_DESCRIPTION
A description of the error condition
MONIT_SERVICE
The name of the service (from monitrc) on which the event occurred.
MONIT_DATE
The time and date (rfc 822 style) the event occurred
MONIT_HOST
The host the event occurred on
The following environment variables are only available for process
service entries:
MONIT_PROCESS_PID
The process pid. This may be 0 if the process was (re)started,
MONIT_PROCESS_MEMORY
Process memory. This may be 0 if the process was (re)started,
MONIT_PROCESS_CHILDREN
Process children. This may be 0 if the process was (re)started,
MONIT_PROCESS_CPU_PERCENT
Process cpu%. This may be 0 if the process was (re)started,
In addition the following spartan PATH environment variable is
available:
PATH=/bin:/usr/bin:/sbin:/usr/sbin
Scripts or programs that depends on other environment variables or on a
more verbose PATH must provide means to set these variables by them
self.
SIGNALS
If a Monit daemon is running, SIGUSR1 wakes it up from its sleep phase
and forces a poll of all services. SIGTERM and SIGINT will gracefully
terminate a Monit daemon. The SIGTERM signal is sent to a Monit daemon
if Monit is started with the quit action argument.
Sending a SIGHUP signal to a running Monit daemon will force the daemon
to reinitialize itself, specifically it will reread configuration,
close and reopen log files.
Running Monit in foreground while a background Monit daemon is running
will wake up the daemon.
NOTES
This is a very silent program. Use the -v switch if you want to see
what Monit is doing, and tail -f the logfile. Optionally for testing
purposes; you can start Monit with the -Iv switch. Monit will then
print debug information to the console, to stop monit in this mode,
simply press CTRL^C (i.e. SIGINT) in the same console.
The syntax (and parser) of the control file was inspired by Eric S.
Raymond et al. excellent fetchmail program. Some portions of this man
page does also receive inspiration from the same authors.
AUTHORS
Jan-Henrik Haukeland <hauk@tildeslash.com>, Martin Pala
<martinp@tildeslash.com>, Christian Hopp <chopp@iei.tu-clausthal.de>,
Rory Toma <rory@digeo.com>
See also http://mmonit.com/monit/who/
COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 2010 by Tildeslash Ltd. All Rights Reserved. This product
is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, but WITHOUT any
warranty; without even the implied warranty of MERCHANTABILITY or
FITNESS for a particular purpose.
SEE ALSO
GNU text utilities; md5sum(1); sha1sum(1); openssl(1); glob(7);
regex(7); http://mmonit.com/