Internet-Draft | MPI | June 2023 |
Kästle | Expires 23 December 2023 | [Page] |
This document aims to document the Monitoring Plugin Interface, a standard more or less strictly implemented by different network monitoring solutions. Implementers and Users of network monitoring solutions, monitoring plugins and libraries can use this as a reference point as to how these programs interface with each other.¶
This note is to be removed before publishing as an RFC.¶
Status information for this document may be found at https://datatracker.ietf.org/doc/draft-kaestle-monitoring-plugins-interface/.¶
Source for this draft and an issue tracker can be found at https://github.com/RincewindsHat/rfc-monitoring-plugins-interface.¶
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With the emergence of NetSaint/Nagios at the latest, these system and their successors/forks have relied on a loose group of programs called "Monitoring Plugins" to do the lower level task of actually determining the state of a particular entity or conduct measurements of certain values.¶
This document shall help users and especially developers of those programs as a basis on how they should be implemented, how they should work and how they should behave. It encourages the standardization of libraries, Monitoring Plugins and Monitoring Systems, to reduce the cognitive load on users, administrators and developers, if they work with different implementations.¶
This document aims to be as general as possible and not to assume a special implementation detail, e.g. the programming language, the install mechanism or the monitoring system which executes the Monitoring Plugin.¶
The key words "MUST", "MUST NOT", "REQUIRED", "SHALL", "SHALL NOT", "SHOULD", "SHOULD NOT", "RECOMMENDED", "NOT RECOMMENDED", "MAY", and "OPTIONAL" in this document are to be interpreted as described in BCP 14 [RFC2119] [RFC8174] when, and only when, they appear in all capitals, as shown here.¶
In many cases thresholds for metrics mark a certain range of values where the values is considered to be good or bad if it is inside or outside. While for significant number of metrics a upper (e.g. load on unixoid systems) or lower (e.g. effective throughput, free space in memory or storage) border might suffice, for some it does not, for example a temperature value from a temperature sensor should be within certain range (e.g. between 10℃ and 45℃).¶
Regarding input parameters this might be handled with options like
--critical-upper-temperature
and --critical-lower-temperature
, but this
creates a problem in the performance data output, if only scalar values could be
used. To resolve this situation the Range expression format was introduced,
with the following definition:¶
[@][start:][end]
¶
where:¶
start
or end
MUST be provided.¶
start
<= end
¶
start
== 0, then start
can be omitted.¶
end
is omitted, it has the "value" of positive infinity.¶
~
.¶
@
IS given, the value exceeds the threshold if it is INSIDE the range between start
and end
(including the endpoints).¶
@
is NOT given, the value exceeds the threshold if it is OUTSIDE of the range between start
and end
(including the endpoints).¶
Range definition | Exceeds threshold if x... |
---|---|
10 | < 0 or > 10, (outside the range of {0 .. 10}) |
10: | < 10, (outside {10 .. ∞}) |
~:10 | > 10, (outside the range of {-∞ .. 10}) |
10:20 | < 10 or > 20, (outside the range of {10 .. 20}) |
@10:20 | >= 10 and <= 20, (inside the range of {10 .. 20}) |
A Monitoring System executes a Monitoring Plugin. The Monitoring Plugin MAY accept parameters in the form of command line arguments, environment variables or a configuration file (the location of which MAY in turn be given on the command line or via environment variable). The Monitoring Plugin then proceeds to execute its duty and returns the result to the Monitoring System. Part of the process of returning the result is the termination of the execution of the Monitoring Plugin itself.¶
A Monitoring Plugin MUST expect input parameters as arguments during execution, if any are needed/expected at all. It MAY accept these parameters given as environment variables and it MAY accept them in a configuration file (with a default path or a path given via arguments or environment variables).¶
In general positional arguments are strongly discouraged.¶
Some arguments MUST have this predetermined meaning, if they are used:¶
Argument (long) | Argument (short version, optional) | Argument | Meaning | optional | can be given multiple times |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
--help | -h | None | Triggers the help functionality of the Monitoring Plugin, showing the individual parameters and their meaning, examples for usage of the Monitoring Plugin and general remarks about the how and why of the Monitoring Plugin. SHOULD overwrite all other options, meaning, they are ignored if --help is given. The Monitoring Plugin SHOULD exit with state UNKNOWN (3). |
no | -- (makes no difference) |
--version | -V | None | Shows the version of the Monitoring Plugin to allow users to report errors better and therefore help them and the developers. The Monitoring Plugin SHOULD exit with state UNKNOWN (3). | no | -- (makes no difference) |
--timeout | -t | Integer (meaning seconds) or a time duration string | Sets a limit for the time which a Monitoring Plugin is given to execute. This is there to enforce the abortion of the test and improve the reaction time of the Monitoring System (e.g. in bad network conditions it might be helpful to abort the test prematurely and inform the user about that, than trying forever to do something which won't succeed. Or if soft real time constraints are present, a result might be worthless altogether after some time). A sane default is probably 30 seconds, although this depends heavily on the scenario and should be given a thought during development. If the execution is terminated by this timeout, it should exit with state UNKNOWN (3) and (if possible) give some helpful output in which stage of the execution the timeout occurred. | no | no |
--hostname | -H | String, meaning either a DNS nameor an IP address of the targeted system | If the Monitoring Plugin targets exactly one other system on the network, this option should be used to tell it which one. If the Monitoring Plugin does its test just locally or the logic does not apply to it, this option is, of course, optional. | yes | no |
--verbose | -v | None | Increases the verbosity of the output, thereby breaking the suggested rules about a short and concise output. The intention is to provide more information to a user. | yes | yes |
--exit-ok | The Monitoring Plugin exits unconditionally with OK (0). Mostly useful for the purpose of packaging and testing plugins, but might be used to always ignore errors (e.g. to just collect data). | yes | no |
For the execution with --help
:¶
$ my_check_plugin --help¶
the output might look like this:¶
my_check_plugin version 3.1.4 Licensed under the AGPLv1. Repository: git.example.com/jdoe/my_check_plugin This plugin just says hello. It fails if you don't give it a name. Usage: my_check_plugin --name NAME [--greeting GREETING] Options: --help this help --version Shows the version of the plugin --name NAME if given, uses NAME as a name to greet. --greeting GREETING if given, uses GREETING instead of Hello. Examples: $ my_check_plugin --name Jane Hello Jane $ my_check_plugin --greeting Ciao --name Alice Ciao Alice¶
This imaginary Monitoring Plugin tries to be really helpful here, displays the version, the license and the upstream repository with the help (although not necessary), has a short description about the purpose, lists the options in an easily readable way and even gives some examples.¶
For the execution with --version
¶
$ my_check_plugin --version¶
the output might be a bit shorter:¶
my_check_plugin version 3.1.4¶
or even:¶
3.1.4¶
where both show the necessary information.¶
The output of a Monitoring Plugin consists of two parts on the first level, the Exit Code and output in textual form on stdout.¶
The Monitoring Plugin MUST make use of the Exit Code as a method to communicate a result to the Monitoring System. Since the Exit Code is more or less standardized over different systems as an integer number with a width of or greater than 8bit, the following mapping is used:¶
Exit Code (numerical) | Meaning (short) | Meaning (extended) |
---|---|---|
0 | OK | The execution of the Monitoring Plugin proceeded as planned and the tests appeared to function properly and the measured values are within their respective thresholds |
1 | WARNING | The execution of the Monitoring Plugin proceeded as planned and the tests appeared to not function properly or the measured values are not with their respective thresholds. The problem(s) do(es) not seem exceptionally grave though and do(es) not require immediate attention |
2 | CRITICAL | The execution of the Monitoring Plugin proceeded as planned and the tests appeared to not function properly or the measured values are not with their respective thresholds. The problem(s) do(es) seem exceptionally grave though and do(es) require immediate attention |
3 | UNKNOWN | The execution of the Monitoring Plugin did not proceed as planned. The reasons might be manifold, e.g. missing permissions, missing libraries, no available network connection to the destination, etc.. In summary: The Monitoring Plugin could not determine the state of whatever it should have been checking and can therefore make no reliable statement about it. |
4-125 | reserved for future use |
The original purpose of the output on stdout was to provide human readable information for the user of the Monitoring System, a way for the Monitoring Plugin to communicate further details on what happened. This purpose still exists, but was expanded with the, so called, performance data to allow the machine readable communication of measured values for further processing in the Monitoring System, e.g. for the creation of diagrams.¶
Therefore the further explanation is split into human readable output and performance data.¶
This part of the output should give an user information about the state of the test and, in the case of problems, ideally hint what the origin of the problem might be or what the symptoms are. If the test relies on numeric values, this might be displayed to give an user more information about the specific problem. It might consist of one or more lines of printable symbols.¶
Although no strict guidelines for creating this part of the output can really be given, a developer should keep a potential user in mind. It might, for example, be OK to put the output in a single line if there are only one or two items of a similar type (think: multiple file systems, multiple sensors, etc.) are present, but not if there 10 or 100, although this might present a valid use case. If there are several different items exists in the output of the Monitoring Plugin they probably SHOULD be given their own line in the output.¶
Remaining space on filesystem "/" is OK Sensor temperature is within thresholds Available Memory is too low Sensore temperature exceeds thresholds¶
are OK, but¶
Remaining space on filesystem "/" is OK ( 62GiB / 128GiB ) Sensor temperature is within thresholds ( 42°C ) Available Memory is too low ( 126MiB / 32GiB ) Sensor temperature exceeds thresholds ( 78°C > 70°C )¶
are better.¶
In addition to the human readable part the output can contain machine readable measurement values. These data points are separated from the human readable part by the "|" symbol which is in effect until the end of the output. The performance data then MUST consist of space (ASCII 0x20) separated single values, these MUST have the following format:¶
[']label[']=value[UOM][;warn[;crit[;min[;max]]]]
¶
with the following definitions:¶
label
MUST consist of at least on non-space character, but can otherwise
contain any printable characters except for the equals sign (=
) or single
quotes ('
). If it contains spaces, it must be surrounded by single quotes¶
value
is a numerical value, might be either an integer or a floating
point number. Using floating point numbers if the value is really discreet
SHOULD be avoided. The representation of a floating point number
SHOULD NOT use the "scientific notation" (e.g. 6.02e23
or -3e-45
),
since some systems might not be able to parse them correctly. Values
with a base other then 10 SHOULD be avoided (see below for more information
on Byte
values).¶
UOM
is the Unit of measurement (e.g. "B" for Bytes, "s" for seconds)
which gives more context to the Monitoring System.¶
The following constraints MUST be applied:¶
The following recommendations SHOULD be applied:¶
UOM
for Byte
values is B
and although many systems do
understand units like KB
,KiB
, MB
, GB
, TB
they SHOULD be
avoided, at the least to avoid the ugly hassle about people
misinterpreting the base10 values as base2 values and the other way
round. This is also a prime example where floating point number SHOULD NOT be used, since there are obviously only integer numbers included.¶
UOM
for time is s
, meaning seconds, SI-Prefixes (e.g. ms
for
milli seconds) are allowed if necessary or useful.¶
UOM
if
applicable, but the Monitoring System may not understand them correctly
(mostly in uncommon cases), in that cases appropriate workarounds MAY be
applied on the side of the Monitoring Plugin. Since the
values are not intented to be human readable normalized units are
recommended (e.g. overall_power=14000000000W
instead of
overall_power=14GW
)¶
warn
and crit
are the threshold values for this measurement, which may
have been given by the user as input, may be hardcoded in the Monitoring
Plugin or may be retrieved from a file or a device or somewhere else
during the execution of the Monitoring Plugin. The unit used MUST be
the same as for value. These values are not simple numbers, but
range expressions (Section 2.1).¶
min
and max
are the minimal respectively the maximal value the
value
could possibly be. The unit MUST be the same as for value
.
These values can be omitted, if the value
is a percentage value,
since min
and max
are always 0
and 100
in this case.¶
The interface metioned here is implemented by several network monitoring systems. A non-exhaustive list of these systems includes:¶
The other side of the interface is implemented by several different projects, again in an non-exhaustive list:¶
Special security considerations are hard to define regarding this topic. Regarding the implementation of this interface, the usual programming security considerations should apply (e.g. sanitize inputs), but the risks and problems regarding security are dependent on the specific implementation and usage.¶
This document has no IANA actions.¶
TODO acknowledge.¶