Tutorial

How To Create Nagios Plugins With Bash On CentOS 6

Published on April 29, 2013
author

Bulat Khamitov

How To Create Nagios Plugins With Bash On CentOS 6

Status: Deprecated

This article covers a version of CentOS that is no longer supported. If you are currently operating a server running CentOS 6, we highly recommend upgrading or migrating to a supported version of CentOS.

Reason: CentOS 6 reached end of life (EOL) on November 30th, 2020 and no longer receives security patches or updates. For this reason, this guide is no longer maintained.

See Instead:
This guide might still be useful as a reference, but may not work on other CentOS releases. If available, we strongly recommend using a guide written for the version of CentOS you are using.

Introduction

Bash is a popular command processor available on Linux by default.

We have previously covered how to install Nagios monitoring server on CentOS 6 x64.

This time, we will expand on this idea and create Nagios plugins using Bash. These plugins will be running on client VPS, and be executed via NRPE.

Step 1 - Install RPMForge Repository and NRPE on client VPS

rpm -ivh http://pkgs.repoforge.org/rpmforge-release/rpmforge-release-0.5.3-1.el6.rf.x86_64.rpm
yum -y install nagios-nrpe
useradd nrpe && chkconfig nrpe on

Step 2 - Create your Bash Script

It would be a good idea to keep your plugins in same directory as other Nagios plugins (/usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/ for example).

For our example, we will create a script that checks current disk usage by calling "df" from shell, and throw an alert if it is over 85% used:

#!/bin/bash
used_space=`df -h / | grep -v Filesystem | awk '{print $5}' | sed 's/%//g'`
case $used_space in
[1-84]*)
echo "OK - $used_space% of disk space used."
exit 0
;;
[85]*)
echo "WARNING - $used_space% of disk space used."
exit 1
;;
[86-100]*)
echo "CRITICAL - $used_space% of disk space used."
exit 2
;;
*)
echo "UNKNOWN - $used_space% of disk space used."
exit 3
;;
esac

We will save this script in /usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/usedspace.sh and make it executable:

chmod +x /usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/usedspace.sh

The entire Nagios NRPE plugin boils down to using exit codes to trigger alerts.

You introduce your level of logic to the script, and if you want to trigger an alert (whether it is OK, WARNING, CRITICAL, or UNKNOWN) - you specify an exit code.

Refer to the following Nagios Exit Codes:

Nagios Exit Codes

Exit Code Status
0 OK
1 WARNING
2 CRITICAL
3 UNKNOWN

Step 3 - Add Your Script to NRPE configuration on client host

Delete original /etc/nagios/nrpe.cfg and add the following lines to it:

log_facility=daemon
pid_file=/var/run/nrpe/nrpe.pid
server_port=5666
nrpe_user=nrpe
nrpe_group=nrpe
allowed_hosts=198.211.117.251
dont_blame_nrpe=1
debug=0
command_timeout=60
connection_timeout=300
include_dir=/etc/nrpe.d/

command[usedspace_bash]=/usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/usedspace.sh

Where 198.211.117.251 is our monitoring server from previous articles. Change these to your own values.

Make sure to restart Nagios NRPE service:

service nrpe restart

Step 4 - Add Your New Command to Nagios Checks on Nagios Monitoring Server

Define new command in /etc/nagios/objects/commands.cfg

define command{
        command_name    usedspace_bash
        command_line    $USER1$/check_nrpe -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -c usedspace_bash
        }

As you can see, it uses NRPE to make TCP connections to port 5666 and run command 'usedspace_bash', which we defined in /etc/nagios/nrpe.cfg on that remote host.

Add this check to your Nagios configuration file for client VPS.

For our example, we will monitor a server called CentOSDroplet and edit /etc/nagios/servers/CentOSDroplet.cfg

define service {
        use                             generic-service
        host_name                       CentOSDroplet
        service_description             Custom Disk Checker In Bash
        check_command                   usedspace_bash
        }

Restart Nagios:

service nagios restart

Verify that the new check is working:

And you are all done!

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About the authors
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Bulat Khamitov

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I had to move print $5 to print $4, this now prints out the correct number, however it still always returns and exit code of 3 regardless of the number that prints.

command$ df -h / | grep -v Filesystem | awk ‘{print $5}’ | sed ‘s/%//g’ output$ /

command$ df -h / | grep -v Filesystem | awk ‘{print $4}’ | sed ‘s/%//g’ output$ 11

command$ ./used_space_root.sh output$ UNKNOWN - 11% of root partition used.

Andrew SB
DigitalOcean Employee
DigitalOcean Employee badge
May 20, 2014

@Zackary: Looks like there might be a problem with your bash script. It’s returning a wrong value. Make sure you’ve copied it correctly. What is the output of running the df command directly:

<pre> df -h / | grep -v Filesystem | awk ‘{print $5}’ | sed ‘s/%//g’ </pre>

Getting this as the status:

UNKNOWN - /% of disk space used.

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