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Nagios-compatible Plugins for Linux Nagios-compatible Plugins for Linux 

A suite of Nagios-compatible Plugins for monitoring Linux hosts.

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This project provides several plugins for monitoring physical and virtual Linux hosts with Nagios and Nagios-compatible monitoring systems like Icinga and Naemon.

Here is the list of the available plugins:

  • check_clock - returns the number of seconds elapsed between local time and Nagios server time
  • check_container - checks docker/podman containers ⚠️ pre-alpha, requires libcurl version 7.40.0+
  • check_cpu - checks the CPU (user mode) utilization
  • check_cpufreq - displays the CPU frequency characteristics
  • check_cswch - checks the total number of context switches across all CPUs
  • check_fc - monitors the status of the fiber status ports
  • check_filecount - checks the number of files found in one or more directories
  • check_ifmountfs - checks whether the given filesystems are mounted
  • check_intr - monitors the total number of system interrupts
  • check_iowait - monitors the I/O wait bottlenecks
  • check_load - checks the current system load average
  • check_memory - checks the memory usage
  • check_multipath - checks the multipath topology status
  • check_nbprocs - displays the number of running processes per user
  • check_network - displays some network interfaces statistics. The following plugins are symlinks to check_network:
    • check_network_collisions
    • check_network_dropped
    • check_network_errors
    • check_network_multicast
  • check_paging - checks the memory and swap paging
  • check_pressure - checks Linux Pressure Stall Information (PSI) data
  • check_readonlyfs - checks for readonly filesystems
  • check_selinux - checks if SELinux is enabled 🆕
  • check_swap - checks the swap usage
  • check_tcpcount - checks the tcp network usage
  • check_temperature - monitors the hardware's temperature
  • check_uptime - checks how long the system has been running
  • check_users - displays the number of users that are currently logged on

Full documentation

The full documentation of the nagios-plugins-linux is available online in the GitHub wiki page.

Get and configure the source code

This package uses GNU autotools for configuration and installation.

If you have cloned the git repository

    git clone --recursive https://github.com/madrisan/nagios-plugins-linux.git

then you will need to run autoreconf --install to generate the required files.

Run ./configure --help to see a list of available install options. The plugin will be installed by default into LIBEXECDIR.

It is highly likely that you will want to customise this location to suit your needs, i.e.:

    ./configure --libexecdir=/usr/lib/nagios/plugins

The plugin check_multipath grabs the status of each path by opening a connection to the multipathd socket. The default value is currently set to the Linux abstract socket namespace @/org/kernel/linux/storage/multipathd, but can be modified at build time by using the option --with-socketfile.

Example (RHEL5 and RHEL6 and other old distributions):

    ./configure --with-socketfile=/var/run/multipathd.sock

If you want to compile the code with a C compiler different from the system default, you can set the environment variable CC accordingly. Here are two examples:

    CC=clang-17 ./configure --libexecdir=/usr/lib/nagios/plugins
    CC=clang-18 ./configure --libexecdir=/usr/lib/nagios/plugins

Installation

After ./configure has completed successfully run make install and you're done!

You can also run the (still incomplete) set of bundled unit tests by entering the command make check (or VERBOSE=1 make check) and, if the llvm tool scan-build is installed on your system, a make -C tests check-clang-checker to get a static code analysis report (for developers only).

Note: you can also pass the option --enable-libprocps to configure for getting the informations about memory and swap usage through the API of the library libproc2.so procps).

Supported Platforms and Linux distributions

This package is written in plain C, making as few assumptions as possible, and sticking closely to ANSI C/POSIX. A C99-compliant compiler is required anyway.

This package is known to compile with:

  • gcc 4.1 (RHEL 5 / CentOS 5),
  • gcc 4.4 (RHEL6 / CentOS 6),
  • gcc 4.8 (RHEL7 / CentOS 7),
  • gcc 3.x, 5.1, 5.3, 6.3, 7-14 (openmamba GNU/Linux, Debian 8+, Fedora 25+),
  • clang 3.7, 3.8, 4.9, 5, 6, 7, 8, 10-19 (openmamba GNU/Linux, Fedora 25+),

List of the Linux kernels that have been successfully tested:

  • 2.6.18, 2.6.32,
  • 3.10, 3.14, 3.18,
  • 4.2, 4.4, 4,9, 4.14, 4.15, 4.16, 4.19
  • 5.6, 5.7, 5.8, 5.12-5.18, 6.1-6.11

The Nagios Plugins Linux are regularly tested on

  • Alpine Linux (musl libc),
  • Debian, Fedora, Gentoo, and Ubuntu (GNU C Library (glibc)).

Alpine, CentOS Stream, Debian, and Fedora Packages

The .apk, .rpm and .deb packages for Alpine, CentOS/RHEL, Debian, and Fedora can be built using the following commands

Command Distribution
Alpine 3.18 make -C packages alpine-3.18
Alpine 3.19 make -C packages alpine-3.19
Alpine 3.20 make -C packages alpine-3.20
CentOS Stream 8 make -C packages centos-stream-8
CentOS Stream 9 make -C packages centos-stream-9
Debian 10 (Buster) make -C packages debian-buster
Debian 11 (Bullseye) make -C packages debian-bullseye
Debian 12 (Bookworm) make -C packages debian-bookworm
Fedora 39 make -C packages fedora-39
Fedora 40 make -C packages fedora-40
Fedora 41 make -C packages fedora-41
Fedora Rawhide make -C packages fedora-rawhide
Rocky Linux 8 make -C packages rockylinux-8
Rocky Linux 9 make -C packages rockylinux-9

in the root source folder. The building process requires the Docker software containerization platform running on your system, and an internet connection to download the Docker images of the operating systems you want to build the packages for.

On Fedora (and all the distributions shipping Podman) you can use the native Podman pod manager along with the Docker CLI emulation script:

sudo install dnf podman podman-docker

Note: the previous make commands can end with a permission denied error if selinux is configured in enforcing mode. In this case you can temporarily disable selinux by executing as root the command setenforce 0 (or maybe share a better solution!).

Debian Package nagios-plugins-contrib

The Nagios Plugin Linux source code has been merged with the Debian package nagios-plugins-contrib but only the check_memory plugin is provided by the binary package shipped by Debian, starting with the Debian Bookworm version.

For more details, see GitHub discussion #147.

Gentoo Package

The plugins are available in the Gentoo tree. They can be installed by running:

emerge -av net-analyzer/nagios-plugins-linux-madrisan

The USE flag curl is required to build check_container.

Bugs

If you find a bug please create an issue in the project bug tracker at GitHub