[Nagios-users] Nagios 2.0 Event Broker and DB Support
Mooney, Ryan
ryan.mooney at pnl.gov
Fri Aug 1 19:22:27 CEST 2003
You could make the service * to be versioned like:
typdef struct {
uint8_t version=MYVERSION;
blah blah blah
} service;
Then check what the module returns like:
if((uint8_t)service != MYVERSION) {
moan_and_complain();
kick_module();
}
(Yeah yeah a union would probably be clearer, and there are 50 ways to do
this, and yes they are all dandy :)
Its a little hacky, but not too bad.
The biggest concern I have with this model is that a poorly behaved module is
much more likely to corrupt the core process by doing something evil
(unintentionally I'm sure) than in your other model.
I'm sort of working on a simular problem and decided to create an API that
the "clients" linked to handle the nasty parts for them (so each "client"
would be an independent entity/process unless someone wanted to create a
"super server client" that loaded modules). This would have each "client"
create a shared mem queue (or a sysv queue - haven't fully decided which is
less evil for this app) and then hand a pointer (literally or not) for that
off to the "server" and register the events they want dumped into it. This
would in theory allow me to have multiple pre-forked backend processes
handling a single queue if I'm doing something with the data that blocks a
lot without stacking up a lot of processes or having to fork for each event
(which can be really bad if you have a lot of events).
This is (in essense) very simular to your socket model with the main difference
being that I don't care what the clients do (queue's full? Tough, message dropped!
although to be polite we might increment a counter they can query). They are
completely decoupled from any of the server code (except thier interaction via
the well defined API). This puts a little more burden on the module writers, but
cleans up the servers interactions (I don't have to worry about timing them out,
or other bad things they might do).
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Ethan Galstad [mailto:nagios at nagios.org]
> Sent: Thursday, July 31, 2003 10:02 PM
> To: nagios-users at lists.sourceforge.net;
> nagios-devel at lists.sourceforge.net
> Subject: [Nagios-users] Nagios 2.0 Event Broker and DB Support
>
>
> Sorry for the crosspost, but the nagios-devel list is usually pretty
> quiet when I request comments about new features I'm implementing.
> This one is bigger than most, so I wanted to reach more people. This
> is a bit long, so bear with me...
>
> I am almost complete with coding for 2.0. Two big things remain: the
> event broker and DB support (which is currently broken).
>
> My original intent was to develop the event broker as a separate
> application, tying it to Nagios with a unix domain socket. Nagios
> would send the event broker information about the everything that was
> going on (service checks, downtime, flapping, log entries, etc.).
> The event broker would be able to load user-developed modules (object
> files) at runtime and pass various types of Nagios data to them for
> processing. This is all fine and good. I have a working prototype
> of the event broker that does just this and seems to work okay. I
> got to thinking that it was rather stupid to develop a separate
> application for this when I could simply have Nagios load user-
> developed modules itself. Doing this would give the modules the
> benefit of having access to internal Nagios structures and functions
> (which is good and bad - see below).
>
> Here's an overview of how it would work:
>
> - Nagios would load user-specified modules (object files) at startup
> using the dlopen() function.
>
> - Nagios would call the module's initialization function (the name of
> which would be standardized).
>
> - The module's init function would register for various types of
> Nagios event data (service checks, host checks, log entries, event
> handlers, etc.) using callback functions.
>
> - When Nagios encounters an event for which a module has registered a
> callback function, Nagios would call that module's function and pass
> it data relevant to the event. The module is then free to do
> whatever it wants to that event data. An example might be to log
> service checks, performance data and log entries to MySQL, etc.
>
> - Before shutting down, Nagios calls the module's de-init function.
> This allows the module to clean up any resources it may be using.
>
>
> Seems good in theory. Heck, might even work okay. However, there's
> a big problem I have with it. If I implement things this way, the
> user-developed modules would have access to internal Nagios data
> structures and functions. This is not necessarily bad, as ill-
> behaved modules would not be adopted by too many people. :-)
> However, modules that might be compiled and working fine
> for Nagios 2.0 might segfault under future versions if the internal
> data structures change. Here's an example of what I mean:
>
> User module registers for Nagios service check data using its
> mymod_handle_servicecheck() function, which has a prototype of:
>
> int mymod_handle_servicecheck(service *);
>
> The service struct is an internal Nagios structure definition which
> changes between Nagios versions. If the user module is compiled for
> use with Nagios 2.0 and it's definition of the service struct, it
> will have problems if it is not recompiled for future versions of
> Nagios.
>
> Off the top of my head, I could overcome this by requiring that the
> user modules indicate (by calling a function) what version of Nagios
> they are compiled for. If they report anything but the current
> version (or do not report at all), unload them so they can do no
> harm.
>
> I'm afraid I'm a bit over my head on how to handle this one. Some of
> you developers out there must have experience with this type of
> thing. If so, how did you handle it? What would you recommend?
> Comments, suggestions, flames? Is there a better way to accomplish
> this? Speak up now.
>
> What does this have to do with DB support, you ask? Well, if I
> implement the event broker as I have proposed I will be yanking
> native DB support out of Nagios completely. You can then write a
> module to log to a DB if you want. :-)
>
> PS: I had originally planned on exposing almost all of Nagios' data
> and events to the broker, but I may have to scale that down if I plan
> on getting 2.0 out this century. Perhaps just support for:
>
> - Service and host checks
> - Event handlers
> - Log data
>
> This would allow the development of modules to log check information,
> performance data, and log file data to a DB (or whatever).
>
>
> Ethan Galstad,
> Nagios Developer
> ---
> Email: nagios at nagios.org
> Website: http://www.nagios.org
>
>
>
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