diff --git a/Dockerfile b/Dockerfile new file mode 100644 index 0000000..b034122 --- /dev/null +++ b/Dockerfile @@ -0,0 +1,25 @@ +FROM alpine:3.7 + +LABEL maintainer="Luis Miguel Vicente Fuentes " + +# monit environment variables +ENV MONIT_VERSION=5.25.1 \ + MONIT_HOME=/opt/monit \ + MONIT_URL=https://mmonit.com/monit/dist \ + PATH=$PATH:/opt/monit/bin + +# Compile and install monit +RUN \ + echo "*** compile and install monit ***" && \ + apk add --update gcc musl-dev make libressl-dev file zlib-dev && \ + mkdir -p /opt/src; cd /opt/src && \ + wget -qO- ${MONIT_URL}/monit-${MONIT_VERSION}.tar.gz | tar xz && \ + cd /opt/src/monit-${MONIT_VERSION} && \ + ./configure --prefix=${MONIT_HOME} --without-pam && \ + make && make install && \ + apk del gcc musl-dev make libressl-dev file zlib-dev && \ + rm -rf /var/cache/apk/* /opt/src + +EXPOSE 2812 + +CMD ["monit", "-I", "-B"] diff --git a/README.md b/README.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..c95a1e8 --- /dev/null +++ b/README.md @@ -0,0 +1,19 @@ +# Monit - UNIX Systems Management + +Run Monit inside docker. + +[![Monit](https://mmonit.com/monit/img/logo.png)](https://mmonit.com/monit/) + +[Monit](https://mmonit.com/monit/) is a free open source utility for managing and monitoring, processes, programs, files, directories and filesystems on a UNIX system. Monit conducts automatic maintenance and repair and can execute meaningful causal actions in error situations. + +## Docker setup + +Install docker: https://docs.docker.com/engine/installation/ + +Docker documentation: https://docs.docker.com/ + +### Build-in docker image + +- build docker image `docker build -t monit .` + +- start monit: `docker run -ti -p 2812:2812 -v $(pwd)/monitrc:/etc/monitrc monit` diff --git a/monitrc b/monitrc new file mode 100755 index 0000000..556ca2d --- /dev/null +++ b/monitrc @@ -0,0 +1,306 @@ +############################################################################### +## Monit control file +############################################################################### +## +## Comments begin with a '#' and extend through the end of the line. Keywords +## are case insensitive. All path's MUST BE FULLY QUALIFIED, starting with '/'. +## +## Below you will find examples of some frequently used statements. For +## information about the control file and a complete list of statements and +## options, please have a look in the Monit manual. +## +## +############################################################################### +## Global section +############################################################################### +## +## Start Monit in the background (run as a daemon): +# +set daemon 30 # check services at 30 seconds intervals +# with start delay 240 # optional: delay the first check by 4-minutes (by +# # default Monit check immediately after Monit start) +# +# +## Set syslog logging. If you want to log to a standalone log file instead, +## specify the full path to the log file +# +set log syslog + +# +# +## Set the location of the Monit lock file which stores the process id of the +## running Monit instance. By default this file is stored in $HOME/.monit.pid +# +# set pidfile /var/run/monit.pid +# +## Set the location of the Monit id file which stores the unique id for the +## Monit instance. The id is generated and stored on first Monit start. By +## default the file is placed in $HOME/.monit.id. +# +# set idfile /var/.monit.id +# +## Set the location of the Monit state file which saves monitoring states +## on each cycle. By default the file is placed in $HOME/.monit.state. If +## the state file is stored on a persistent filesystem, Monit will recover +## the monitoring state across reboots. If it is on temporary filesystem, the +## state will be lost on reboot which may be convenient in some situations. +# +# set statefile /var/.monit.state +# +# + +## Set limits for various tests. The following example shows the default values: +## +# set limits { +# programOutput: 512 B, # check program's output truncate limit +# sendExpectBuffer: 256 B, # limit for send/expect protocol test +# fileContentBuffer: 512 B, # limit for file content test +# httpContentBuffer: 1 MB, # limit for HTTP content test +# networkTimeout: 5 seconds # timeout for network I/O +# programTimeout: 300 seconds # timeout for check program +# stopTimeout: 30 seconds # timeout for service stop +# startTimeout: 30 seconds # timeout for service start +# restartTimeout: 30 seconds # timeout for service restart +# } + +## Set global SSL options (just most common options showed, see manual for +## full list). +# +# set ssl { +# verify : enable, # verify SSL certificates (disabled by default but STRONGLY RECOMMENDED) +# selfsigned : allow # allow self signed SSL certificates (reject by default) +# } +# +# +## Set the list of mail servers for alert delivery. Multiple servers may be +## specified using a comma separator. If the first mail server fails, Monit +# will use the second mail server in the list and so on. By default Monit uses +# port 25 - it is possible to override this with the PORT option. +# +# set mailserver mail.bar.baz, # primary mailserver +# backup.bar.baz port 10025, # backup mailserver on port 10025 +# localhost # fallback relay +# +# +## By default Monit will drop alert events if no mail servers are available. +## If you want to keep the alerts for later delivery retry, you can use the +## EVENTQUEUE statement. The base directory where undelivered alerts will be +## stored is specified by the BASEDIR option. You can limit the queue size +## by using the SLOTS option (if omitted, the queue is limited by space +## available in the back end filesystem). +# +# set eventqueue +# basedir /var/monit # set the base directory where events will be stored +# slots 100 # optionally limit the queue size +# +# +## Send status and events to M/Monit (for more informations about M/Monit +## see https://mmonit.com/). By default Monit registers credentials with +## M/Monit so M/Monit can smoothly communicate back to Monit and you don't +## have to register Monit credentials manually in M/Monit. It is possible to +## disable credential registration using the commented out option below. +## Though, if safety is a concern we recommend instead using https when +## communicating with M/Monit and send credentials encrypted. The password +## should be URL encoded if it contains URL-significant characters like +## ":", "?", "@". Default timeout is 5 seconds, you can customize it by +## adding the timeout option. +# +# set mmonit http://monit:monit@192.168.1.10:8080/collector +# # with timeout 30 seconds # Default timeout is 5 seconds +# # and register without credentials # Don't register credentials +# +# +## Monit by default uses the following format for alerts if the mail-format +## statement is missing:: +## --8<-- +## set mail-format { +## from: Monit +## subject: monit alert -- $EVENT $SERVICE +## message: $EVENT Service $SERVICE +## Date: $DATE +## Action: $ACTION +## Host: $HOST +## Description: $DESCRIPTION +## +## Your faithful employee, +## Monit +## } +## --8<-- +## +## You can override this message format or parts of it, such as subject +## or sender using the MAIL-FORMAT statement. Macros such as $DATE, etc. +## are expanded at runtime. For example, to override the sender, use: +# +# set mail-format { from: monit@foo.bar } +# +# +## You can set alert recipients whom will receive alerts if/when a +## service defined in this file has errors. Alerts may be restricted on +## events by using a filter as in the second example below. +# +# set alert sysadm@foo.bar # receive all alerts +# +## Do not alert when Monit starts, stops or performs a user initiated action. +## This filter is recommended to avoid getting alerts for trivial cases. +# +# set alert your-name@your.domain not on { instance, action } +# +# +## Monit has an embedded HTTP interface which can be used to view status of +## services monitored and manage services from a web interface. The HTTP +## interface is also required if you want to issue Monit commands from the +## command line, such as 'monit status' or 'monit restart service' The reason +## for this is that the Monit client uses the HTTP interface to send these +## commands to a running Monit daemon. See the Monit Wiki if you want to +## enable SSL for the HTTP interface. +# +set httpd port 2812 and + # use address localhost # only accept connection from localhost + # allow localhost # allow localhost to connect to the server and + allow admin:monit # require user 'admin' with password 'monit' + #with ssl { # enable SSL/TLS and set path to server certificate + # pemfile: /etc/ssl/certs/monit.pem + #} + +############################################################################### +## Services +############################################################################### +## +## Check general system resources such as load average, cpu and memory +## usage. Each test specifies a resource, conditions and the action to be +## performed should a test fail. +# +# check system $HOST +# if loadavg (1min) > 4 then alert +# if loadavg (5min) > 2 then alert +# if cpu usage > 95% for 10 cycles then alert +# if memory usage > 75% then alert +# if swap usage > 25% then alert +# +# +## Check if a file exists, checksum, permissions, uid and gid. In addition +## to alert recipients in the global section, customized alert can be sent to +## additional recipients by specifying a local alert handler. The service may +## be grouped using the GROUP option. More than one group can be specified by +## repeating the 'group name' statement. +# +# check file apache_bin with path /usr/local/apache/bin/httpd +# 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 +# alert security@foo.bar on { +# checksum, permission, uid, gid, unmonitor +# } with the mail-format { subject: Alarm! } +# group server +# +# +## Check that a process is running, in this case Apache, and that it respond +## to HTTP and HTTPS requests. Check its resource usage such as cpu and memory, +## and number of children. If the process is not running, Monit will restart +## it by default. In case the service is restarted very often and the +## problem remains, it is possible to disable monitoring using the TIMEOUT +## statement. This service depends on another service (apache_bin) which +## is defined above. +# +# 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 cpu > 60% for 2 cycles then alert +# if cpu > 80% for 5 cycles then restart +# if totalmem > 200.0 MB for 5 cycles then restart +# if children > 250 then restart +# if loadavg(5min) greater than 10 for 8 cycles then stop +# if disk read > 500 kb/s for 10 cycles then alert +# if disk write > 500 kb/s for 10 cycles then alert +# if failed host www.tildeslash.com port 80 protocol http and request "/somefile.html" then restart +# if failed port 443 protocol https with timeout 15 seconds then restart +# if 3 restarts within 5 cycles then unmonitor +# depends on apache_bin +# group server +# +# +## Check filesystem permissions, uid, gid, space usage, inode usage and disk I/O. +## Other services, such as databases, may depend on this resource and an automatically +## graceful stop may be cascaded to them before the filesystem will become full and data +## lost. +# +# check filesystem datafs with path /dev/sdb1 +# 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% for 5 times within 15 cycles then alert +# if space usage > 99% then stop +# if inode usage > 30000 then alert +# if inode usage > 99% then stop +# if read rate > 1 MB/s for 5 cycles then alert +# if read rate > 500 operations/s for 5 cycles then alert +# if write rate > 1 MB/s for 5 cycles then alert +# if write rate > 500 operations/s for 5 cycles then alert +# if service time > 10 milliseconds for 3 times within 5 cycles then alert +# group server +# +# +## Check a file's timestamp. In this example, we test if a file is older +## than 15 minutes and assume something is wrong if its not updated. Also, +## if the file size exceed a given limit, execute a script +# +# check file database with path /data/mydatabase.db +# if failed permission 700 then alert +# if failed uid "data" then alert +# if failed gid "data" then alert +# if timestamp > 15 minutes then alert +# if size > 100 MB then exec "/my/cleanup/script" as uid dba and gid dba +# +# +## Check directory permission, uid and gid. An event is triggered if the +## directory does not belong to the user with uid 0 and gid 0. In addition, +## the permissions have to match the octal description of 755 (see chmod(1)). +# +# check directory bin with path /bin +# if failed permission 755 then unmonitor +# if failed uid 0 then unmonitor +# if failed gid 0 then unmonitor +# +# +## Check a remote host availability by issuing a ping test and check the +## content of a response from a web server. Up to three pings are sent and +## connection to a port and an application level network check is performed. +# +# check host myserver with address 192.168.1.1 +# if failed ping then alert +# if failed port 3306 protocol mysql with timeout 15 seconds then alert +# if failed port 80 protocol http +# and request /some/path with content = "a string" +# then alert +# +# +## Check a network link status (up/down), link capacity changes, saturation +## and bandwidth usage. +# +# check network public with interface eth0 +# if failed link then alert +# if changed link then alert +# if saturation > 90% then alert +# if download > 10 MB/s then alert +# if total uploaded > 1 GB in last hour then alert +# +# +## Check custom program status output. +# +# check program myscript with path /usr/local/bin/myscript.sh +# if status != 0 then alert +# +# +############################################################################### +## Includes +############################################################################### +## +## It is possible to include additional configuration parts from other files or +## directories. +# +# include /etc/monit.d/* +#