Book Image

Mastering Bash

By : Giorgio Zarrelli
Book Image

Mastering Bash

By: Giorgio Zarrelli

Overview of this book

System administration is an everyday effort that involves a lot of tedious tasks, and devious pits. Knowing your environment is the key to unleashing the most powerful solution that will make your life easy as an administrator, and show you the path to new heights. Bash is your Swiss army knife to set up your working or home environment as you want, when you want. This book will enable you to customize your system step by step, making your own real, virtual, home out of it. The journey will take you swiftly through the basis of the shell programming in Bash to more interesting and challenging tasks. You will be introduced to one of the most famous open source monitoring systems—Nagios, and write complex programs with it in any languages. You’ll see how to perform checks on your sites and applications. Moving on, you’ll discover how to write your own daemons so you can create your services and take advantage of inter-process communication to let your scripts talk to each other. So, despite these being everyday tasks, you’ll have a lot of fun on the way. By the end of the book, you will have gained advanced knowledge of Bash that will help you automate routine tasks and manage your systems.
Table of Contents (15 chapters)

Command and service definitions

At the base of everything in Nagios is a plugin, the minion who carries out the job of retrieving the information, evaluating it, raising the alarm, and providing a meaningful message. Left alone, Nagios does not know how to call a plugin, what options to pass to it or how to handle it, so we need a command definition, which defines how the script will be called.

Let's take as an example the command definition for the ssh service check, which is failing because the port used for the check is not the one the daemon is listening on:

# 'check_ssh' command definition
define command{
command_name check_ssh
command_line /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_ssh '$HOSTADDRESS$'
}

We can see here a command definition named command_name check_ssh.

Let's keep check_ssh in mind, because it will be the handle we will use to refer to this command...