Overview
This charm provides OpenStack service checks for Nagios
Usage
juju deploy cs:~canonical-bootstack/openstack-service-checks
juju add-relation openstack-service-checks nrpe
This charm supports relating to keystone via the keystone-credentials interface. If you do not wish to use this, you can supply your own credential set for Openstack by adding ‘os-credentials’ setting (see setting description hints)
juju config openstack-services-checks os-credentials=" ... "
With Keystone
juju add-relation openstack-service-checks:identity-credentials keystone:identity-credentials
API endpoints monitoring
If your OpenStack API endpoints have a common URL for the Admin, Public and Internal addresses, you should consider disabling some endpoints which would be duplicated otherwise, e.g.
juju config openstack-service-checks check_internal_urls=False check_admin_urls=False
If such API endpoints use TLS, new checks will monitor the certificates expiration time:
juju config openstack-service-checks tls_warn_days=30 tls_crit_days=14
Note: in order to have endpoint checks updated on endpoint changes you should also relate identity-notifications:
juju add-relation keystone:identity-notifications openstack-service-checks:identity-notifications
Alternatively, instead of the above relation, there is also an action “refresh-endpoint-checks” available. Running this action will update the service checks with the current endpoints.
Octavia Checks
Knowning when an openstack load-balancer is having an issue is an important operational situation which this charm helps manage. There is both course grain control over octavia checks, as well as more fine-grained control by use of the following config items.
Course Grain
check-octavia
:true
orfalse
can enable or disable checks
Fine Grain
octavia-loadbalancers-ignored
octavia-amphorae-ignored
octavia-pools-ignored
octavia-image-ignored
Each of these config items adds an ignore-list of keywords. Each keyword in the ignore list will be blocked when it appears in the output of the check.
Examples
Ignoring a test or non-production loadbalancer with the ID=deadbeef-1234 -56789012-dead-beef
which is INACTIVE or DEGRADED.
juju config my-openstack-service-checks octavia-loadbalancer-ignored='deadbeef-1234-56789012-dead-beef,'
Ignoring all loadbalancers which happen to be DEGRADED.
juju config my-openstack-service-checks octavia-loadbalancer-ignored='DEGRADED,'
Ignoring amphorae that are stuck in BOOTING state
juju config my-openstack-service-checks octavia-amphorae-ignored='BOOTING,'
Masakari Checks
Alert when the openstack compute nodes protected by Masakari are on maintenance during a failure. Follow-up must be done to re-enable the service for nodes marked by Masakari as being in maintenance state.
juju config openstack-service-checks check-masakari=true
Horizon Checks
Alert when the connection or login to openstack-dashboard is unsuccessful. A website relation with openstack-dashboard is required to enable this.
juju config openstack-service-checks check-horizon=true
Compute services monitoring
Compute services are monitored via the ‘os-services’ interface. Several thresholds can be adjusted to tweak the alerting system: number of available nodes per host (warning and critical thresholds), ignore certain host aggregates (by default, no aggregates are skipped), ignore nodes in ‘disabled’ state.
juju config openstack-service-checks nova_warn=2 nova_crit=1
juju config openstack-service-checks skipped_host_aggregates='hostaggr1,hostaggr2'
juju config openstack-service-checks skip-disabled=true
Rally checks
A new nrpe check supports a limited list of rally/tempest tests, which can be scheduled to run via cron (default cronjob schedule is every 15 minutes). Tests can also be skipped as follows (available components are cinder, glance, nova and neutron):
juju config openstack-service-checks check-rally=true
juju config openstack-service-checks rally-cron-schedule='*/20 * * * *'
juju config openstack-service-checks skip-rally='nova,neutron'
Juju Resources
The rally/tempest tests are installed via the
fbctest snap. The charm supports installing it
from a juju resource, which can be handy in offline deployments. In this case
you’ll also have to install the snaps upon which fcbtest
depends: core18
and snapd
. Prefetch the snaps:
snap download fcbtest
snap download core18
snap download snapd
Provide the snap files as resources to the application:
for e.g. (change the snap files version accordingly)
FCBTEST_SNAP_FILE="fcbtest_14.snap"
CORE18_SNAP_FILE="core18_2074.snap"
SNAPD_SNAP_FILE="snapd_12398.snap"
juju deploy cs:~canonical-bootstack/openstack-service-checks \
--resource fcbtest=$FCBTEST_SNAP_FILE \
--resource core18=$CORE18_SNAP_FILE \
--resource snapd=$SNAPD_SNAP_FILE
Deploy with openstack-base
To communication with openstack. We need to provide os-credentials
and trusted_ssl_ca
cofiguration in the right way.
os-credentials can be either provided by user or looking for the keystone relation keystone:identity-notifications
and keystone:identity-credentials
.
Provide by juju config:
# You can get openrc with this script
source ./openstack-bundles/stable/openstack-base/openrc
env | grep OS_
juju config openstack-service-checks os_credentials="..."
By keystone relation:
juju add-relation keystone:identity-notifications openstack-service-checks:identity-notifications
juju add-relation keystone:identity-credentials openstack-service-checks:identity-credentials
trusted_ssl_ca
# Vault config
juju actions vault
# Use `get-root-ca` action to get the ca from vault and configure
# Please replace unit name to match your model
juju run-action --wait vault/0 get-root-ca --format json \
| jq -r '."unit-vault-0".results.output' \
| base64 -w 0 \
| xargs -I {} \
juju config openstack-service-checks trusted_ssl_ca={}
If you are using configuration options provided by the charm such as cinder, you
will need to provide the root CA certificate to the trusted_ssl_ca
.
Cryptography
This charm interacts with the OpenStack API using the library os-client-config to be able to access the necessary data on different OpenStack services. The configuration necessary to authenticate with the OpenStack client can be achieved by two possible ways:
- Relating with the keystone application via the
keystone-credentials
interface - Supply your the credentials using the
os-credentials
as string to the charm configuration
User credentials via charm config option is recommended to configure a dedicated user with a dedicated role and not a full admin. Since the credentials are stored as charm config values, they are stored unencrypted in the Juju DB in the controller.
Both ways of passing OpenStack credentials will end up on-disk on the o-s-c unit(s) in the file /var/lib/nagios/nagios.novarc. This file is set to be readable by the nagios user to allow NRPE checks to have the necessary environment variables to use the OpenStack client.
Finally, if the OpenStack endpoints use https, users need to pass a base64 encoded SSL ca cert to use for OpenStack API client connections.
Contact information
Please contact Canonical’s BootStack team via the “Submit a bug” link. Upstream Project Name