Executing a script from Nagios event handler fails to run
I have Nagios running on a webserver. For this one Nagios service check in particular, if it fails, it will run a script. This script is triggered via Nagios event handlers.
Nagios event handler command:
define command{
command_name testDisableServer
command_line /usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/event_handlers/testDisableServer.sh
}
I am executing a script called testDisableServer.sh from Nagios event handlers that looks like this:
#!/bin/bash
wall "Script execution started";/usr/bin/sudo /root/scripts/disableServer.sh force
This script 'testDisableServer.sh' has the following permissions:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 nagios nagios 2.0KOct1214:57 testDisableServer.sh
When the service goes down, I will get a wall post in my SSH connection saying "Script execution started", but it will not trigger my disableServer.sh script. I tried to place another wall post inside of disableServer.sh and it did not trigger it.
This script is being run by the user 'nagios'. 'nagios' was added in visudo, as such:
nagios ALL=(ALL)NOPASSWD:/root/scripts/disableServer.sh
Running this script as the user 'nagios' from a command line works perfectly fine. However, when the event handler triggers it, there is no output. I tried to catch the output into a log file, and I came up with nothing. These are the permissions on /root/scripts/disableServer.sh:
-rwxr-xr-x 1 root root 2.0KOct1215:01 disableServer.sh
Why would the event handler hit 'testDisableServer.sh', but not execute 'disableServer.sh' from a Nagios event handler, but work just fine in an SSH connection as the user nagios? BTW, 'testDisableServer.sh' is just an extra layer added to see if the event handlers were working, which they seem to be. This will be removed after this script execution is all sorted out.
Answer:
Possibly it's an environment issue (the script is relying on something in its environment that is not available when run by nagios).
I would change your script (temporarily for debugging only) to:
#!/bin/bash
exec 2>/tmp/log."$$"set-x
wall "Script execution started";/usr/bin/sudo /root/scripts/disableServer.sh force
And add another set -x
at the top of disableServer.sh
To see what's going on (in the /tmp/log.*
files).
posted on 2013-06-22 01:20 Step-BY-Step 阅读(315) 评论(0) 编辑 收藏 举报