Table of Contents |
---|
Feature Overview
opEvents has the ability to notify people via email and conduct other actions based on criteria the administrator selects.
...
- An event matches criteria defined in an action rule.
- An action fires an escalation policy.
- The Escalation policy initiates email or some other action. The email action calls a 'contact' variable.
- The contact variable is resolved to an email address or multiple
- The event action policy indicates that an email action is to be taken, with a given 'contact'.
- Or: the event action activates an escalation policy, the event is escalated after some time and the Escalation policy indicates an email action to take, again with a given 'contact.
- The named 'contact' is resolved to one or more email addresses.
- Emails are sent via an associated the configured email server.
Related Wiki Articles
Configuration
...
Define an Email Server
opEvents requires an email server in order to sent send notifications via email. This email server is associated in configured in /usr/local/omk/conf/opCommon.nmis
.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
'email' => {
'mail_domain' => 'yourdomain.com',
'mail_from' => 'yourmailname@yourdomain.com',
'mail_password' => 'your_password',
'mail_server' => 'smtp.yourdomain.com',
'mail_server_port' => 25,
'mail_use_sasl' => 'false',
'mail_use_tls' => 'true',
'mail_user' => 'your_user_account@your_domain.com'
}, |
Find Open opCommon.nmis
in an editor, find the email section in opCommon.nmis and updated update the values to match the email server that opEvents should utilise.
Here is a brief description of the fields:
Field Name | Description |
---|---|
mail_domain | This is required for some mail servers that enforce strict HELO messages. Using your company domain here is a good idea. |
mail_from | This is the From address for email notifications. Emails will go out with this as the sender. |
mail_user | This is the mail user name for authenticating at your mail server. Leave this blank if you don't need to authenticate at your mail server. |
mail_password | This is the password for authenticating at your mail server. Leave this blank if you don't need to authenticate at your mail server. |
mail_server | The FQDN (or IP address) of your outgoing mail server. |
mail_server_port | The port number your mail server listens on for SMTP conversations. Common choices are 25 and 587, but note that 587 commonly requires authentication! |
mail_use_tls | If you select true here, then opEvents will try to negotiate STARTTLS encryption with your mail server. Not useful if your mail server is localhost . |
mail_use_sasl | disregard: deprecated, should not be present in new installations. |
Optional - Create an Email Template
If itIt's desirable possible to have customise the notification email customisedemail format by updating /usr/local/omk/conf/EventEmails.nmis. This article explains how to do this: Email templates in opEvents
Configure a Contact
A 'contact' in is a variable that can represent one or many email addresses. opEvents can utilize the NMIS contacts file (/usr/local/nmis8/conf/Contact.nmis) or the OMK contacts (/usr/local/omk/conf/COntacts.nmis) file. In order to determine which file your system is using look in opCommon.nmis; find the opevents section then look for the opevents_contacts attribute.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
'opevents' => { 'black_list_enabled' => 'true', 'log_archive_enabled' => 'true', 'nmis_non_stateful_events' => 'Node Configuration Change|Node Reset', 'opevents_action_max_runtime' => 30, 'opevents_action_policy' => '<omk_conf>/EventActions.nmis', 'opevents_application_heading' => undef, 'opevents_archivelogs_purge_older_than' => undef, 'opevents_auto_acknowledge' => 'true', 'opevents_auto_acknowledge_up' => 'true', 'opevents_auto_create_nodes' => 'true', 'opevents_contacts' => '<omk_conf>/Contacts.nmis', |
In the example above (last line) the OMK contacts file is being used.
In Contacts.nmis create a new contact or modify and existing one with the desired email address(es). If desired an email template may be associated with the contact. Multiple emails may be assigned to the Email attribute, simply separate them by a comma.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
%hash = (
'contact1' => {
'Contact' => 'Contact1',
'Phone' => '',
'DutyTime' => '06:20:MonTueWedThuFri',
'Level' => '(Fatal|Critical|Major|Minor|Warning|Normal)',
'TimeZone' => '0',
'Pager' => '',
'Mobile' => '5555551234',
'Location' => 'default',
'Email' => 'nobody@localhost',
'EmailTemplate' => 'default',
}
); |
For more information about how to configure Contacts.nmis for use by NMIS see this page: NMIS8 Contacts
Create an Escalation Policy
Escalation policies are created in /usr/local/omk/conf/EventActions.nmis. Find the 'escalate' section and add or modify an existing policy. This is an example of a new escalation policy with the minimum required information.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
'escalate' => {
'exampleEmailPolicy' => {
'name' => 'exampleEmailPolicy',
'IF' => {
priority => '>= 0',
},
'10' => 'email(contact1)',
}, |
This example states that 10 seconds after the policy is invoked it will email addresses associated with 'contact1' if the priority of the event is greater than zero.
For more information about creating Escalation policies see this page: Event Actions and Escalation (opEvents 4)
Create an Action
An action is required that will invoke the escalation policy. Actions are created in the 'policy' section of EventActions.nmis. The opEvents administrator will determine where best to place the rule with EventActions.nmis. Here is one example.
Code Block | ||
---|---|---|
| ||
'40' => {
IF => 'event.priority >= 5',
THEN => 'escalate.exampleEmailPolicy()',
BREAK => 'false'
}, |
In this example any event with a priority greater than or equal to 5 will fire the escalation policy 'exampleEmailPolicy. Because the BREAK attribute is set to false, any rules following this one in the same hierarchy will continue to be processed.
For more information about Action Policies see this page: Event Actions and Escalation (opEvents 4)
Verification
The opevents-cli.exe utility found in /usr/local/omk/bin may be used to create a test event. Create an event that will match the previously configured action rule.
Code Block |
---|
[root@opmantek conf]# /usr/local/omk/bin/opevents-cli.exe act=create-event node=testNode4 stateful=node state=down event="Node DOWN" priority=5
5997bb8cce2c2e6d9453c101
[root@opmantek conf]# |
This command will return an event ID. Go to the event context page for this event. In the Actions section of the page there should be an entry stating an email was successfully sent. Keep in mind that this entry will not be present until the flap window and escalation timers have elapsed.