forked from nconf/nconf
-
Notifications
You must be signed in to change notification settings - Fork 0
NConf - Enterprise Nagios configurator - official development repository
License
therealdano/nconf
Folders and files
Name | Name | Last commit message | Last commit date | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Repository files navigation
NConf README ============ NConf homepage: http://www.nconf.org Start guide: http://www.nconf.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=nconf:help:documentation:start:main Complete documentation: http://www.nconf.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=nconf:help:documentation:detail:main Table of contents ----------------- A. Requirements B. Manual installation C. Manual update A. Requirements --------------- NConf system requirements: * Apache webserver * PHP 5 or higher, php-mysql, php-ldap (only if using LDAP auth) * MySQL 5.0.2 or higher (with InnoDB) * Perl 5.6 or higher, perl-DBI, perl-DBD-MySQL * Nagios 3.x or Icinga 0.8x (binary necessary for testing generated config) php.ini settings: * short_open_tag = On * register_globals = Off * magic_quotes_gpc = Off Compatibility: NConf has been tested on Red Hat, Fedora and CentOS Linux. It has not been tested on Windows or any UNIX, or with SELinux. Security considerations: NConf is intended to be deployed within a private network or intranet. As such, development focus is clearly not that of a secure Internet application. Although it can be run anywhere, we do not advise users to publish NConf as a public site. B. Manual installation ---------------------- 1. Download and unpack Download and unpack the NConf archive to your webserver's document root folder. 2. Set permissions Make sure the following directories are writable for your webserver user: ./config ./output ./static_cfg ./temp 3. Create the database Create a new MySQL database for NConf, create a user to access the database, grant the appropriate privileges (make sure InnoDB for MySQL is set up properly prior to creating the database). On the commandline, you would proceed like this: $> mysql -u root -p Enter password: mysql> CREATE DATABASE DBNAME; mysql> GRANT SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, DELETE, CREATE, DROP, ALTER ON `DBNAME`.* TO 'DB_USER'@'localhost' IDENTIFIED BY 'DB_PASS'; Please refer to the MySQL manual on how to set up InnoDB (the steps might vary depending on your OS distribution). 4. Create the database structure $> mysql -u DBUSER -p DBNAME < INSTALL/create_database.sql 5. Configure NConf Copy the contents of ./config.orig to ./config. Make sure you also copy the hidden files. Edit ./config/mysql.php, set at least the following values: DBHOST DBNAME DBUSER DBPASS Edit ./config/nconf.php, set at least the following values: NCONFDIR NAGIOS_BIN 6. Clean up Remove the INSTALL and UPDATE folders, as well as the INSTALL.php and UPDATE.php scripts. 7. Get OS logo icons (optional, but nice) If you like, download the OS logo icons and unpack them to ./img/logos/base/ The icons can be downloaded here: http://www.monitoringexchange.org/p/47 8. Authentication If you need authentication, configure ./config/authentication.php appropriately. C. Manual update ---------------- 1. Backup Make a backup copy of your whole 'nconf/' folder and create a dump of your 'nconf' database. The update process will not overwrite your configuration, but if you have made changes to any other files, these changes will be lost! This is also true for icons that you might have installed manually ('img/logos/base/'). Example: cp -rp nconf/ nconf.BAK mysqldump -u DBUSER -p DBNAME > nconf-dbdump.sql 2. Download and unpack Download and unpack the NConf archive to a temporary location on your webserver. Example: tar -zxf nconf-VERSION.tgz -C /tmp/ 3. Update existing files Copy the unpacked files to the 'nconf/' folder and overwrite any existing files of your current NConf installation. Example: /bin/cp -rv /tmp/nconf/* /path/to/nconf/ (specify the full path to the 'cp' binary!) This step cannot be undone! Make sure you have made a backup of your 'nconf/' folder. 4. Check permissions Make sure the following directories are still writable for your webserver user: ./config ./output ./static_cfg ./temp 5. Update the database The 'UPDATE/' folder contains a subfolder for each previous release of NConf. The folders are named like this: x.x.x_to_y.y.y Make sure you know your current version of NConf. Next, chose the appropriate folder and look for a script named update_database_x.x.x_to_y.y.y.sql. Update the database like this: $> mysql -u DBUSER -p DBNAME < UPDATE/x.x.x_to_y.y.y/update_database_x.x.x_to_y.y.y.sql If you are updating from an older version of NConf, make sure you apply all available updates for all versions between your version and the latest version of NConf. Also, make sure you apply the updates in the right order! Important: make sure you don't skip any updates, and that you apply ALL of them in the right order. Failure to do so may result in data corruption and instability of NConf! 6. Additional tasks Check the version-specific 'README' file within the current subfolder for update-related instructions. If you have applied more than one update, make sure you study all README files in all subfolders. These files contain important instructions about necessary config changes etc. The release notes for the current release can also be found here: http://www.nconf.org/dokuwiki/doku.php?id=nconf:download:releasenotes 7. Restore icons (optional) If you were using additional icons prior to the update, you will have to copy these back from your backup folder. 8. Clean up Finally, remove the following files and directories: * INSTALL * INSTALL.php * UPDATE * UPDATE.php The update should now be complete. Refresh browser cache: If NConf does not look or feel right after the update, push CTRL-F5. Your browser might have to reload some cached CSS & JavaScript files.
About
NConf - Enterprise Nagios configurator - official development repository
Resources
License
Stars
Watchers
Forks
Packages 0
No packages published
Languages
- PHP 60.2%
- Perl 22.6%
- HTML 11.5%
- JavaScript 3.5%
- CSS 2.0%
- Shell 0.2%