Main Configuration File Options


Notes

When creating and/or editing configuration files, keep the following in mind:

  1. Lines that start with a '#' character are taken to be comments and are not processed
  2. Variables names must begin at the start of the line - no white space is allowed before the name
  3. Variable names are case-sensitive

Sample Configuration

A sample main configuration file is created in the base directory of the Nagios distribution when you run the configure script. The default name of the main configuration file is nagios.cfg - its usually placed in the etc/ subdirectory of you Nagios installation (i.e. /usr/local/nagios/etc/).

Index

Log file
Object configuration file
Object configuration directory
Object cache file
Resource file
Temp file

Status file
Aggregated status updates option
Aggregated status data update interval

Nagios user
Nagios group

Notifications option
Service check execution option
Passive service check acceptance option
Host check execution option
Passive host check acceptance option
Event handler option

Log rotation method
Log archive path

External command check option
External command check interval
External command file

Comment file
Downtime file
Lock file

State retention option
State retention file
Automatic state retention update interval
Use retained program state option
Use retained scheduling info option

Syslog logging option
Notification logging option
Service check retry logging option
Host retry logging option
Event handler logging option
Initial state logging option
External command logging option
Passive check logging option

Global host event handler
Global service event handler

Inter-check sleep time
Service inter-check delay method
Maximum service check spread
Service interleave factor
Maximum concurrent service checks
Service reaper frequency
Host inter-check delay method
Maximum host check spread
Timing interval length
Auto-rescheduling option
Auto-rescheduling interval
Auto-rescheduling window

Agressive host checking option

Flap detection option
Low service flap threshold
High service flap threshold
Low host flap threshold
High host flap threshold

Soft service dependencies option

Service check timeout
Host check timeout
Event handler timeout
Notification timeout
Obsessive compulsive service processor timeout
Obsessive compulsive host processor timeout
Performance data processor command timeout

Obsess over services option
Obsessive compulsive service processor command
Obsess over hosts option
Obsessive compulsive host processor command

Performance data processing option
Host performance data processing command
Service performance data processing command
Host performance data file
Service performance data file
Host performance data file template
Service performance data file template
Host performance data file mode
Service performance data file mode
Host performance data file processing interval
Service performance data file processing interval
Host performance data file processing command
Service performance data file processing command

Orphaned service check option

Service freshness checking option
Service freshness check interval
Host freshness checking option
Host freshness check interval

Date format

Illegal object name characters
Illegal macro output characters

Regular expression matching option
True regular expression matching option

Administrator email address
Administrator pager

Log File

Format: log_file=<file_name>
Example: log_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/nagios.log

This variable specifies where Nagios should create its main log file. This should be the first variable that you define in your configuration file, as Nagios will try to write errors that it finds in the rest of your configuration data to this file. If you have log rotation enabled, this file will automatically be rotated every hour, day, week, or month.

Object Configuration File

Format: cfg_file=<file_name>
Example: cfg_file=/usr/local/nagios/etc/hosts.cfg
cfg_file=/usr/local/nagios/etc/services.cfg
cfg_file=/usr/local/nagios/etc/commands.cfg

This directive is used to specify an object configuration file containing object definitions that Nagios should use for monitoring. Object configuration files contain definitions for hosts, host groups, contacts, contact groups, services, commands, etc. You can seperate your configuration information into several files and specify multiple cfg_file= statements to have each of them processed.

Object Configuration Directory

Format: cfg_dir=<directory_name>
Example: cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/commands
cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/services
cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/hosts

This directive is used to specify a directory which contains object configuration files that Nagios should use for monitoring. All files in the directory with a .cfg extension are processed as object config files. Additionally, Nagios will recursively process all config files in subdirectories of the directory you specify here. You can seperate your configuration files into different directories and specify multiple cfg_dir= statements to have all config files in each directory processed.

Object Cache File

Format: object_cache_file=<file_name>
Example: object_cache_file_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/objects.cache

This directive is used to specify a file in which a cached copy of object definitions should be stored. The cache file is (re)created every time Nagios is (re)started and is used by the CGIs. It is intended to speed up config file caching in the CGIs and allow you to edit the source object config files while Nagios is running without affecting the output displayed in the CGIs.

Resource File

Format: resource_file=<file_name>
Example: resource_file=/usr/local/nagios/etc/resource.cfg

This is used to specify an optional resource file that can contain $USERn$ macro definitions. $USERn$ macros are useful for storing usernames, passwords, and items commonly used in command definitions (like directory paths). The CGIs will not attempt to read resource files, so you can set restrictive permissions (600 or 660) on them to protect sensitive information. You can include multiple resource files by adding multiple resource_file statements to the main config file - Nagios will process them all. See the sample resource.cfg file in the base of the Nagios directory for an example of how to define $USERn$ macros.

Temp File

Format: temp_file=<file_name>
Example: temp_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/nagios.tmp

This is a temporary file that Nagios periodically creates to use when updating comment data, status data, etc. The file is deleted when it is no longer needed.

Status File

Format: status_file=<file_name>
Example: status_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/status.dat

This is the file that Nagios uses to store the current status of all monitored services. The status of all hosts associated with the service you monitor are also recorded here. This file is used by the CGIs so that current monitoring status can be reported via a web interface. The CGIs must have read access to this file in order to function properly. This file is deleted every time Nagios stops and recreated when it starts.

Aggregated Status Updates Option

Format: aggregate_status_updates=<0/1>
Example: aggregate_status_updates=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will aggregate updates of host, service, and program status data. If you do not enable this option, status data is updated every time a host or service checks occurs. This can result in high CPU loads and file I/O if you are monitoring a lot of services. If you want Nagios to only update status data (in the status file) every few seconds (as determined by the status_update_interval option), enable this option. If you want immediate updates, disable it. I would highly recommend using aggregated updates (even at short intervals) unless you have good reason not to. Values are as follows:

Aggregated Status Update Interval

Format: status_update_interval=<seconds>
Example: status_update_interval=15

This setting determines how often (in seconds) that Nagios will update status data in the status file. The minimum update interval is five seconds. If you have disabled aggregated status updates (with the aggregate_status_updates option), this option has no effect.

Nagios User

Format: nagios_user=<username/UID>
Example: nagios_user=nagios

This is used to set the effective user that the Nagios process should run as. After initial program startup and before starting to monitor anything, Nagios will drop its effective privileges and run as this user. You may specify either a username or a UID.

Nagios Group

Format: nagios_group=<groupname/GID>
Example: nagios_group=nagios

This is used to set the effective group that the Nagios process should run as. After initial program startup and before starting to monitor anything, Nagios will drop its effective privileges and run as this group. You may specify either a groupname or a GID.

Notifications Option

Format: enable_notifications=<0/1>
Example: enable_notifications=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will send out notifications when it initially (re)starts. If this option is disabled, Nagios will not send out notifications for any host or service. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface. Values are as follows:

Service Check Execution Option

Format: execute_service_checks=<0/1>
Example: execute_service_checks=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will execute service checks when it initially (re)starts. If this option is disabled, Nagios will not actively execute any service checks and will remain in a sort of "sleep" mode (it can still accept passive checks unless you've disabled them). This option is most often used when configuring backup monitoring servers, as described in the documentation on redundancy, or when setting up a distributed monitoring environment. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface. Values are as follows:

Passive Service Check Acceptance Option

Format: accept_passive_service_checks=<0/1>
Example: accept_passive_service_checks=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will accept passive service checks when it initially (re)starts. If this option is disabled, Nagios will not accept any passive service checks. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface. Values are as follows:

Host Check Execution Option

Format: execute_host_checks=<0/1>
Example: execute_host_checks=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will execute on-demand and regularly scheduled host checks when it initially (re)starts. If this option is disabled, Nagios will not actively execute any host checks, although it can still accept passive host checks unless you've disabled them). This option is most often used when configuring backup monitoring servers, as described in the documentation on redundancy, or when setting up a distributed monitoring environment. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface. Values are as follows:

Passive Host Check Acceptance Option

Format: accept_passive_host_checks=<0/1>
Example: accept_passive_host_checks=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will accept passive host checks when it initially (re)starts. If this option is disabled, Nagios will not accept any passive host checks. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface. Values are as follows:

Event Handler Option

Format: enable_event_handlers=<0/1>
Example: enable_event_handlers=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will run event handlers when it initially (re)starts. If this option is disabled, Nagios will not run any host or service event handlers. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface. Values are as follows:

Log Rotation Method

Format: log_rotation_method=<n/h/d/w/m>
Example: log_rotation_method=d

This is the rotation method that you would like Nagios to use for your log file. Values are as follows:

Log Archive Path

Format: log_archive_path=<path>
Example: log_archive_path=/usr/local/nagios/var/archives/

This is the directory where Nagios should place log files that have been rotated. This option is ignored if you choose to not use the log rotation functionality.

External Command Check Option

Format: check_external_commands=<0/1>
Example: check_external_commands=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will check the command file for internal commands it should execute. This option must be enabled if you plan on using the command CGI to issue commands via the web interface. Third party programs can also issue commands to Nagios by writing to the command file, provided proper rights to the file have been granted as outlined in this FAQ. More information on external commands can be found here.

External Command Check Interval

Format: command_check_interval=<xxx>[s]
Example: command_check_interval=1

If you specify a number with an "s" appended to it (i.e. 30s), this is the number of seconds to wait between external command checks. If you leave off the "s", this is the number of "time units" to wait between external command checks. Unless you've changed the interval_length value (as defined below) from the default value of 60, this number will mean minutes.

Note: By setting this value to -1, Nagios will check for external commands as often as possible. Each time Nagios checks for external commands it will read and process all commands present in the command file before continuing on with its other duties. More information on external commands can be found here.

External Command File

Format: command_file=<file_name>
Example: command_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/rw/nagios.cmd

This is the file that Nagios will check for external commands to process. The command CGI writes commands to this file. Other third party programs can write to this file if proper file permissions have been granted as outline in here. The external command file is implemented as a named pipe (FIFO), which is created when Nagios starts and removed when it shuts down. If the file exists when Nagios starts, the Nagios process will terminate with an error message. More information on external commands can be found here.

Downtime File

Format: downtime_file=<file_name>
Example: downtime_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/downtime.dat

This is the file that Nagios will use for storing scheduled host and service downtime information. Comments can be viewed and added for both hosts and services through the extended information CGI.

Comment File

Format: comment_file=<file_name>
Example: comment_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/comment.dat

This is the file that Nagios will use for storing service and host comments. Comments can be viewed and added for both hosts and services through the extended information CGI.

Lock File

Format: lock_file=<file_name>
Example: lock_file=/tmp/nagios.lock

This option specifies the location of the lock file that Nagios should create when it runs as a daemon (when started with the -d command line argument). This file contains the process id (PID) number of the running Nagios process.

State Retention Option

Format: retain_state_information=<0/1>
Example: retain_state_information=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will retain state information for hosts and services between program restarts. If you enable this option, you should supply a value for the state_retention_file variable. When enabled, Nagios will save all state information for hosts and service before it shuts down (or restarts) and will read in previously saved state information when it starts up again.

State Retention File

Format: state_retention_file=<file_name>
Example: state_retention_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/retention.dat

This is the file that Nagios will use for storing service and host state information before it shuts down. When Nagios is restarted it will use the information stored in this file for setting the initial states of services and hosts before it starts monitoring anything. This file is deleted after Nagios reads in initial state information when it (re)starts. In order to make Nagios retain state information between program restarts, you must enable the retain_state_information option.

Automatic State Retention Update Interval

Format: retention_update_interval=<minutes>
Example: retention_update_interval=60

This setting determines how often (in minutes) that Nagios will automatically save retention data during normal operation. If you set this value to 0, Nagios will not save retention data at regular intervals, but it will still save retention data before shutting down or restarting. If you have disabled state retention (with the retain_state_information option), this option has no effect.

Use Retained Program State Option

Format: use_retained_program_state=<0/1>
Example: use_retained_program_state=1

This setting determines whether or not Nagios will set various program-wide state variables based on the values saved in the retention file. Some of these program-wide state variables that are normally saved across program restarts if state retention is enabled include the enable_notifications, enable_flap_detection, enable_event_handlers, execute_service_checks, and accept_passive_service_checks options. If you do not have state retention enabled, this option has no effect.

Use Retained Scheduling Info Option

Format: use_retained_scheduling_info=<0/1>
Example: use_retained_scheduling_info=1

This setting determines whether or not Nagios will retain scheduling info (next check times) for hosts and services when it restarts. If you are adding a large number (or percentage) of hosts and services, I would recommend disabling this option when you first restart Nagios, as it can adversely skew the spread of initial checks. Otherwise you will probably want to leave it enabled.

Syslog Logging Option

Format: use_syslog=<0/1>
Example: use_syslog=1

This variable determines whether messages are logged to the syslog facility on your local host. Values are as follows:

Notification Logging Option

Format: log_notifications=<0/1>
Example: log_notifications=1

This variable determines whether or not notification messages are logged. If you have a lot of contacts or regular service failures your log file will grow relatively quickly. Use this option to keep contact notifications from being logged.

Service Check Retry Logging Option

Format: log_service_retries=<0/1>
Example: log_service_retries=1

This variable determines whether or not service check retries are logged. Service check retries occur when a service check results in a non-OK state, but you have configured Nagios to retry the service more than once before responding to the error. Services in this situation are considered to be in "soft" states. Logging service check retries is mostly useful when attempting to debug Nagios or test out service event handlers.

Host Check Retry Logging Option

Format: log_host_retries=<0/1>
Example: log_host_retries=1

This variable determines whether or not host check retries are logged. Logging host check retries is mostly useful when attempting to debug Nagios or test out host event handlers.

Event Handler Logging Option

Format: log_event_handlers=<0/1>
Example: log_event_handlers=1

This variable determines whether or not service and host event handlers are logged. Event handlers are optional commands that can be run whenever a service or hosts changes state. Logging event handlers is most useful when debugging Nagios or first trying out your event handler scripts.

Initial States Logging Option

Format: log_initial_states=<0/1>
Example: log_initial_states=1

This variable determines whether or not Nagios will force all initial host and service states to be logged, even if they result in an OK state. Initial service and host states are normally only logged when there is a problem on the first check. Enabling this option is useful if you are using an application that scans the log file to determine long-term state statistics for services and hosts.

External Command Logging Option

Format: log_external_commands=<0/1>
Example: log_external_commands=1

This variable determines whether or not Nagios will log external commands that it receives from the external command file. Note: This option does not control whether or not passive service checks (which are a type of external command) get logged. To enable or disable logging of passive checks, use the log_passive_service_checks option.

Passive Check Logging Option

Format: log_passive_checks=<0/1>
Example: log_passive_checks=1

This variable determines whether or not Nagios will log passive host and service checks that it receives from the external command file. If you are setting up a distributed monitoring environment or plan on handling a large number of passive checks on a regular basis, you may wish to disable this option so your log file doesn't get too large.

Global Host Event Handler Option

Format: global_host_event_handler=<command>
Example: global_host_event_handler=log-host-event-to-db

This option allows you to specify a host event handler command that is to be run for every host state change. The global event handler is executed immediately prior to the event handler that you have optionally specified in each host definition. The command argument is the short name of a command that you define in your object configuration file. The maximum amount of time that this command can run is controlled by the event_handler_timeout option. More information on event handlers can be found here.

Global Service Event Handler Option

Format: global_service_event_handler=<command>
Example: global_service_event_handler=log-service-event-to-db

This option allows you to specify a service event handler command that is to be run for every service state change. The global event handler is executed immediately prior to the event handler that you have optionally specified in each service definition. The command argument is the short name of a command that you define in your object configuration file. The maximum amount of time that this command can run is controlled by the event_handler_timeout option. More information on event handlers can be found here.

Inter-Check Sleep Time

Format: sleep_time=<seconds>
Example: sleep_time=1

This is the number of seconds that Nagios will sleep before checking to see if the next service or host check in the scheduling queue should be executed. Note that Nagios will only sleep after it "catches up" with queued service checks that have fallen behind.

Service Inter-Check Delay Method

Format: service_inter_check_delay_method=<n/d/s/x.xx>
Example: service_inter_check_delay_method=s

This option allows you to control how service checks are initially "spread out" in the event queue. Using a "smart" delay calculation (the default) will cause Nagios to calculate an average check interval and spread initial checks of all services out over that interval, thereby helping to eliminate CPU load spikes. Using no delay is generally not recommended unless you are testing the service check parallelization functionality. Using no delay will cause all service checks to be scheduled for execution at the same time. This means that you will generally have large CPU spikes when the services are all executed in parallel. More information on how to estimate how the inter-check delay affects service check scheduling can be found here. Values are as follows:

Maximum Service Check Spread

Format: max_service_check_spread=<minutes>
Example: max_service_check_spread=30

This option determines the maximum number of minutes from when Nagios starts that all services (that are scheduled to be regularly checked) are checked. This option will automatically adjust the service inter-check delay (if necessary) to ensure that the initial checks of all services occur within the timeframe you specify. In general, this option will not have an affect on service check scheduling if scheduling information is being retained using the use_retained_scheduling_info option. Default value is 30 (minutes).

Service Interleave Factor

Format: service_interleave_factor=<s|x>
Example: service_interleave_factor=s

This variable determines how service checks are interleaved. Interleaving allows for a more even distribution of service checks, reduced load on remote hosts, and faster overall detection of host problems. With the introduction of service check parallelization, remote hosts could get bombarded with checks if interleaving was not implemented. This could cause the service checks to fail or return incorrect results if the remote host was overloaded with processing other service check requests. Setting this value to 1 is equivalent to not interleaving the service checks (this is how versions of Nagios previous to 0.0.5 worked). Set this value to s (smart) for automatic calculation of the interleave factor unless you have a specific reason to change it. The best way to understand how interleaving works is to watch the status CGI (detailed view) when Nagios is just starting. You should see that the service check results are spread out as they begin to appear. More information on how interleaving works can be found here.

Maximum Concurrent Service Checks

Format: max_concurrent_checks=<max_checks>
Example: max_concurrent_checks=20

This option allows you to specify the maximum number of service checks that can be run in parallel at any given time. Specifying a value of 1 for this variable essentially prevents any service checks from being parallelized. Specifying a value of 0 (the default) does not place any restrictions on the number of concurrent checks. You'll have to modify this value based on the system resources you have available on the machine that runs Nagios, as it directly affects the maximum load that will be imposed on the system (processor utilization, memory, etc.). More information on how to estimate how many concurrent checks you should allow can be found here.

Service Reaper Frequency

Format: service_reaper_frequency=<frequency_in_seconds>
Example: service_reaper_frequency=10

This option allows you to control the frequency in seconds of service "reaper" events. "Reaper" events process the results from parallelized service checks that have finished executing. These events consitute the core of the monitoring logic in Nagios.

Host Inter-Check Delay Method

Format: host_inter_check_delay_method=<n/d/s/x.xx>
Example: host_inter_check_delay_method=s

This option allows you to control how host checks that are scheduled to be checked on a regular basis are initially "spread out" in the event queue. Using a "smart" delay calculation (the default) will cause Nagios to calculate an average check interval and spread initial checks of all hosts out over that interval, thereby helping to eliminate CPU load spikes. Using no delay is generally not recommended. Using no delay will cause all host checks to be scheduled for execution at the same time. More information on how to estimate how the inter-check delay affects host check scheduling can be found here.Values are as follows:

Maximum Host Check Spread

Format: max_host_check_spread=<minutes>
Example: max_host_check_spread=30

This option determines the maximum number of minutes from when Nagios starts that all hosts (that are scheduled to be regularly checked) are checked. This option will automatically adjust the host inter-check delay (if necessary) to ensure that the initial checks of all hosts occur within the timeframe you specify. In general, this option will not have an affect on host check scheduling if scheduling information is being retained using the use_retained_scheduling_info option. Default value is 30 (minutes).

Timing Interval Length

Format: interval_length=<seconds>
Example: interval_length=60

This is the number of seconds per "unit interval" used for timing in the scheduling queue, re-notifications, etc. "Units intervals" are used in the object configuration file to determine how often to run a service check, how often of re-notify a contact, etc.

Important: The default value for this is set to 60, which means that a "unit value" of 1 in the object configuration file will mean 60 seconds (1 minute). I have not really tested other values for this variable, so proceed at your own risk if you decide to do so!

Auto-Rescheduling Option

Format: auto_reschedule_checks=<0/1>
Example: auto_reschedule_checks=1

This option determines whether or not Nagios will attempt to automatically reschedule active host and service checks to "smooth" them out over time. This can help to balance the load on the monitoring server, as it will attempt to keep the time between consecutive checks consistent, at the expense of executing checks on a more rigid schedule.

WARNING: THIS IS AN EXPERIMENTAL FEATURE AND MAY BE REMOVED IN FUTURE VERSIONS. ENABLING THIS OPTION CAN DEGRADE PERFORMANCE - RATHER THAN INCREASE IT - IF USED IMPROPERLY!

Auto-Rescheduling Interval

Format: auto_rescheduling_interval=<seconds>
Example: auto_rescheduling_interval=30

This option determines how often (in seconds) Nagios will attempt to automatically reschedule checks. This option only has an effect if the auto_reschedule_checks option is enabled. Default is 30 seconds.

WARNING: THIS IS AN EXPERIMENTAL FEATURE AND MAY BE REMOVED IN FUTURE VERSIONS. ENABLING THE AUTO-RESCHEDULING OPTION CAN DEGRADE PERFORMANCE - RATHER THAN INCREASE IT - IF USED IMPROPERLY!

Auto-Rescheduling Window

Format: auto_rescheduling_window=<seconds>
Example: auto_rescheduling_window=180

This option determines the "window" of time (in seconds) that Nagios will look at when automatically rescheduling checks. Only host and service checks that occur in the next X seconds (determined by this variable) will be rescheduled. This option only has an effect if the auto_reschedule_checks option is enabled. Default is 180 seconds (3 minutes).

WARNING: THIS IS AN EXPERIMENTAL FEATURE AND MAY BE REMOVED IN FUTURE VERSIONS. ENABLING THE AUTO-RESCHEDULING OPTION CAN DEGRADE PERFORMANCE - RATHER THAN INCREASE IT - IF USED IMPROPERLY!

Agressive Host Checking Option

Format: use_agressive_host_checking=<0/1>
Example: use_agressive_host_checking=0

Nagios tries to be smart about how and when it checks the status of hosts. In general, disabling this option will allow Nagios to make some smarter decisions and check hosts a bit faster. Enabling this option will increase the amount of time required to check hosts, but may improve reliability a bit. Unless you have problems with Nagios not recognizing that a host recovered, I would suggest not enabling this option.

Flap Detection Option

Format: enable_flap_detection=<0/1>
Example: enable_flap_detection=0

This option determines whether or not Nagios will try and detect hosts and services that are "flapping". Flapping occurs when a host or service changes between states too frequently, resulting in a barrage of notifications being sent out. When Nagios detects that a host or service is flapping, it will temporarily suppress notifications for that host/service until it stops flapping. Flap detection is very experimental at this point, so use this feature with caution! More information on how flap detection and handling works can be found here. Note: If you have state retention enabled, Nagios will ignore this setting when it (re)starts and use the last known setting for this option (as stored in the state retention file), unless you disable the use_retained_program_state option. If you want to change this option when state retention is active (and the use_retained_program_state is enabled), you'll have to use the appropriate external command or change it via the web interface.

Low Service Flap Threshold

Format: low_service_flap_threshold=<percent>
Example: low_service_flap_threshold=25.0

This option is used to set the low threshold for detection of service flapping. For more information on how flap detection and handling works (and how this option affects things) read this.

High Service Flap Threshold

Format: high_service_flap_threshold=<percent>
Example: high_service_flap_threshold=50.0

This option is used to set the low threshold for detection of service flapping. For more information on how flap detection and handling works (and how this option affects things) read this.

Low Host Flap Threshold

Format: low_host_flap_threshold=<percent>
Example: low_host_flap_threshold=25.0

This option is used to set the low threshold for detection of host flapping. For more information on how flap detection and handling works (and how this option affects things) read this.

High Host Flap Threshold

Format: high_host_flap_threshold=<percent>
Example: high_host_flap_threshold=50.0

This option is used to set the low threshold for detection of host flapping. For more information on how flap detection and handling works (and how this option affects things) read this.

Soft Service Dependencies Option

Format: soft_state_dependencies=<0/1>
Example: soft_state_dependencies=0

This option determines whether or not Nagios will use soft service state information when checking service dependencies. Normally Nagios will only use the latest hard service state when checking dependencies. If you want it to use the latest state (regardless of whether its a soft or hard state type), enable this option.

Service Check Timeout

Format: service_check_timeout=<seconds>
Example: service_check_timeout=60

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow service checks to run. If checks exceed this limit, they are killed and a CRITICAL state is returned. A timeout error will also be logged.

There is often widespread confusion as to what this option really does. It is meant to be used as a last ditch mechanism to kill off plugins which are misbehaving and not exiting in a timely manner. It should be set to something high (like 60 seconds or more), so that each service check normally finishes executing within this time limit. If a service check runs longer than this limit, Nagios will kill it off thinking it is a runaway processes.

Host Check Timeout

Format: host_check_timeout=<seconds>
Example: host_check_timeout=60

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow host checks to run. If checks exceed this limit, they are killed and a CRITICAL state is returned and the host will be assumed to be DOWN. A timeout error will also be logged.

There is often widespread confusion as to what this option really does. It is meant to be used as a last ditch mechanism to kill off plugins which are misbehaving and not exiting in a timely manner. It should be set to something high (like 60 seconds or more), so that each host check normally finishes executing within this time limit. If a host check runs longer than this limit, Nagios will kill it off thinking it is a runaway processes.

Event Handler Timeout

Format: event_handler_timeout=<seconds>
Example: event_handler_timeout=60

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow event handlers to be run. If an event handler exceeds this time limit it will be killed and a warning will be logged.

There is often widespread confusion as to what this option really does. It is meant to be used as a last ditch mechanism to kill off commands which are misbehaving and not exiting in a timely manner. It should be set to something high (like 60 seconds or more), so that each event handler command normally finishes executing within this time limit. If an event handler runs longer than this limit, Nagios will kill it off thinking it is a runaway processes.

Notification Timeout

Format: notification_timeout=<seconds>
Example: notification_timeout=60

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow notification commands to be run. If a notification command exceeds this time limit it will be killed and a warning will be logged.

There is often widespread confusion as to what this option really does. It is meant to be used as a last ditch mechanism to kill off commands which are misbehaving and not exiting in a timely manner. It should be set to something high (like 60 seconds or more), so that each notification command finishes executing within this time limit. If a notification command runs longer than this limit, Nagios will kill it off thinking it is a runaway processes.

Obsessive Compulsive Service Processor Timeout

Format: ocsp_timeout=<seconds>
Example: ocsp_timeout=5

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow an obsessive compulsive service processor command to be run. If a command exceeds this time limit it will be killed and a warning will be logged.

Obsessive Compulsive Host Processor Timeout

Format: ochp_timeout=<seconds>
Example: ochp_timeout=5

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow an obsessive compulsive host processor command to be run. If a command exceeds this time limit it will be killed and a warning will be logged.

Performance Data Processor Command Timeout

Format: perfdata_timeout=<seconds>
Example: perfdata_timeout=5

This is the maximum number of seconds that Nagios will allow a host performance data processor command or service performance data processor command to be run. If a command exceeds this time limit it will be killed and a warning will be logged.

Obsess Over Services Option

Format: obsess_over_services=<0/1>
Example: obsess_over_services=1

This value determines whether or not Nagios will "obsess" over service checks results and run the obsessive compulsive service processor command you define. I know - funny name, but it was all I could think of. This option is useful for performing distributed monitoring. If you're not doing distributed monitoring, don't enable this option.

Obsessive Compulsive Service Processor Command

Format: ocsp_command=<command>
Example: ocsp_command=obsessive_service_handler

This option allows you to specify a command to be run after every service check, which can be useful in distributed monitoring. This command is executed after any event handler or notification commands. The command argument is the short name of a command definition that you define in your object configuration file. The maximum amount of time that this command can run is controlled by the ocsp_timeout option. More information on distributed monitoring can be found here. This command is only executed if the obsess_over_services option is enabled globally and if the obsess_over_service directive in the service definition is enabled.

Obsess Over Hosts Option

Format: obsess_over_hosts=<0/1>
Example: obsess_over_hosts=1

This value determines whether or not Nagios will "obsess" over host checks results and run the obsessive compulsive host processor command you define. I know - funny name, but it was all I could think of. This option is useful for performing distributed monitoring. If you're not doing distributed monitoring, don't enable this option.

Obsessive Compulsive Host Processor Command

Format: ochp_command=<command>
Example: ochp_command=obsessive_host_handler

This option allows you to specify a command to be run after every host check, which can be useful in distributed monitoring. This command is executed after any event handler or notification commands. The command argument is the short name of a command definition that you define in your object configuration file. The maximum amount of time that this command can run is controlled by the ochp_timeout option. More information on distributed monitoring can be found here. This command is only executed if the obsess_over_hosts option is enabled globally and if the obsess_over_host directive in the host definition is enabled.

Performance Data Processing Option

Format: process_performance_data=<0/1>
Example: process_performance_data=1

This value determines whether or not Nagios will process host and service check performance data.

Host Performance Data Processing Command

Format: host_perfdata_command=<command>
Example: host_perfdata_command=process-host-perfdata

This option allows you to specify a command to be run after every host check to process host performance data that may be returned from the check. The command argument is the short name of a command definition that you define in your object configuration file. This command is only executed if the process_performance_data option is enabled globally and if the process_perf_data directive in the host definition is enabled.

Service Performance Data Processing Command

Format: service_perfdata_command=<command>
Example: service_perfdata_command=process-service-perfdata

This option allows you to specify a command to be run after every service check to process service performance data that may be returned from the check. The command argument is the short name of a command definition that you define in your object configuration file. This command is only executed if the process_performance_data option is enabled globally and if the process_perf_data directive in the service definition is enabled.

Host Performance Data File

Format: host_perfdata_file=<file_name>
Example: host_perfdata_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/host-perfdata.dat

This option allows you to specify a file to which host performance data will be written after every host check. Data will be written to the performance file as specified by the host_perfdata_file_template option. Performance data is only written to this file if the process_performance_data option is enabled globally and if the process_perf_data directive in the host definition is enabled.

Service Performance Data File

Format: service_perfdata_file=<file_name>
Example: service_perfdata_file=/usr/local/nagios/var/service-perfdata.dat

This option allows you to specify a file to which service performance data will be written after every service check. Data will be written to the performance file as specified by the service_perfdata_file_template option. Performance data is only written to this file if the process_performance_data option is enabled globally and if the process_perf_data directive in the service definition is enabled.

Host Performance Data File Template

Format: host_perfdata_file_template=<template>
Example: host_perfdata_file_template=[HOSTPERFDATA]\t$TIMET$\t$HOSTNAME$\t$HOSTEXECUTIONTIME$\t$HOSTOUTPUT$\t$HOSTPERFDATA$

This option determines what (and how) data is written to the host performance data file. The template may contain macros, special characters (\t for tab, \r for carriage return, \n for newline) and plain text. A newline is automatically added after each write to the performance data file.

Service Performance Data File Template

Format: service_perfdata_file_template=<template>
Example: service_perfdata_file_template=[SERVICEPERFDATA]\t$TIMET$\t$HOSTNAME$\t$SERVICEDESC$\t$SERVICEEXECUTIONTIME$\t$SERVICELATENCY$\t$SERVICEOUTPUT$\t$SERVICEPERFDATA$

This option determines what (and how) data is written to the service performance data file. The template may contain macros, special characters (\t for tab, \r for carriage return, \n for newline) and plain text. A newline is automatically added after each write to the performance data file.

Host Performance Data File Mode

Format: host_perfdata_file_mode=<mode>
Example: host_perfdata_file_mode=a

This option determines whether the host performance data file is opened in write or append mode. Unless the file is a named pipe, you will probably want to use the default mode of append.

Service Performance Data File Mode

Format: service_perfdata_file_mode=<mode>
Example: service_perfdata_file_mode=a

This option determines whether the service performance data file is opened in write or append mode. Unless the file is a named pipe, you will probably want to use the default mode of append.

Host Performance Data File Processing Interval

Format: host_perfdata_file_processing_interval=<seconds>
Example: host_perfdata_file_processing_interval=0

This option allows you to specify the interval (in seconds) at which the host performance data file is processed using the host performance data file processing command. A value of 0 indicates that the performance data file should not be processed at regular intervals.

Service Performance Data File Processing Interval

Format: service_perfdata_file_processing_interval=<seconds>
Example: service_perfdata_file_processing_interval=0

This option allows you to specify the interval (in seconds) at which the service performance data file is processed using the service performance data file processing command. A value of 0 indicates that the performance data file should not be processed at regular intervals.

Host Performance Data File Processing Command

Format: host_perfdata_file_processing_command=<command>
Example: host_perfdata_file_processing_command=process-host-perfdata-file

This option allows you to specify the command that should be executed to process the host performance data file. The command argument is the short name of a command definition that you define in your object configuration file. The interval at which this command is executed is determined by the host_perfdata_file_processing_interval directive.

Service Performance Data File Processing Command

Format: service_perfdata_file_processing_command=<command>
Example: service_perfdata_file_processing_command=process-service-perfdata-file

This option allows you to specify the command that should be executed to process the service performance data file. The command argument is the short name of a command definition that you define in your object configuration file. The interval at which this command is executed is determined by the service_perfdata_file_processing_interval directive.

Orphaned Service Check Option

Format: check_for_orphaned_services=<0/1>
Example: check_for_orphaned_services=0

This option allows you to enable or disable checks for orphaned service checks. Orphaned service checks are checks which ahve been executed and have been removed from the event queue, but have not had any results reported in a long time. Since no results have come back in for the service, it is not rescheduled in the event queue. This can cause service checks to stop being executed. Normally it is very rare for this to happen - it might happen if an external user or process killed off the process that was being used to execute a service check. If this option is enabled and Nagios finds that results for a particular service check have not come back, it will log an error message and reschedule the service check. If you start seeing service checks that never seem to get rescheduled, enable this option and see if you notice any log messages about orphaned services.

Service Freshness Checking Option

Format: check_service_freshness=<0/1>
Example: check_service_freshness=0

This option determines whether or not Nagios will periodically check the "freshness" of service checks. Enabling this option is useful for helping to ensure that passive service checks are received in a timely manner. More information on freshness checking can be found here.

Service Freshness Check Interval

Format: service_freshness_check_interval=<seconds>
Example: service_freshness_check_interval=60

This setting determines how often (in seconds) Nagios will periodically check the "freshness" of service check results. If you have disabled service freshness checking (with the check_service_freshness option), this option has no effect. More information on freshness checking can be found here.

Host Freshness Checking Option

Format: check_host_freshness=<0/1>
Example: check_host_freshness=0

This option determines whether or not Nagios will periodically check the "freshness" of host checks. Enabling this option is useful for helping to ensure that passive host checks are received in a timely manner. More information on freshness checking can be found here.

Host Freshness Check Interval

Format: host_freshness_check_interval=<seconds>
Example: host_freshness_check_interval=60

This setting determines how often (in seconds) Nagios will periodically check the "freshness" of host check results. If you have disabled host freshness checking (with the check_host_freshness option), this option has no effect. More information on freshness checking can be found here.

Date Format

Format: date_format=<option>
Example: date_format=us

This option allows you to specify what kind of date/time format Nagios should use in the web interface and date/time macros. Possible options (along with example output) include:

OptionOutput FormatSample Output
usMM/DD/YYYY HH:MM:SS06/30/2002 03:15:00
euroDD/MM/YYYY HH:MM:SS30/06/2002 03:15:00
iso8601YYYY-MM-DD HH:MM:SS2002-06-30 03:15:00
strict-iso8601YYYY-MM-DDTHH:MM:SS2002-06-30T03:15:00

Illegal Object Name Characters

Format: illegal_object_name_chars=<chars...>
Example: illegal_object_name_chars=`~!$%^&*"|'<>?,()=

This option allows you to specify illegal characters that cannot be used in host names, service descriptions, or names of other object types. Nagios will allow you to use most characters in object definitions, but I recommend not using the characters shown in the example above. Doing may give you problems in the web interface, notification commands, etc.

Illegal Macro Output Characters

Format: illegal_macro_output_chars=<chars...>
Example: illegal_macro_output_chars=`~$^&"|'<>

This option allows you to specify illegal characters that should be stripped from macros before being used in notifications, event handlers, and other commands. This DOES NOT affect macros used in service or host check commands. You can choose to not strip out the characters shown in the example above, but I recommend you do not do this. Some of these characters are interpreted by the shell (i.e. the backtick) and can lead to security problems. The following macros are stripped of the characters you specify:

$HOSTOUTPUT$, $HOSTPERFDATA$, $HOSTACKAUTHOR$, $HOSTACKCOMMENT$, $SERVICEOUTPUT$, $SERVICEPERFDATA$, $SERVICEACKAUTHOR$, and $SERVICEACKCOMMENT$

Regular Expression Matching Option

Format: use_regexp_matching=<0/1>
Example: use_regexp_matching=0

This option determines whether or not various directives in your object definitions will be processed as regular expressions. More information on how this works can be found here.

True Regular Expression Matching Option

Format: use_true_regexp_matching=<0/1>
Example: use_true_regexp_matching=0

If you've enabled regular expression matching of various object directives using the use_regexp_matching option, this option will determine when object directives are treated as regular expressions. If this option is disabled (the default), directives will only be treated as regular expressions if the contain a * or ? wildcard character. If this option is enabled, all appropriate directives will be treated as regular expression - be careful when enabling this! More information on how this works can be found here.

Administrator Email Address

Format: admin_email=<email_address>
Example: admin_email=root@localhost.localdomain

This is the email address for the administrator of the local machine (i.e. the one that Nagios is running on). This value can be used in notification commands by using the $ADMINEMAIL$ macro.

Administrator Pager

Format: admin_pager=<pager_number_or_pager_email_gateway>
Example: admin_pager=pageroot@localhost.localdomain

This is the pager number (or pager email gateway) for the administrator of the local machine (i.e. the one that Nagios is running on). The pager number/address can be used in notification commands by using the $ADMINPAGER$ macro.