Installing Nagios Core From Source
This document describes how to install Nagios Core from source.
This guide is broken up into several sections and covers different operating system (OS) distributions. If your OS Distribution is not included in this guide then please contact us to see if we can get it added. Some distributions may be missing as we don't have access to a test environment that allows us to develop the documentation.
Nagios Core 4.4.14 and Nagios Plugins 2.4.6 are the versions used in this guide, however future versions should also work fine with these steps.
NOTE: As of Nagios Core 4.4.7, openssl is a required prerequisite. This command has been added in the documentation below for the more popular distributions (CentOS, RHEL, Ubuntu, etc...). If you are using other distributions (Solaris, Gentoo, etc...) you will need to run the appropriate command to install openssl in the prerequisite section.
This documentation is broken up into two distinct sections:
Install Nagios Core
Install Nagios Plugins
This separation is to make a clear distinction as to what prerequisite packages are required by the OS it is being installed on. For example the SNMP packages are installed as part of the Nagios Plugins section, as SNMP is not required by Nagios Core.
Please select your OS:
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. Steps to do this are as follows.
sed -i 's/SELINUX=.*/SELINUX=disabled/g' /etc/selinux/config
setenforce 0
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
===== RHEL 5/6/7 | CentOS 5/6/7 | Oracle Linux 5/6/7 =====
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common wget unzip httpd php gd gd-devel perl postfix
yum install openssl-devel
===== RHEL 8/9 | CentOS Stream 8/9=====
dnf install -y gcc glibc glibc-common perl httpd php wget gd gd-devel
dnf install openssl-devel
dnf update -y
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure
make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The apache user is also added to the nagios group.
make install-groups-users
usermod -a -G nagios apache
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot. The Apache httpd service is also configured at this point.
===== RHEL 5/6 | CentOS 5/6 | Oracle Linux 5/6 =====
make install-daemoninit
chkconfig --level 2345 httpd on
===== RHEL 7/8/9 | CentOS 7 | Oracle Linux 7/8/9 | CentoOS Stream 8/9=====
make install-daemoninit
systemctl enable httpd.service
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files. Also configure Apache settings if required.
make install-webconf
You need to allow port 80 inbound traffic on the local firewall so you can reach the Nagios Core web interface.
===== RHEL 5/6 | CentOS 5/6 | Oracle Linux 5/6 =====
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 80 -j ACCEPT
service iptables save
ip6tables -I INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 80 -j ACCEPT
service ip6tables save
===== RHEL 7/8/9 | CentOS 7 | Oracle Linux 7/8/9 | CentOS Stream 8/9=====
firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=80/tcp
firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=80/tcp --permanent
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
===== RHEL 5/6 | CentOS 5/6 | Oracle Linux 5/6 =====
service httpd start
===== RHEL 7/8/9 | CentOS 7 | Oracle Linux 7/8/9 | CentOS Stream 8/9=====
systemctl start httpd.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
===== RHEL 5/6 | CentOS 5/6 | Oracle Linux 5/6 =====
service nagios start
===== RHEL 7/8/9 | CentOS 7 | Oracle Linux 7/8/9 | CentOS Stream 8/9=====
systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
===== CentOS 5 =====
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils epel-release
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
cd /tmp
wget http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/autoconf/autoconf-2.60.tar.gz
tar xzf autoconf-2.60.tar.gz
cd /tmp/autoconf-2.60
./configure
make
make install
===== CentOS 6/7 =====
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils epel-release
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
===== | CentOS Stream 8/9=====
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils epel-release
yum --enablerepo=powertools,epel install perl-Net-SNMP
===== RHEL 5 | Oracle Linux 5 =====
cd /tmp
wget http://archives.fedoraproject.org/pub/archive/epel/epel-release-latest-5.noarch.rpm
rpm -ihv epel-release-latest-5.noarch.rpm
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
wget http://ftp.gnu.org/gnu/autoconf/autoconf-2.60.tar.gz
tar xzf autoconf-2.60.tar.gz
cd /tmp/autoconf-2.60
./configure
make
make install
===== RHEL 6 | Oracle Linux 6 =====
cd /tmp
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-6.noarch.rpm
rpm -ihv epel-release-latest-6.noarch.rpm
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
===== RHEL 7 =====
cd /tmp
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
rpm -ihv epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
subscription-manager repos --enable=rhel-7-server-optional-rpms
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
===== RHEL 8/9 =====
At the time of writing this EPEL for RHEL 8 was not released, affected commands are struck out but *should* work if EPEL 8 was available.
cd /tmp
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-8.noarch.rpm
rpm -ihv epel-release-latest-8.noarch.rpm
subscription-manager repos --enable=rhel-8-server-optional-rpms
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
===== Oracle Linux 7 =====
yum install -y yum-utils
yum-config-manager --enable ol7_optional_latest
cd /tmp
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
rpm -ihv epel-release-latest-7.noarch.rpm
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
===== Oracle Linux 8/9 =====
yum install -y yum-utils
yum-config-manager --enable ol8_optional_latest
cd /tmp
wget https://dl.fedoraproject.org/pub/epel/epel-release-latest-8.noarch.rpm
rpm -ihv epel-release-latest-8.noarch.rpm
yum install -y gcc glibc glibc-common make gettext automake autoconf wget openssl-devel net-snmp net-snmp-utils
yum install -y perl-Net-SNMP
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
make
make install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
Different Linux distributions have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
===== RHEL 5/6 | CentOS 5/6 | Oracle Linux 5/6 =====
service nagios start
service nagios stop
service nagios restart
service nagios status
===== RHEL 7/8/9 | CentOS 7 | Oracle Linux 7/8/9 | CentOS Stream 8/9=====
systemctl start nagios.service
systemctl stop nagios.service
systemctl restart nagios.service
systemctl status nagios.service
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. SELinux is not enabled by default on Ubuntu. If you would like to see if it is installed run the following command:
sudo dpkg -l selinux*
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
===== Ubuntu 14.x / 15.x =====
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 libgd2-xpm-dev
===== Ubuntu 16.x / 17.x =====
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 make wget unzip apache2 php libapache2-mod-php7.0 libgd2-xpm-dev
===== Ubuntu 18.x =====
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 make wget unzip apache2 php libapache2-mod-php7.2 libgd-dev
===== Ubuntu 20.x =====
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 make wget unzip apache2 php libapache2-mod-php7.4 libgd-dev
sudo apt-get install openssl libssl-dev
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
sudo ./configure --with-httpd-conf=/etc/apache2/sites-enabled
sudo make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The www-data user is also added to the nagios group.
sudo make install-groups-users
sudo usermod -a -G nagios www-data
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
sudo make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot.
sudo make install-daemoninit
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
sudo make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
sudo make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files and configures Apache settings.
sudo make install-webconf
sudo a2enmod rewrite
sudo a2enmod cgi
You need to allow port 80 inbound traffic on the local firewall so you can reach the Nagios Core web interface.
sudo ufw allow Apache
sudo ufw reload
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
sudo htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
===== Ubuntu 14.x =====
Need to restart it because it is already running.
sudo service apache2 restart
===== Ubuntu 15.x / 16.x / 17.x / 18.x / 20.x =====
Need to restart it because it is already running.
sudo systemctl restart apache2.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
===== Ubuntu 14.x =====
sudo start nagios
===== Ubuntu 15.x / 16.x / 17.x / 18.x / 20.x =====
sudo systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
sudo apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 libmcrypt-dev make libssl-dev wget bc gawk dc build-essential snmp libnet-snmp-perl gettext
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
sudo ./tools/setup
sudo ./configure
sudo make
sudo make install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
Different Linux distributions have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
===== Ubuntu 14.x =====
sudo start nagios
sudo stop nagios
sudo restart nagios
sudo status nagios
===== Ubuntu 15.x / 16.x / 17.x / 18.x / 20.x =====
sudo systemctl start nagios.service
sudo systemctl stop nagios.service
sudo systemctl restart nagios.service
sudo systemctl status nagios.service
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. SELinux is not enabled by default on SUSE. If you would like to see if it is enabled run the following command:
ls -la /etc/selinux/config
If the file does not exist, SELinux is not enabled.
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
===== SUSE SLES 11.3 =====
cd /tmp
wget 'https://nu.novell.com/repo/$RCE/SLE11-SDK-SP3-Pool/sle-11-x86_64/rpm/x86_64/sle-sdk-release-11.3-1.69.x86_64.rpm'
wget 'https://nu.novell.com/repo/$RCE/SLE11-SDK-SP3-Pool/sle-11-x86_64/rpm/x86_64/sle-sdk-release-SDK-11.3-1.69.x86_64.rpm'
sudo rpm -ivh sle-sdk-release-*
sudo suse_register
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php53 apache2-mod_php53 gd gd-devel
===== SUSE SLES 11.4 =====
cd /tmp
wget 'https://nu.novell.com/repo/$RCE/SLE11-SDK-SP4-Pool/sle-11-x86_64/rpm/x86_64/sle-sdk-release-11.4-1.55.x86_64.rpm'
wget 'https://nu.novell.com/repo/$RCE/SLE11-SDK-SP4-Pool/sle-11-x86_64/rpm/x86_64/sle-sdk-release-SDK-11.4-1.55.x86_64.rpm'
sudo rpm -ivh sle-sdk-release-*
sudo suse_register
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php53 apache2-mod_php53 gd gd-devel
===== SUSE SLES 12 =====
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-sdk/12/x86_64
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-module-web-scripting/12/x86_64
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 apache2-mod_php5 gd gd-devel
===== SUSE SLES 12.1 =====
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-sdk/12.1/x86_64
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-module-web-scripting/12/x86_64
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 apache2-mod_php5 gd gd-devel
===== SUSE SLES 12.2 =====
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-sdk/12.2/x86_64
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-module-web-scripting/12/x86_64
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 apache2-mod_php5 gd gd-devel
===== SUSE SLES 12.3 =====
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-sdk/12.3/x86_64
sudo SUSEConnect -p sle-module-web-scripting/12/x86_64
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 apache2-mod_php5 gd gd-devel
===== openSUSE Leap 42.x =====
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 apache2-mod_php5 gd gd-devel
===== openSUSE Leap 15.x =====
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php7 apache2-mod_php7 gd gd-devel
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
sudo ./configure --with-httpd-conf=/etc/apache2/vhosts.d
sudo make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The apache user is also added to the nagios group.
===== SUSE SLES 11.x =====
sudo make install-groups-users
sudo /usr/sbin/usermod -A nagios wwwrun
===== SUSE SLES 12.x | openSUSE Leap 42.x / 15.x =====
sudo make install-groups-users
sudo /usr/sbin/usermod -a -G nagios wwwrun
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
sudo make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot.
sudo make install-daemoninit
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
sudo make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
sudo make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files. Also configure Apache settings if required.
===== SUSE SLES 11.x =====
sudo make install-webconf
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod rewrite
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod cgi
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod version
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod php5
sudo /sbin/chkconfig --set apache2 on
===== SUSE SLES 12.x | openSUSE Leap 42.x =====
sudo make install-webconf
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod rewrite
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod cgi
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod version
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod php5
sudo systemctl enable apache2.service
===== openSUSE Leap 15.x =====
sudo make install-webconf
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod rewrite
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod cgi
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod version
sudo /usr/sbin/a2enmod php7
sudo systemctl enable apache2.service
You need to allow port 80 inbound traffic on the local firewall so you can reach the Nagios Core web interface.
===== SUSE SLES 11.x =====
sudo sed -i '/FW_SERVICES_EXT_TCP=/s/\"$/\ 80\"/' /etc/sysconfig/SuSEfirewall2
sudo /sbin/service SuSEfirewall2_init restart
sudo /sbin/service SuSEfirewall2_setup restart
===== SUSE SLES 12.x =====
sudo /usr/sbin/SuSEfirewall2 open EXT TCP 80
sudo systemctl restart SuSEfirewall2
===== openSUSE Leap 42.x =====
Port 80 is enabled when Apache is installed, nothing needs to be done.
===== openSUSE Leap 15.x =====
sudo firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=80/tcp
sudo firewall-cmd --zone=public --add-port=80/tcp --permanent
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
sudo htpasswd2 -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
===== SUSE SLES 11.x =====
sudo /sbin/service apache2 start
===== SUSE SLES 12.x | openSUSE Leap 42.x / 15.x =====
sudo systemctl start apache2.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
===== SUSE SLES 11.x =====
sudo /sbin/service nagios start
===== SUSE SLES 12.x | openSUSE Leap 42.x / 15.x =====
sudo systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
===== SUSE SLES 11.x / 12.x | openSUSE Leap 42.x =====
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc libmcrypt-devel make libopenssl-devel wget gettext gettext-runtime automake net-snmp perl-Net-SNMP
===== openSUSE Leap 15.x =====
sudo zypper --non-interactive install autoconf gcc glibc libgcrypt-devel make libopenssl-devel wget gettext gettext-runtime automake net-snmp perl-Net-SNMP
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
sudo ./tools/setup
sudo ./configure
sudo make
sudo make install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
Different Linux distributions have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
===== SUSE SLES 11.x =====
sudo /sbin/service nagios start
sudo /sbin/service nagios stop
sudo /sbin/service nagios restart
sudo /sbin/service nagios status
===== SUSE SLES 12.x | openSUSE Leap 42.x / 15.x =====
sudo systemctl start nagios.service
sudo systemctl stop nagios.service
sudo systemctl restart nagios.service
sudo systemctl status nagios.service
All steps on Debian require to run as root. To become root simply run:
Debian:
su
Raspbian:
sudo -i
All commands from this point onwards will be as root.
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. SELinux is not enabled by default on Debian. If you would like to see if it is installed run the following command:
dpkg -l selinux*
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
===== 7.x / 8.x =====
apt-get update
apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php5 libgd2-xpm-dev
===== 9.x / 10.x / 11.x =====
apt-get update
apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 make wget unzip apache2 apache2-utils php libgd-dev
apt-get install openssl libssl-dev
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure --with-httpd-conf=/etc/apache2/sites-enabled
make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The www-data user is also added to the nagios group.
make install-groups-users
usermod -a -G nagios www-data
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot.
make install-daemoninit
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files and configures the Apache settings.
make install-webconf
a2enmod rewrite
a2enmod cgi
You need to allow port 80 inbound traffic on the local firewall so you can reach the Nagios Core web interface.
iptables -I INPUT -p tcp --destination-port 80 -j ACCEPT
apt-get install -y iptables-persistent
Answer yes to saving existing rules
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
===== 7.x =====
Need to restart it because it is already running.
service apache2 restart
===== 8.x / 9.x / 10.x /11.x =====
Need to restart it because it is already running.
systemctl restart apache2.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
===== 7.x =====
service nagios start
===== 8.x / 9.x / 10.x / 11.x =====
systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
apt-get install -y autoconf gcc libc6 libmcrypt-dev make libssl-dev wget bc gawk dc build-essential snmp libnet-snmp-perl gettext
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
make
make install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
Different Linux distributions have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
===== 7.x =====
service nagios start
service nagios stop
service nagios restart
service nagios status
===== 8.x / 9.x / 10.x /11.x =====
systemctl start nagios.service
systemctl stop nagios.service
systemctl restart nagios.service
systemctl status nagios.service
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. Steps to do this are as follows.
sed -i 's/SELINUX=.*/SELINUX=disabled/g' /etc/selinux/config
setenforce 0
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
dnf install -y gcc glibc glibc-common perl httpd php wget gd gd-devel
dnf update -y
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure
make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The apache user is also added to the nagios group.
make install-groups-users
usermod -a -G nagios apache
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot. The Apache httpd service is also configured at this point.
make install-daemoninit
systemctl enable httpd.service
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files. Also configure Apache settings if required.
make install-webconf
You need to allow port 80 inbound traffic on the local firewall so you can reach the Nagios Core web interface.
firewall-cmd --zone=FedoraServer --add-port=80/tcp
firewall-cmd --zone=FedoraServer --add-port=80/tcp --permanent
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
systemctl start httpd.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
dnf install -y gcc glibc glibc-common openssl-devel perl wget gettext make net-snmp net-snmp-utils perl-Net-SNMP automake autoconf
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
make
make install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
These commands are for starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
systemctl start nagios.service
systemctl stop nagios.service
systemctl restart nagios.service
systemctl status nagios.service
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. SELinux is not installed on a base build of Arch Linux. If you would like to see if it is enabled run the following command:
ls -la /etc/selinux/config
If the file does not exist, SELinux is not enabled.
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
pacman --noconfirm -Syyu
pacman --noconfirm -S gcc glibc make wget unzip apache php gd traceroute php-apache
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure --with-httpd-conf=/etc/httpd/conf/extra
make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The http user is also added to the nagios group.
make install-groups-users
usermod -a -G nagios http
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot. The Apache httpd service is also configured at this point.
make install-daemoninit
systemctl enable httpd.service
This installs and configures the external command file.
make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files.
make install-webconf
As well as installing the Apache web server configuration files, there are additional changes required to the Apache config file httpd.conf to enable modules.
Commands that do all of these changes are below, but first is a list of the changes being made.
Change this:
LoadModule mpm_event_module modules/mod_mpm_event.so
To this:
#LoadModule mpm_event_module modules/mod_mpm_event.so
Change this:
#LoadModule mpm_prefork_module modules/mod_mpm_prefork.so
To this:
LoadModule mpm_prefork_module modules/mod_mpm_prefork.so
Change this:
<IfModule !mpm_prefork_module>
#LoadModule cgid_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgid.so
</IfModule>
<IfModule mpm_prefork_module>
#LoadModule cgi_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgi.so
</IfModule>
To this:
<IfModule !mpm_prefork_module>
LoadModule cgid_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgid.so
</IfModule>
<IfModule mpm_prefork_module>
LoadModule cgi_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgi.so
</IfModule>
Change this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.html
</IfModule>
To this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm AddType application/x-httpd-php .phpAddType application/x-httpd-php-source .phps
</IfModule>
Add these lines to the end of the file:
LoadModule php7_module modules/libphp7.so
Include "conf/extra/nagios.conf"
Include "conf/extra/php7_module.conf"
<FilesMatch ".php$">
SetHandler application/x-httpd-php
</FilesMatch>
<FilesMatch ".phps$">
SetHandler application/x-httpd-php-source
</FilesMatch>
Execute the following commands to make the changes described above:
sed -i 's/^LoadModule mpm_event_module modules\/mod_mpm_event\.so/#LoadModule mpm_event_module modules\/mod_mpm_event\.so/g' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
sed -i 's/^#LoadModule mpm_prefork_module modules\/mod_mpm_prefork\.so/LoadModule mpm_prefork_module modules\/mod_mpm_prefork\.so/g' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
sed -i 's/DirectoryIndex index.html/DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm AddType application\/x-httpd-php .phpAddType application\/x-httpd-php-source .phps/g' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
sed -i 's/#LoadModule cgid_module/LoadModule cgid_module/g' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
sed -i 's/#LoadModule cgi_module/LoadModule cgi_module/g' /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
echo 'LoadModule php7_module modules/libphp7.so' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
echo 'Include "conf/extra/nagios.conf"' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
echo 'Include "conf/extra/php7_module.conf"' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
printf '\n<FilesMatch ".php$">\n' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
printf '\tSetHandler application/x-httpd-php\n' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
printf '</FilesMatch>\n' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
printf '<FilesMatch ".phps$">\n' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
printf '\tSetHandler application/x-httpd-php-source\n' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
printf '</FilesMatch>\n' >> /etc/httpd/conf/httpd.conf
Arch Linux does not have a firewall enabled in a fresh installation. Please refer to the Arch Linux documentation on allowing TCP port 80 inbound.
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
systemctl start httpd.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
pacman --noconfirm -S autoconf gcc glibc make openssl wget perl gettext net-snmp perl-net-snmp automake autoconf
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
make
make install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
Different Linux distributions have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
systemctl start nagios.service
systemctl stop nagios.service
systemctl status nagios.service
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. SELinux is not installed on a base build of Gentoo. If you would like to see if it is enabled run the following command:
ls -la /etc/selinux/config
If the file does not exist, SELinux is not enabled.
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
emerge --sync
mkdir -p /etc/portage/package.use
echo "www-servers/apache dir cgi cgid event prefork apache2_modules_version" >> /etc/portage/package.use/apache
echo "dev-lang/php apache2" >> /etc/portage/package.use/php
echo "app-eselect/eselect-php apache2" >> /etc/portage/package.use/eselect-php
echo "media-libs/gd gd png jpeg" >> /etc/portage/package.use/gd
emerge --noreplace sys-devel/gcc sys-libs/glibc net-misc/wget app-arch/unzip www-servers/apache dev-lang/php media-libs/gd
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure --with-httpd-conf=/etc/apache2/vhosts.d --sysconfdir=/usr/local/nagios/etc
make all
This creates the nagios user and group. The http user is also added to the nagios group.
make install-groups-users
usermod -a -G nagios apache
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
make install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot. The apache2 service also needs to be configured to start at boot.
===== openrc =====
make install-daemoninit
rc-update add apache2 default
===== systemd =====
make install-daemoninit
systemctl enable apache2.service
This installs and configures the external command file.
make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files.
make install-webconf
As well as installing the Apache web server configuration files, there are additional changes required to the Apache config file apache2 to enable modules.
Commands that do all of these changes are below, but first is a list of the changes being made.
In the file /etc/conf.d/apache2 change this:
APACHE2_OPTS="-D DEFAULT_VHOST -D INFO -D SSL -D SSL_DEFAULT_VHOST -D LANGUAGE"
To this:
APACHE2_OPTS="-D DEFAULT_VHOST -D INFO -D SSL -D SSL_DEFAULT_VHOST -D LANGUAGE -D PHP"
The /run/apache_ssl_mutex directory also needs to be created.
Execute the following commands to make the change described above:
sed -i '/^APACHE2_OPTS=/s/\([^"]*\)"$/\1 '"-D PHP"'"/' /etc/conf.d/apache2
mkdir -p /run/apache_ssl_mutex
Gentoo does not have a firewall enabled in a fresh installation. Please refer to the Gentoo documentation on allowing TCP port 80 inbound.
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
===== openrc =====
rc-service apache2 restart
===== systemd =====
systemctl restart apache2.service
This command starts Nagios Core.
===== openrc =====
rc-service nagios start
===== systemd =====
systemctl start nagios.service
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed.
emerge --noreplace sys-devel/gcc sys-libs/glibc net-misc/wget sys-devel/make sys-devel/gettext sys-devel/automake sys-devel/autoconf dev-libs/openssl net-analyzer/net-snmp dev-perl/Net-SNMP
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
make
make install
chmod u+s /bin/ping
chmod u+s /bin/ping6
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
The different init systems have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
===== openrc =====
rc-service nagios start
rc-service nagios stop
rc-service nagios status
rc-service nagios restart
===== systemd =====
systemctl start nagios.service
systemctl stop nagios.service
systemctl status nagios.service
systemctl restart nagios.service
This guide is based on SELinux being disabled or in permissive mode. SELinux is not enabled by default on FreeBSD. If you would like to see if it is enabled run the following command:
ls -la /etc/selinux/config
If the file does not exist, SELinux is not enabled.
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
pkg install -y wget autoconf automake gmake gettext gcc apache24 php73 php73-extensions mod_php73 libgd gperf
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure --with-httpd-conf=/usr/local/etc/apache24/Includes
gmake all
This creates the nagios user and group. The www user is also added to the nagios group.
gmake install-groups-users
pw group mod nagios -m www
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
gmake install
chown nagios:nagios /usr/local/nagios/bin/*
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot.
gmake install-daemoninit
echo '/usr/local/etc/rc.d/nagios start' >> /etc/rc.local
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
gmake install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
gmake install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files.
gmake install-webconf
As well as installing the Apache web server configuration files, there are additional changes required to the Apache config file httpd.conf to enable modules.
Commands that do all of these changes are below, but first is a list of the changes being made.
Change this:
<IfModule !mpm_prefork_module>
#LoadModule cgid_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgid.so
</IfModule>
<IfModule mpm_prefork_module>
#LoadModule cgi_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgi.so
</IfModule>
To this:
<IfModule !mpm_prefork_module>
LoadModule cgid_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgid.so
</IfModule>
<IfModule mpm_prefork_module>
LoadModule cgi_module libexec/apache24/mod_cgi.so
</IfModule>
Change this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.html
</IfModule>
To this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm AddType application/x-httpd-php .phpAddType application/x-httpd-php-source .phps
</IfModule>
Add these lines to the end of the file:
<FilesMatch ".php$">
SetHandler application/x-httpd-php
</FilesMatch>
<FilesMatch ".phps$">
SetHandler application/x-httpd-php-source
</FilesMatch>
Execute the following commands to make the changes described above:
cp /usr/local/etc/php.ini-production /usr/local/etc/php.ini
echo 'apache24_enable="YES"' >> /etc/rc.conf
sed -i '' 's/DirectoryIndex index.html/DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm AddType application\/x-httpd-php .phpAddType application\/x-httpd-php-source .phps/g' /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
sed -i '' 's/#LoadModule cgid_module/LoadModule cgid_module/g' /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
sed -i '' 's/#LoadModule cgi_module/LoadModule cgi_module/g' /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
printf '\n<FilesMatch ".php$">\n' >> /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
printf '\tSetHandler application/x-httpd-php\n' >> /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
printf '</FilesMatch>\n' >> /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
printf '<FilesMatch ".phps$">\n' >> /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
printf '\tSetHandler application/x-httpd-php-source\n' >> /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
printf '</FilesMatch>\n' >> /usr/local/etc/apache24/httpd.conf
Please refer to the FreeBSD documentation for information on how to enable or configure IP Filter to allow TCP port 80 inbound.
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
service apache24 start
This command starts Nagios Core.
service nagios start
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Make sure that you have the following packages installed. In the steps below, when installing FreeBSD packages you will be prompted with screens asking what you would like installed. You can just press Enter to accept the default selections.
pkg install -y wget autoconf automake gettext gcc openssl-devel net-snmp p5-Net-SNMP-Util
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
gmake
gmake install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
Different Linux distributions have different methods of starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
service nagios start
service nagios stop
service nagios restart
service nagios status
Tested with Solaris 11.
SELinux is not implemented in Solaris and hence is not an issue.
Perform these steps to install the pre-requisite packages.
echo 'export PATH=$PATH:/opt/csw/bin:/usr/xpg4/bin:/usr/sfw/bin' >> ~/.profile
source ~/.profile
pkgadd -d http://get.opencsw.org/now
answer all
answer y
perl -ni.bak -le 'print; print "mirror=http://mirrors.ibiblio.org/opencsw/stable" if /mirror=/' /etc/opt/csw/pkgutil.conf
pkgutil -y -i autoconf automake unzip gd
pkg install gcc-45 web/php-53 apache-php53 gd
cd /tmp
wget -O nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
./configure --with-httpd-conf=/etc/apache2/2.2/conf.d --with-gd-inc=/usr/include/gd2
gmake all
This creates the nagios user and group. The webservd user is also added to the nagios group.
gmake install-groups-users
usermod -G nagios webservd
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
gmake install
This installs the service or daemon files and also configures them to start on boot. The Apache httpd service is also configured at this point.
gmake install-daemoninit
svcbundle -o /lib/svc/manifest/site/nagios.xml -s service-name=application/nagios -s rc-script=/etc/init.d/nagios:2 -s model=contract
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
gmake install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
gmake install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files. Also configure Apache settings if required.
gmake install-webconf
On a manually networked system, IP Filter is not enabled by default. Please refer to the Solaris documentation for information on how to enable or configure IP Filter to allow TCP port 80 inbound.
Documentation - Configuring IP Filter
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
svcadm enable apache22
This command starts Nagios Core.
svcadm restart manifest-import
svcadm enable nagios
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. The following steps will walk you through installing Nagios Plugins.
These steps install nagios-plugins 2.4.6. Newer versions will become available in the future and you can use those in the following installation steps. Please see the releases page on GitHub for all available versions.
Please note that the following steps install most of the plugins that come in the Nagios Plugins package. However there are some plugins that require other libraries which are not included in those instructions. Please refer to the following KB article for detailed installation instructions:
Documentation - Installing Nagios Plugins From Source
Already completed as part of the Nagios installation. Some of the plugins require the NET::SNMP perl module. Please refer to the following documentation:
http://www.net-snmp.org/docs/README.solaris.html
cd /tmp
wget --no-check-certificate -O nagios-plugins.tar.gz https://github.com/nagios-plugins/nagios-plugins/archive/release-2.4.6.tar.gz
tar zxf nagios-plugins.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagios-plugins-release-2.4.6/
./tools/setup
./configure
gmake
gmake install
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
These commands are for starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
svcadm enable nagios
svcadm disable nagios
svcadm restart nagios
svcs nagios
svcs -xv nagios
svcadm clear nagios
The following KB article has important information on Solaris and services:
How To Clear Solaris Service Maintenance Status
SELinux is not implemented in Apple OS X and hence is not an issue.
First, make sure Xcode is installed. If it is not installed visit the App Store and install Xcode (3.8GB download).
Then you need to download and install MacPorts, instructions for doing this can be found here:
https://www.macports.org/install.php
Once you've done this, follow these steps in a terminal session:
sudo xcodebuild -license
View the agreement and then type agree
sudo xcode-select --install
You will be prompted on your Mac display to install the component, click install
Click Agree
Wait while it is downloaded and installed
Continue in your terminal session (you may need to close and open your terminal session):
sudo /opt/local/bin/port install zlib libpng jpeg gd2 apache2 php70 php70-apache2handler
cd /tmp
curl -L -o nagioscore.tar.gz https://github.com/NagiosEnterprises/nagioscore/archive/nagios-4.4.14.tar.gz
tar xzf nagioscore.tar.gz
cd /tmp/nagioscore-nagios-4.4.14/
sudo ./configure --with-httpd-conf=/opt/local/apache2/conf/extra --with-gd-lib=/opt/local/lib --with-gd-inc=/opt/local/include
sudo make all
Currently Nagios Core does not have a built in script for creating the nagios user and group. However NRPE v3 does have this script, so we're going to download it and run it which makes things easy.
sudo make install-groups-users
sudo dseditgroup -o edit -a _www -t user nagios
This step installs the binary files, CGIs, and HTML files.
sudo make install
This installs the script in /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios which is not the correct way it should be run in OS X however a native OS X launch script does not exist in this version of Nagios Core.
sudo make install-daemoninit
You will configure it to start at boot using a Global Daemon property list.
Open the vi text editor with the following command:
sudo vi /Library/LaunchDaemons/org.nagios.nagios.plist
This creates a new file.
Press i on the keyboard to enter insert mode.
Paste the following into the vi editor:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?>
<!DOCTYPE plist PUBLIC "-//Apple/DTD PLIST 1.0//EN" "http://www.apple.com/DTDs/PropertyList-1.0.dtd">
<plist version="1.0">
<dict>
<key>Label</key>
<string>org.nagios.nagios</string>
<key>UserName</key>
<string>nagios</string>
<key>GroupName</key>
<string>nagios</string>
<key>Program</key>
<string>/etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios</string>
<key>ProgramArguments</key>
<array>
<string>nagios</string>
<string>start</string>
</array>
<key>KeepAlive</key>
<dict>
<key>SuccessfulExit</key>
<false/>
<key>NetworkState</key>
<true/>
</dict>
<key>RunAtLoad</key>
<true/>
<key>ProcessType</key>
<string>Background</string>
</dict>
</plist>
Press escape on the keyboard to exit insert mode.
Type :wq on the and press Enter.
The file has been saved and Nagios will automatically start on the next boot.
Information on starting and stopping services will be explained further on.
This installs and configures the external command file.
sudo make install-commandmode
This installs the *SAMPLE* configuration files. These are required as Nagios needs some configuration files to allow it to start.
sudo make install-config
This installs the Apache web server configuration files.
sudo make install-webconf
As well as installing the Apache web server configuration files, there are additional changes required to the Apache config file httpd.conf to enable modules.
Commands that do all of these changes are below, but first is a list of the changes being made.
Change this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.html
</IfModule>
To this:
<IfModule dir_module>
DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm AddType application/x-httpd-php .phpAddType application/x-httpd-php-source .phps
</IfModule>
Add these lines to the end of the file:
Include conf/extra/nagios.conf
Include conf/extra/mod_php70.conf
Execute the following commands to make the changes described above:
sudo cp /opt/local/etc/php70/php.ini-production /opt/local/etc/php70/php.ini
cd /opt/local/apache2/modules/
sudo /opt/local/apache2/bin/apxs -a -e -n php7 mod_php70.so
printf '\nInclude conf/extra/nagios.conf\n' | sudo tee -a /opt/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf
printf '\nInclude conf/extra/mod_php70.conf\n' | sudo tee -a /opt/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf
sudo sed -i '' 's/DirectoryIndex index.html/DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.htm AddType application\/x-httpd-php .phpAddType application\/x-httpd-php-source .phps/g' /opt/local/apache2/conf/httpd.conf
The firewall in OS X is turned off by default. Please refer to the Apple documentation for information on how to enable or configure TCP port 80 inbound.
You'll need to create an Apache user account to be able to log into Nagios.
The following command will create a user account called nagiosadmin and you will be prompted to provide a password for the account.
sudo htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
When adding additional users in the future, you need to remove -c from the above command otherwise it will replace the existing nagiosadmin user (and any other users you may have added).
sudo /opt/local/bin/port load apache2
This command starts Nagios Core.
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios start
Nagios is now running, to confirm this you need to log into the Nagios Web Interface.
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
You will be prompted for a username and password. The username is nagiosadmin (you created it in a previous step) and the password is what you provided earlier.
Once you have logged in you are presented with the Nagios interface. Congratulations you have installed Nagios Core.
Currently you have only installed the Nagios Core engine. You'll notice some errors under the hosts and services along the lines of:
(No output on stdout) stderr: execvp(/usr/local/nagios/libexec/check_load, ...) failed. errno is 2: No such file or directory
These errors will be resolved once you install the Nagios Plugins, which is covered in the next step.
Nagios Core needs plugins to operate properly. These steps are going to install the Nagios Plugins that are available via MacPorts. Future versions of the Nagios Plugins package will be updated to support OS X, until then the version available via MacPorts will be fine.
These get installed to /opt/local/libexec/nagios/ so the /usr/local/nagios/etc/resource.cfg file also needs to be updated and Nagios restarted (covered in the steps below).
sudo /opt/local/bin/port install nagios-plugins
sudo sed -i '' 's/\/usr\/local\/nagios\/libexec/\/opt\/local\/libexec\/nagios/g' /usr/local/nagios/etc/resource.cfg
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios stop
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios start
Point your web browser to the ip address or FQDN of your Nagios Core server, for example:
http://10.25.5.143/nagios
http://core-013.domain.local/nagios
Go to a host or service object and "Re-schedule the next check" under the Commands menu. The error you previously saw should now disappear and the correct output will be shown on the screen.
These commands are for starting / stopping / restarting / status Nagios.
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios start
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios stop
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios restart
sudo /etc/rc.d/init.d/nagios status
For any support related questions please visit the Nagios Support Forums at:
http://support.nagios.com/forum/
Article ID: 96
Created On: Wed, May 20, 2015 at 2:07 PM
Last Updated On: Wed, Mar 6, 2024 at 8:44 PM
Authored by: jolson
Online URL: https://support.nagios.com/kb/article/nagios-core-installing-nagios-core-from-source-96.html