Provided by: xymon_4.3.30-1build2_amd64 bug

NAME

       client-local.cfg - Local configuration settings for Xymon clients

SYNOPSIS

       ~xymon/server/etc/client-local.cfg

DESCRIPTION

       The  client-local.cfg  file  contains  settings that are used by each Xymon client when it
       runs on a monitored host. It provides a convenient  way  of  configuring  clients  from  a
       central  location  without  having to setup special configuration maintenance tools on all
       clients.

       The client-local.cfg file is currently used to configure what logfiles the  client  should
       fetch  data  from,  to be used as the basis for the "msgs" status column; and to configure
       which files and directories are being monitored in the "files" status column.

       Note that there is a dependency between the client-local.cfg file and the  analysis.cfg(5)
       file.  When  monitoring  e.g. a logfile, you must first enter it into the client-local.cfg
       file, to trigger the Xymon client into reporting any data about  the  logfile.  Next,  you
       must  configure  analysis.cfg  so the Xymon server knows what to look for in the file data
       sent by the client. So: client-local.cfg defines what raw data is collected by the client,
       and analysis.cfg defines how to analyze them.

PROPAGATION TO CLIENTS

       The client-local.cfg file resides on the Xymon server.

       When  clients  connect to the Xymon server to send in their client data, they will receive
       part of this file back from the Xymon server.  The configuration received by the client is
       then used the next time the client runs.

       This method of propagating the configuration means that there is a delay of up to two poll
       cycles  (i.e.  5-10  minutes)  from  a  configuration   change   is   entered   into   the
       client-local.cfg file, and until you see the result in the status messages reported by the
       client.

       By default, xymond will look for  a  matching  entry  by  matching  the  client  hostname,
       classname  or operating system name against the section expressions.  Hostname matches are
       used first, then classname matches, then OS matches.  The first match  found  is  the  one
       that is returned to the client.

       If xymond is started with the "--merge-clientlocal" option, then xymond will instead merge
       all of the matching sections into one, and return all of this data to the client.  So  you
       can  have  host-specific  entries,  and  then  supplement  them  with class- or os-generic
       entries. Note that the merging does not remove entries, so if you have e.g. a "log"  entry
       defined in both a hostname- and an osname-matching section, then both entries will be sent
       back to the client.

FILE FORMAT

       The file is divided into sections, delimited by "[name]" lines.  A  section  name  can  be
       either  an  operating  system  identifier  - linux, solaris, hp-ux, aix, freebsd, openbsd,
       netbsd, darwin - a class, or a hostname. When deciding which section to send to a  client,
       Xymon  will  first  look  for  a section named after the hostname of the client; if such a
       section does not exist, it will look for a section named by the operating  system  of  the
       client.  So  you  can  configure  special  configurations for individual hosts, and have a
       default configuration for all other hosts of a certain type.

       It will often be practical to use regular expressions for hostnames.  To do this you  must
       use

           [host=<expression>]

       where  <expression> is a Perl-compatible regular expression. The same kind of matching can
       be done on operating system or host class, using

           [os=<expresssion>]
           [class=<expression>]

       Apart from the section delimiter, the file format is free-form, or rather it is defined by
       the tools that make use of the configuration.

LOGFILE CONFIGURATION ENTRIES

       A logfile configuration entry looks like this:

           log:/var/log/messages:10240
           ignore MARK
           trigger Oops

       The log:FILENAME:SIZE line defines the filename of the log, and the maximum amount of data
       (in bytes) to send to the Xymon server. FILENAME is usually an explicit full-path filename
       on the client. If it is enclosed in backticks, it is a command which the Xymon client runs
       and each line of output from this  command  is  then  used  as  a  filename.  This  allows
       scripting  which files to monitor, e.g. if you have logfiles that are named with some sort
       of timestamp. If FILENAME is enclosed in angle brackets it is treated as a glob and passed
       through the local glob(3) function first.

       The  ignore  PATTERN  line  (optional)  defines  lines  in  the  logfile which are ignored
       entirely, i.e. they are stripped from the logfile data before  sending  it  to  the  Xymon
       server.  It  is  used  to  remove  completely  unwanted  "noise"  entries from the logdata
       processed by Xymon. "PATTERN" is a regular expression.

       The trigger PATTERN line (optional) is used only when there is more data in the  log  than
       the  maximum size set in the "log:FILENAME:SIZE" line.  The "trigger" pattern is then used
       to find particularly interesting lines in the logfile - these will always be sent  to  the
       Xymon server. After picking out the "trigger" lines, any remaining space up to the maximum
       size is filled in with the most recent entries from the logfile. "PATTERN"  is  a  regular
       expression.

COUNTING LOGENTRIES

       A  special  type of log-handling is possible, where the number of lines matching a regular
       expressions are merely counted. This is linecount:FILENAME, followed by a number of  lines
       of the form ID:PATTERN. E.g.

           linecount:/var/log/messages
           diskerrors:I/O error.*device.*hd
           badlogins:Failed login

FILE CONFIGURATION ENTRIES

       A  file  monitoring  entry  is  used to watch the meta-data of a file: Owner, group, size,
       permissions, checksum etc. It looks like this:

           file:/var/log/messages[:HASH]

       The file:FILENAME line defines the filename of the file to monitor.  As  with  the  "log:"
       entries,  a  filename  enclosed  in  backticks  means  a  command  which will generate the
       filenames dynamically. The optional [:HASH] setting defines what type of hash  to  compute
       for the file: md5, rmd160, sha1, or sha256, sha512, sha224, or sha384. By default, no hash
       is calculated.
       NOTE: If you want to check multiple files using a wildcard, you  must  use  a  command  to
       generate the filenames. Putting wildcards directly into the file: entry will not work.

DIRECTORY CONFIGURATION ENTRIES

       A  directory  monitoring  entry  is  used  to  watch  the size of a directory and any sub-
       directories. It looks like this:

           dir:DIRECTORYNAME

       The dir:DIRECTORYNAME line defines the filename of the  file  to  monitor.   As  with  the
       "log:"  entries,  a filename enclosed in backticks means a command which will generate the
       filenames dynamically and a filename enclosed in angle  brackets  will  be  treated  as  a
       fileglob. The Xymon client will run the du(1) command with the directoryname as parameter,
       and send the output back to the Xymon server.
       NOTE: If you want to check multiple directories using a wildcard, you must use  a  command
       or  glob  to generate the directory names.  Putting wildcards directly into the dir: entry
       will not work. E.g. use something like
            dir:`find /var/log -maxdepth 1 -type d`

       The "du" command used can be  configured  through  the  DU  environment  variable  in  the
       xymonclient.cfg  file  if  needed.  If not specified, du -k is used, as on some systems by
       default du reports data in disk blocks instead of KB (e.g. Solaris).

NOTES

       The ability of the Xymon client to calculate file hashes and monitor those can be used for
       file  integrity  validation  on  a small scale. However, there is a significant processing
       overhead in calculating these every time the Xymon client runs,  so  this  should  not  be
       considered  a  replacement  for host-based intrusion detection systems such as Tripwire or
       AIDE.

       Use of the directory monitoring on directory structures  with  a  large  number  of  files
       and/or sub-directories can be quite ressource-intensive.

SEE ALSO

       analysis.cfg(5), xymond_client(8), xymond(8), xymon(7)