Provided by: libmonitoring-plugin-perl_0.39-1_all bug

NAME

       Monitoring::Plugin - A family of perl modules to streamline writing Naemon, Nagios, Icinga or Shinken
       (and compatible) plugins.

SYNOPSIS

          # Constants OK, WARNING, CRITICAL, and UNKNOWN are exported by default
          # See also Monitoring::Plugin::Functions for a functional interface
          use Monitoring::Plugin;

          # Constructor
          $np = Monitoring::Plugin->new;                               # OR
          $np = Monitoring::Plugin->new( shortname => "PAGESIZE" );    # OR

          # use Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt to process the @ARGV command line options:
          #   --verbose, --help, --usage, --timeout and --host are defined automatically.
          $np = Monitoring::Plugin->new(
            usage => "Usage: %s [ -v|--verbose ]  [-H <host>] [-t <timeout>] "
              . "[ -c|--critical=<threshold> ] [ -w|--warning=<threshold> ]",
          );

          # add valid command line options and build them into your usage/help documentation.
          $np->add_arg(
            spec => 'warning|w=s',
            help => '-w, --warning=INTEGER:INTEGER .  See '
              . 'https://www.monitoring-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html#THRESHOLDFORMAT '
              . 'for the threshold format. ',
          );

          # Parse @ARGV and process standard arguments (e.g. usage, help, version)
          $np->getopts;

          # Exit/return value methods - plugin_exit( CODE, MESSAGE ),
          #                             plugin_die( MESSAGE, [CODE])
          $page = retrieve_page($page1)
              or $np->plugin_exit( UNKNOWN, "Could not retrieve page" );
              # Return code: 3;
              #   output: PAGESIZE UNKNOWN - Could not retrieve page
          test_page($page)
              or $np->plugin_exit( CRITICAL, "Bad page found" );

          # plugin_die() is just like plugin_exit(), but return code defaults
          #   to UNKNOWN
          $page = retrieve_page($page2)
            or $np->plugin_die( "Could not retrieve page" );
            # Return code: 3;
            #   output: PAGESIZE UNKNOWN - Could not retrieve page

          # Threshold methods
          $code = $np->check_threshold(
            check => $value,
            warning => $warning_threshold,
            critical => $critical_threshold,
          );
          $np->plugin_exit( $code, "Threshold check failed" ) if $code != OK;

          # Message methods (EXPERIMENTAL AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE) -
          #   add_message( CODE, $message ); check_messages()
          for (@collection) {
            if (m/Error/) {
              $np->add_message( CRITICAL, $_ );
            } else {
              $np->add_message( OK, $_ );
            }
          }
          ($code, $message) = $np->check_messages();
          plugin_exit( $code, $message );
          # If any items in collection matched m/Error/, returns CRITICAL and
          #   the joined set of Error messages; otherwise returns OK and the
          #   joined set of ok messages

          # Perfdata methods
          $np->add_perfdata(
            label => "size",
            value => $value,
            uom => "kB",
            threshold => $threshold,
          );
          $np->add_perfdata( label => "time", ... );
          $np->plugin_exit( OK, "page size at http://... was ${value}kB" );
          # Return code: 0;
          #   output: PAGESIZE OK - page size at http://... was 36kB \
          #   | size=36kB;10:25;25: time=...

DESCRIPTION

       Monitoring::Plugin and its associated Monitoring::Plugin::* modules are a family of perl modules to
       streamline writing Monitoring plugins. The main end user modules are Monitoring::Plugin, providing an
       object-oriented interface to the entire Monitoring::Plugin::* collection, and
       Monitoring::Plugin::Functions, providing a simpler functional interface to a useful subset of the
       available functionality.

       The purpose of the collection is to make it as simple as possible for developers to create plugins that
       conform the Monitoring Plugin guidelines (https://www.monitoring-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html).

   EXPORTS
       Nagios status code constants are exported by default:

           OK
           WARNING
           CRITICAL
           UNKNOWN
           DEPENDENT

       The following variables are also exported on request:

       %ERRORS
           A hash mapping error strings ("CRITICAL", "UNKNOWN", etc.) to the corresponding status code.

       %STATUS_TEXT
           A  hash mapping status code constants (OK, WARNING, CRITICAL, etc.) to the corresponding error string
           ("OK", "WARNING, "CRITICAL", etc.) i.e. the reverse of %ERRORS.

   CONSTRUCTOR
               Monitoring::Plugin->new;

               Monitoring::Plugin->new( shortname => 'PAGESIZE' );

               Monitoring::Plugin->new(
                       usage => "Usage: %s [ -v|--verbose ]  [-H <host>] [-t <timeout>]
                            [ -c|--critical=<critical threshold> ] [ -w|--warning=<warning threshold> ]  ",
                       version => $VERSION,
                       blurb   => $blurb,
                       extra   => $extra,
                       url     => $url,
                       license => $license,
                       plugin  => basename $0,
                       timeout => 15,
               );

       Instantiates a new Monitoring::Plugin object. Accepts the following named arguments:

       shortname
           The 'shortname' for this plugin, used as the first token in the plugin output  by  the  various  exit
           methods. Default: uc basename $0.

       usage ("Usage:  %s --foo --bar")
           Passing   a   value   for   the   usage()  argument  makes  Monitoring::Plugin  instantiate  its  own
           "Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt" object so you can start doing command  line  argument  processing.   See
           "CONSTRUCTOR" in Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt for more about "usage" and the following options:

       version
       url
       blurb
       license
       extra
       plugin
       timeout

   OPTION HANDLING METHODS
       "Monitoring::Plugin"     provides     these     methods    for    accessing    the    functionality    in
       "Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt".

       add_arg
           Examples:

             # Define --hello argument (named parameters)
             $plugin->add_arg(
               spec => 'hello=s',
               help => "--hello\n   Hello string",
               required => 1,
             );

             # Define --hello argument (positional parameters)
             #   Parameter order is 'spec', 'help', 'default', 'required?'
             $plugin->add_arg('hello=s', "--hello\n   Hello string", undef, 1);

           See "ARGUMENTS" in Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt for more details.

       getopts()
           Parses and processes the command line options you've defined, automatically  doing  the  right  thing
           with help/usage/version arguments.

           See  "GETOPTS" in Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt for more details.

       opts()
           Assuming  you've  instantiated  it by passing 'usage' to new(), opts() returns the Monitoring::Plugin
           object's "Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt" object, with which you can do lots of great things.

           E.g.

             if ( $plugin->opts->verbose ) {
                     print "yah yah YAH YAH YAH!!!";
             }

             # start counting down to timeout
             alarm $plugin->opts->timeout;
             your_long_check_step_that_might_time_out();

             # access any of your custom command line options,
             # assuming you've done these steps above:
             #   $plugin->add_arg('my_argument=s', '--my_argument [STRING]');
             #   $plugin->getopts;
             print $plugin->opts->my_argument;

           Again, see Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt.

   EXIT METHODS
       plugin_exit( <CODE>, $message )
           Exit with return code CODE, and a standard nagios message of the form "SHORTNAME CODE - $message".

       plugin_die( $message, [<CODE>] )
           Same as plugin_exit(), except that CODE is optional, defaulting to UNKNOWN.  NOTE: exceptions are not
           raised by default to calling code.  Set $_use_die flag if this functionality is  required  (see  test
           code).

       nagios_exit( <CODE>, $message )
           Alias for plugin_die(). Deprecated.

       nagios_die( $message, [<CODE>] )
           Alias for plugin_die(). Deprecated.

       die( $message, [<CODE>] )
           Alias for plugin_die(). Deprecated.

       max_state, max_state_alt
           These      are      wrapper     function     for     Monitoring::Plugin::Functions::max_state     and
           Monitoring::Plugin::Functions::max_state_alt.

   THRESHOLD METHODS
       These provide a top level interface to the "Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold" module; for more details,  see
       Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold and Monitoring::Plugin::Range.

       check_threshold( $value )
       check_threshold( check => $value, warning => $warn, critical => $crit )
           Evaluates  $value  against  the  thresholds  and  returns  OK,  CRITICAL,  or  WARNING constant.  The
           thresholds may be:

           1. explicitly set by passing 'warning' and/or 'critical' parameters to
              "check_threshold()", or,

           2. explicitly set by calling "set_thresholds()" before "check_threshold()", or,

           3. implicitly set by command-line parameters -w, -c, --critical or
              --warning, if you have run "$plugin->getopts()".

           You can specify $value as an array of values and each will be checked against the thresholds.

           The return value is ready to pass to C <plugin_exit>, e . g .,

             $p->plugin_exit(
                   return_code => $p->check_threshold($result),
                   message     => " sample result was $result"
             );

       set_thresholds(warning => "10:25", critical => "~:25")
           Sets the acceptable ranges and  creates  the  plugin's  Monitoring::Plugins::Threshold  object.   See
           https://www.monitoring-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html#THRESHOLDFORMAT  for  details  and examples of
           the threshold format.

       threshold()
           Returns the object's "Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold" object,  if  it  has  been  defined  by  calling
           set_thresholds().   You  can  pass  a  new Threshold object to it to replace the old one too, but you
           shouldn't need to do that from a plugin script.

   MESSAGE METHODS
       EXPERIMENTAL AND SUBJECT TO CHANGE

       add_messages and check_messages are higher-level convenience methods to add  and  then  check  a  set  of
       messages,  returning an appropriate return code and/or result message. They are equivalent to maintaining
       a set of @critical, @warning, and and @ok message arrays (add_message), and then doing a  final  if  test
       (check_messages) like this:

         if (@critical) {
           plugin_exit( CRITICAL, join(' ', @critical) );
         }
         elsif (@warning) {
           plugin_exit( WARNING, join(' ', @warning) );
         }
         else {
           plugin_exit( OK, join(' ', @ok) );
         }

       add_message( <CODE>, $message )
           Add  a  message with CODE status to the object. May be called multiple times.  The messages added are
           checked by check_messages, following.

           Only CRITICAL, WARNING, and OK are accepted as valid codes.

       check_messages()
           Check the current set of messages and return an  appropriate  nagios  return  code  and/or  a  result
           message.  In  scalar  context, returns only a return code; in list context returns both a return code
           and an output message, suitable for passing directly to plugin_exit() e.g.

               $code = $np->check_messages;
               ($code, $message) = $np->check_messages;

           check_messages returns CRITICAL if any critical messages are found, WARNING if any  warning  messages
           are found, and OK otherwise. The message returned in list context defaults to the joined set of error
           messages; this may be customised using the arguments below.

           check_messages accepts the following named arguments (none are required):

           join => SCALAR
               A  string used to join the relevant array to generate the message string returned in list context
               i.e. if the 'critical' array @crit is non-empty, check_messages would return:

                   join( $join, @crit )

               as the result message. Default: ' ' (space).

           join_all => SCALAR
               By default, only one set of messages are joined and returned in the result message  i.e.  if  the
               result is CRITICAL, only the 'critical' messages are included in the result; if WARNING, only the
               'warning'  messages  are  included;  if OK, the 'ok' messages are included (if supplied) i.e. the
               default is to return an 'errors-only' type message.

               If join_all is supplied, however, it will be used as a string to  join  the  resultant  critical,
               warning, and ok messages together i.e.  all messages are joined and returned.

           critical => ARRAYREF
               Additional critical messages to supplement any passed in via add_message().

           warning => ARRAYREF
               Additional warning messages to supplement any passed in via add_message().

           ok => ARRAYREF | SCALAR
               Additional ok messages to supplement any passed in via add_message().

   PERFORMANCE DATA METHODS
       add_perfdata( label => "size", value => $value, uom => "kB", threshold => $threshold )
           Add  a  set of performance data to the object. May be called multiple times.  The performance data is
           included in the standard plugin output messages by the various exit methods.

           See the Monitoring::Plugin::Performance documentation for more information on  performance  data  and
           the  various  field  definitions, as well as the relevant section of the Monitoring Plugin guidelines
           (https://www.monitoring-plugins.org/doc/guidelines.html#AEN202).

EXAMPLES

       "Enough talk!  Show me some examples!"

       See the file 'check_stuff.pl' in the 't' directory included with the Monitoring::Plugin distribution  for
       a complete working example of a plugin script.

VERSIONING

       The  Monitoring::Plugin::*  modules  are currently experimental and so the interfaces may change up until
       Monitoring::Plugin hits version 1.0, although every attempt will  be  made  to  keep  them  as  backwards
       compatible as possible.

SEE ALSO

       See  Monitoring::Plugin::Functions  for  a  simple  functional  interface  to  a  subset of the available
       Monitoring::Plugin functionality.

       See   also   Monitoring::Plugin::Getopt,   Monitoring::Plugin::Range,    Monitoring::Plugin::Performance,
       Monitoring::Plugin::Range, and Monitoring::Plugin::Threshold.

       The Monitoring Plugin project page is at http://monitoring-plugins.org.

BUGS

       Please    report    bugs    in    these    modules   to   the   Monitoring   Plugin   development   team:
       devel@monitoring-plugins.org.

AUTHOR

       Maintained by the Monitoring Plugin development team - https://www.monitoring-plugins.org.

       Originally by Ton Voon, <ton.voon@altinity.com>.

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE

       Copyright (C) 2014      by Monitoring Plugin Team Copyright (C) 2006-2014 by  Nagios  Plugin  Development
       Team

       This  library  is  free  software;  you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl
       itself, either Perl version 5.8.4 or, at your option, any later version of Perl 5 you may have available.

perl v5.20.2                                       2015-04-11                            Monitoring::Plugin(3pm)