== Munin == Munin is a performance monitoring system which creates nice RRD graphs and has a very easy plugin interface. The munin homepage is http://munin.projects.linpro.no/ To use this module, follow these directions: 0. This module requires puppet 2.7 or newer. 1. Install the "common", "concat" and "stdlib" modules -- the munin module depends on functions that are defined and installed via these modules. 2. You will need storedconfigs enabled in your puppet setup, to do that you need to add a line to your puppet.conf in your [puppetmasterd] section which says: storeconfigs=true You may wish to immediately setup a mysql/pgsql database for your storedconfigs, as the default method uses sqlite, and is not very efficient, to do that you need lines such as the following below the storeconfigs=true line (adjust as needed): dbadapter=mysql dbserver=localhost dbuser=puppet dbpassword=puppetspasswd 3. Install the "munin" module: a. Your modules directory will need all the files included in this repository placed under a directory called "munin" b. add the following line to your modules.pp: import "munin" (NOTE: if you have followed the directions in README.common then you will have import "modules.pp" in your site.pp, if you do not have that, then you will need to add the import line to your site.pp) c. you will also need to create the following empty directories: mkdir -p /etc/puppet/modules/munin/files/nodes/modules_dir mkdir -p /etc/puppet/modules/munin/files/plugins/modules_dir d. Add to the top of your site.pp a variable which indicates what IP should be allowed to connect to your individual munin-nodes (this is typically your main munin host's IP): $munin_allow = '192.168.0.1/32' You can also put an array there. On pre-lenny systems, you have to use the older Regexp-variant: node foo { class { 'munin::client': allow => '192.168.0.1'} } for multiple munin nodes, you can pass an array: class { 'munin::client': allow => [ '192.168.0.1', '10.0.0.1' ] } c. In the node definition in your site.pp for your main munin host, add the following: class { 'munin::host': } If you want cgi graphing you can pass cgi_graphing => true. (For CentOS this is enabled in the default header config) for more information, see: http://munin.projects.linpro.no/wiki/CgiHowto d. If there are particular munin plugins you want to enable or configure, you define them in the node definition, like follows: # Enable monitoring of disk stats in bytes munin::plugin { 'df_abs': } # Use a non-standard plugin path to use custom plugins munin::plugin { 'spamassassin': ensure => present, script_path => '/usr/local/share/munin-plugins', } # For wildcard plugins (eg. ip_, snmp_, etc.), use the name variable to # configure the plugin name, and the ensure parameter to indicate the base # plugin name to which you want a symlink, for example: munin::plugin { [ 'ip_192.168.0.1', 'ip_10.0.0.1' ]: ensure => 'ip_' } # Use a special config to pass parameters to the plugin munin::plugin { [ 'apache_accesses', 'apache_processes', 'apache_volume' ]: ensure => present, config => 'env.url http://127.0.0.1:80/server-status?auto' } e. If you have Linux-Vservers configured, you will likely have multiple munin-node processes competing for the default port 4949, for those nodes, set an alternate port for munin-node to run on by putting something similar to the following class parameter: class { 'munin::client': allow => '192.168.0.1', port => '4948' }