Nagios::Object(3pm) | User Contributed Perl Documentation | Nagios::Object(3pm) |
Nagios::Object - Creates perl objects to represent Nagios objects
This module contains the code for creating perl objects to represent any of the Nagios objects. All of the perl classes are auto-generated at compile-time, so it's pretty trivial to add new attributes or even entire objects. The following is a list of currently supported classes:
Nagios::TimePeriod Nagios::Command Nagios::Contact Nagios::ContactGroup Nagios::Host Nagios::Service Nagios::HostGroup Nagios::ServiceEscalation Nagios::HostDependency Nagios::HostEscalation Nagios::HostGroupEscalation Nagios::ServiceDependency -- next two are for status.dat in Nagios 2.x Nagios::Info Nagios::Program
use Nagios::Object; my $generic_host = Nagios::Host->new( register => 0, parents => undef, check_command => $some_command, max_check_attempts => 3, checks_enabled => 1, event_handler => $some_command, event_handler_enabled => 0, low_flap_threshold => 0, high_flap_threshold => 0, flap_detection_enabled => 0, process_perf_data => 1, retain_status_information => 1, retain_nonstatus_information => 1, notification_interval => $timeperiod, notification_options => [qw(d u r)], notifications_enabled => 1, stalking_options => [qw(o d u)] ); # this will automatically 'use' $generic_host my $localhost = $generic_host->new( host_name => "localhost", alias => "Loopback", address => "127.0.0.1" ); my $hostname = $localhost->host_name(); printf "max check attempts for $hostname is %s.\n", $localhost->max_check_attempts; $localhost->set_event_handler( Nagios::Command->new( command_name => "new_event_handler", command_line => "/bin/true" ) );
Calling new() on an existing object will use the LHS object as the template for the object being created. This is mainly useful for creating objects without involving Nagios::Object::Config (like in the test suite).
Nagios::Host->new( ... );
print $object->dump(); print $object->dump(1); # flatten
my $svc_desc = $service->name; my $hostname = $host->name;
Which is just short for:
my $svc_desc = $service->service_description; my $hostname = $service->host_name;
if ( $object->register ) { print $object->name, " is registerable." }
# check to see if $object has attribute "command_line" die if ( !$object->has_attribute("command_line") );
my @host_attributes = $host->list_attributes();
For "name" attributes, it will simply return whatever %setup_data contains.
This method needs some TLC ...
my $type = $host->attribute_type("notification_period");
if ( $object->attribute_is_list("members") ) { $object->set_members( [$member] ); } else { $object->set_members( $member ); }
Al Tobey <tobeya@cpan.org>
Thank you to the fine people of #perl on freenode.net for helping me with some hairy code and silly optimizations.
See AUTHOR.
2022-06-16 | perl v5.34.0 |