Protocol WHOIS
Connector dependencies​
The following monitoring connectors will be installed when you install the Protocol WHOIS connector through the Configuration > Connectors > Monitoring Connectors menu:
Pack assets​
Templates​
The Monitoring Connector Protocol WHOIS brings a host template:
- App-Protocol-Whois-custom
The connector brings the following service templates (sorted by the host template they are attached to):
- App-Protocol-Whois-custom
- Not attached to a host template
This host template does not bring any service template.
| Service Alias | Service Template | Service Description |
|---|---|---|
| Domain | App-Protocol-Whois-Domain-custom | Check domain status and expiration |
The services listed above are not created automatically when a host template is applied. To use them, create a service manually, then apply the service template you want.
Collected metrics & status​
Here is the list of services for this connector, detailing all metrics and statuses linked to each service.
- Domain
| Name | Unit |
|---|---|
| domains~whois.response.time.milliseconds | ms |
| status | N/A |
| domains~domain.expires.seconds | s |
Prerequisites​
To monitor your domains, the system command whois must be operational.
Installing the monitoring connector​
Pack​
The installation procedures for monitoring connectors are slightly different depending on whether your license is offline or online.
- If the platform uses an online license, you can skip the package installation instruction below as it is not required to have the connector displayed within the Configuration > Connectors > Monitoring Connectors menu. If the platform uses an offline license, install the package on the central server with the command corresponding to the operating system's package manager:
- Alma / RHEL / Oracle Linux 8
- Alma / RHEL / Oracle Linux 9
- Debian 11 & 12
- CentOS 7
dnf install centreon-pack-applications-protocol-whois
dnf install centreon-pack-applications-protocol-whois
apt install centreon-pack-applications-protocol-whois
yum install centreon-pack-applications-protocol-whois
- Whatever the license type (online or offline), install the Protocol WHOIS connector through the Configuration > Connectors > Monitoring Connectors menu.
Plugin​
Since Centreon 22.04, you can benefit from the 'Automatic plugin installation' feature. When this feature is enabled, you can skip the installation part below.
You still have to manually install the plugin on the poller(s) when:
- Automatic plugin installation is turned off
- You want to run a discovery job from a poller that doesn't monitor any resource of this kind yet
More information in the Installing the plugin section.
Use the commands below according to your operating system's package manager:
- Alma / RHEL / Oracle Linux 8
- Alma / RHEL / Oracle Linux 9
- Debian 11 & 12
- CentOS 7
dnf install centreon-plugin-Applications-Protocol-Whois
dnf install centreon-plugin-Applications-Protocol-Whois
apt install centreon-plugin-applications-protocol-whois
yum install centreon-plugin-Applications-Protocol-Whois
Using the monitoring connector​
Using a host template provided by the connector​
-
Log into Centreon and add a new host through Configuration > Hosts.
-
Fill in the Name, Alias & IP Address/DNS fields according to your resource's settings.
-
Apply the App-Protocol-Whois-custom template to the host. A list of macros appears. Macros allow you to define how the connector will connect to the resource, and to customize the connector's behavior.
-
Deploy the configuration. The host appears in the list of hosts, and on the Resources Status page. The command that is sent by the connector is displayed in the details panel of the host: it shows the values of the macros.
Using a service template provided by the connector​
- If you have used a host template and checked Create Services linked to the Template too, the services linked to the template have been created automatically, using the corresponding service templates. Otherwise, create manually the services you want and apply a service template to them.
- Fill in the macros you want (e.g. to change the thresholds for the alerts). Some macros are mandatory (see the table below).
- Domain
| Macro | Description | Default value | Mandatory |
|---|---|---|---|
| UNKNOWNSTATUS | Define the conditions to match for the status to be CRITICAL (default: '%{status} =~ /checkError/i'). You can use the following variables: %{status}, %{domain} | %{status} =~ /checkError/i | |
| DOMAIN | Domain to check | X | |
| WHOISSERVER | Query this specific whois server host | ||
| EXPIRATIONDATE | Set your domain expiration date manually (Format: YYYY-MM-DD) | ||
| UNIT | Select the time unit for the expiration thresholds. May be 's' for seconds, 'm' for minutes, 'h' for hours, 'd' for days, 'w' for weeks. Default is seconds | ||
| WARNINGEXPIRES | Threshold | ||
| CRITICALEXPIRES | Threshold | ||
| WARNINGRESPONSETIME | Threshold | ||
| CRITICALRESPONSETIME | Threshold | ||
| WARNINGSTATUS | Define the conditions to match for the status to be WARNING. You can use the following variables: %{status}, %{domain} | ||
| CRITICALSTATUS | Define the conditions to match for the status to be CRITICAL. You can use the following variables: %{status}, %{domain} | ||
| EXTRAOPTIONS | Any extra option you may want to add to the command (a --verbose flag for example). All options are listed here. | --verbose |
- Deploy the configuration. The service appears in the list of services, and on the Resources Status page. The command that is sent by the connector is displayed in the details panel of the service: it shows the values of the macros.
How to check in the CLI that the configuration is OK and what are the main options for?​
Once the plugin is installed, log into your Centreon poller's CLI using the
centreon-engine user account (su - centreon-engine). Test that the connector
is able to monitor a resource using a command like this one (replace the sample values by yours):
/usr/lib/centreon/plugins/centreon_protocol_whois.pl \
--plugin=apps::protocols::whois::plugin \
--mode=domain \
--domain='xxxxxx' \
--whois-server='' \
--expiration-date='' \
--unit='' \
--unknown-status='%\{status\} =~ /checkError/i' \
--warning-status='' \
--critical-status='' \
--warning-response-time='' \
--critical-response-time='' \
--warning-expires='' \
--critical-expires='' \
--verbose
The expected command output is shown below:
OK: All domains are ok | 'centreon.com#whois.response.time.milliseconds'=237ms;;;0; 'centreon.com#domain.expires.seconds'=27417843s;;;0; 'centreon.fr#whois.response.time.milliseconds'=125ms;;;0; 'centreon.fr#domain.expires.seconds'=24120041s;;;0;
checking domain 'centreon.com'
whois reponse time: 237 ms
status: clientDeleteProhibited,clientTransferProhibited,clientDeleteProhibited,clientTransferProhibited
expires in 10M 1w 5d 23h 13m 33s
checking domain 'centreon.fr'
whois reponse time: 125 ms
status: ACTIVE
expires in 9M 5d 5h 39m 14s
Troubleshooting​
Please find the troubleshooting documentation for Centreon Plugins typical issues.
Available modes​
In most cases, a mode corresponds to a service template. The mode appears in the execution command for the connector. In the Centreon interface, you don't need to specify a mode explicitly: its use is implied when you apply a service template. However, you will need to specify the correct mode for the template if you want to test the execution command for the connector in your terminal.
All available modes can be displayed by adding the --list-mode parameter to
the command:
/usr/lib/centreon/plugins/centreon_protocol_whois.pl \
--plugin=apps::protocols::whois::plugin \
--list-mode
The plugin brings the following modes:
| Mode | Linked service template |
|---|---|
| domain [code] | App-Protocol-Whois-Domain-custom |
Available options​
Modes options​
All available options for each service template are listed below:
- Domain
| Option | Description |
|---|---|
| --filter-counters | Only display some counters (regexp can be used). Example to check SSL connections only : --filter-counters='^xxxx|yyyy$' |
| --domain | Domain to check. |
| --whois-server | Query this specific whois server host. |
| --expiration-date | Set your domain expiration date manually (Format: YYYY-MM-DD). |
| --expiration-date-tz | Set your domain expiration date timezone (default: 'UTC'). |
| --unknown-status | Define the conditions to match for the status to be CRITICAL (default: '%{status} =~ /checkError/i'). You can use the following variables: %{status}, %{domain} |
| --warning-status | Define the conditions to match for the status to be WARNING. You can use the following variables: %{status}, %{domain} |
| --critical-status | Define the conditions to match for the status to be CRITICAL. You can use the following variables: %{status}, %{domain} |
| --unit | Select the time unit for the expiration thresholds. May be 's' for seconds, 'm' for minutes, 'h' for hours, 'd' for days, 'w' for weeks. Default is seconds. |
| --warning-* --critical-* | Thresholds. Can be: 'response-time', 'expires'. |
| --mode | Define the mode in which you want the plugin to be executed (see --list-mode). |
| --dyn-mode | Specify a mode with the module's path (advanced). |
| --list-mode | List all available modes. |
| --mode-version | Check minimal version of mode. If not, unknown error. |
| --version | Return the version of the plugin. |
| --custommode | When a plugin offers several ways (CLI, library, etc.) to get information the desired one must be defined with this option. |
| --list-custommode | List all available custom modes. |
| --multiple | Multiple custom mode objects. This may be required by some specific modes (advanced). |
| --pass-manager | Define the password manager you want to use. Supported managers are: environment, file, keepass, hashicorpvault and teampass. |
| --verbose | Display extended status information (long output). |
| --debug | Display debug messages. |
| --filter-perfdata | Filter perfdata that match the regexp. Example: adding --filter-perfdata='avg' will remove all metrics that do not contain 'avg' from performance data. |
| --filter-perfdata-adv | Filter perfdata based on a "if" condition using the following variables: label, value, unit, warning, critical, min, max. Variables must be written either %{variable} or %(variable). Example: adding --filter-perfdata-adv='not (%(value) == 0 and %(max) eq "")' will remove all metrics whose value equals 0 and that don't have a maximum value. |
| --explode-perfdata-max | Create a new metric for each metric that comes with a maximum limit. The new metric will be named identically with a '_max' suffix. Example: it will split 'used_prct'=26.93%;0:80;0:90;0;100 into 'used_prct'=26.93%;0:80;0:90;0;100 'used_prct_max'=100%;;;; |
| --change-perfdata --extend-perfdata | Change or extend perfdata. Syntax: --extend-perfdata=searchlabel,newlabel,target[,[<new-unit-of-mesure>],[min],[max]] Common examples: =over 4 Convert storage free perfdata into used: --change-perfdata='free,used,invert()' Convert storage free perfdata into used: --change-perfdata='used,free,invert()' Scale traffic values automatically: --change-perfdata='traffic,,scale(auto)' Scale traffic values in Mbps: --change-perfdata='traffic_in,,scale(Mbps),mbps' Change traffic values in percent: --change-perfdata='traffic_in,,percent()' =back |
| --extend-perfdata-group | Add new aggregated metrics (min, max, average or sum) for groups of metrics defined by a regex match on the metrics' names. Syntax: --extend-perfdata-group=regex,<names-of-new-metrics>,calculation[,[<new-unit-of-mesure>],[min],[max]] regex: regular expression <names-of-new-metrics>: how the new metrics' names are composed (can use $1, $2... for groups defined by () in regex). calculation: how the values of the new metrics should be calculated <new-unit-of-mesure> (optional): unit of measure for the new metrics min (optional): lowest value the metrics can reach max (optional): highest value the metrics can reach Common examples: =over 4 Sum wrong packets from all interfaces (with interface need --units-errors=absolute): --extend-perfdata-group=',packets_wrong,sum(packets_(discard|error)_(in|out))' Sum traffic by interface: --extend-perfdata-group='traffic_in_(.*),traffic_$1,sum(traffic_(in|out)_$1)' =back |
| --change-short-output --change-long-output | Modify the short/long output that is returned by the plugin. Syntax: --change-short-output=pattern |
| --change-exit | Replace an exit code with one of your choice. Example: adding --change-exit=unknown=critical will result in a CRITICAL state instead of an UNKNOWN state. |
| --change-output-adv | Replace short output and exit code based on a "if" condition using the following variables: short_output, exit_code. Variables must be written either %{variable} or %(variable). Example: adding --change-output-adv='%(short_ouput) =~ /UNKNOWN: No daemon/,OK: No daemon,OK' will change the following specific UNKNOWN result to an OK result. |
| --range-perfdata | Rewrite the ranges displayed in the perfdata. Accepted values: 0: nothing is changed. 1: if the lower value of the range is equal to 0, it is removed. 2: remove the thresholds from the perfdata. |
| --filter-uom | Mask the units when they don't match the given regular expression. |
| --opt-exit | Replace the exit code in case of an execution error (i.e. wrong option provided, SSH connection refused, timeout, etc). Default: unknown. |
| --output-ignore-perfdata | Remove all the metrics from the service. The service will still have a status and an output. |
| --output-ignore-label | Remove the status label ("OK:", "WARNING:", "UNKNOWN:", CRITICAL:") from the beginning of the output. Example: 'OK: Ram Total:...' will become 'Ram Total:...' |
| --output-xml | Return the output in XML format (to send to an XML API). |
| --output-json | Return the output in JSON format (to send to a JSON API). |
| --output-openmetrics | Return the output in OpenMetrics format (to send to a tool expecting this format). |
| --output-file | Write output in file (can be combined with JSON, XML and OpenMetrics options). Example: --output-file=/tmp/output.txt will write the output in /tmp/output.txt. |
| --disco-format | Applies only to modes beginning with 'list-'. Returns the list of available macros to configure a service discovery rule (formatted in XML). |
| --disco-show | Applies only to modes beginning with 'list-'. Returns the list of discovered objects (formatted in XML) for service discovery. |
| --float-precision | Define the float precision for thresholds (default: 8). |
| --source-encoding | Define the character encoding of the response sent by the monitored resource Default: 'UTF-8'. =head1 DESCRIPTION B<output>. =cut |
| --ssh-backend | Define the backend you want to use. It can be: C<sshcli> (default), C<plink> and C<libssh>. |
| --ssh-username | Define the user name to log in to the host. |
| --ssh-password | Define the password associated with the user name. Cannot be used with the C<sshcli> backend. Warning: using a password is not recommended. Use C<--ssh-priv-key> instead. |
| --ssh-port | Define the TCP port on which SSH is listening. |
| --ssh-priv-key | Define the private key file to use for user authentication. |
| --hostname | Hostname to query in ssh. |
| --timeout | Timeout in seconds for the command (default: 45). Default value can be override by the mode. |
| --command | Command to get information. Used it you have output in a file. |
| --command-path | Command path. |
| --command-options | Command options. |
| --sudo | sudo command. |
All available options for a given mode can be displayed by adding the
--help parameter to the command:
/usr/lib/centreon/plugins/centreon_protocol_whois.pl \
--plugin=apps::protocols::whois::plugin \
--mode=domain \
--help