Icinga and MySQL Integration

Powerful performance with an easy integration, powered by Telegraf, the open source data connector built by InfluxData.

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This is not the recommended configuration for real-time query at scale. For query and compression optimization, high-speed ingest, and high availability, you may want to consider Icinga and InfluxDB.

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Time series database
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Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale

Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.

See Ways to Get Started

Input and output integration overview

This plugin gathers services & hosts status using Icinga2 Remote API, providing an interface to monitor your infrastructure effectively.

The Telegraf SQL plugin allows you to store metrics from Telegraf directly into a MySQL database, making it easier to analyze and visualize the collected metrics.

Integration details

Icinga

The Icinga2 Plugin enables users to gather status information from Icinga2’s Remote API. Icinga2 is a powerful monitoring system that checks the health of hosts and services and provides detailed monitoring capabilities. The plugin facilitates retrieving metrics such as the state of hosts and services, as well as detailed API status metrics. This integration is vital for users looking to keep an eye on their infrastructure’s health and performance metrics automatically, leveraging the Icinga2’s extensive API. By utilizing this plugin, users can easily integrate Icinga2 monitoring data with other systems, providing a comprehensive view of their infrastructure status.

MySQL

Telegraf’s SQL output plugin is designed to seamlessly write metric data to a SQL database by dynamically creating tables and columns based on the incoming metrics. When configured for MySQL, the plugin leverages the go-sql-driver/mysql, which requires enabling the ANSI_QUOTES SQL mode to ensure proper handling of quoted identifiers. This dynamic schema creation approach ensures that each metric is stored in its own table with a structure derived from its fields and tags, providing a detailed, timestamped record of system performance. The flexibility of the plugin allows it to handle high-throughput environments, making it ideal for scenarios that demand robust, granular metric logging and historical data analysis.

Configuration

Icinga

[[inputs.icinga2]]
  ## Required Icinga2 server address
  # server = "https://localhost:5665"

  ## Collected Icinga2 objects ("services", "hosts")
  ## Specify at least one object to collect from /v1/objects endpoint.
  # objects = ["services"]

  ## Collect metrics from /v1/status endpoint
  ## Choose from:
  ##     "ApiListener", "CIB", "IdoMysqlConnection", "IdoPgsqlConnection"
  # status = []

  ## Credentials for basic HTTP authentication
  # username = "admin"
  # password = "admin"

  ## Maximum time to receive response.
  # response_timeout = "5s"

  ## Optional TLS Config
  # tls_ca = "/etc/telegraf/ca.pem"
  # tls_cert = "/etc/telegraf/cert.pem"
  # tls_key = "/etc/telegraf/key.pem"
  ## Use TLS but skip chain & host verification
  # insecure_skip_verify = true

MySQL

[[outputs.sql]]
  ## Database driver
  ## Valid options: mssql (Microsoft SQL Server), mysql (MySQL), pgx (Postgres),
  ##  sqlite (SQLite3), snowflake (snowflake.com) clickhouse (ClickHouse)
  driver = "mysql"

  ## Data source name
  ## The format of the data source name is different for each database driver.
  ## See the plugin readme for details.
  data_source_name = "username:password@tcp(host:port)/dbname"

  ## Timestamp column name
  timestamp_column = "timestamp"

  ## Table creation template
  ## Available template variables:
  ##  {TABLE} - table name as a quoted identifier
  ##  {TABLELITERAL} - table name as a quoted string literal
  ##  {COLUMNS} - column definitions (list of quoted identifiers and types)
  table_template = "CREATE TABLE {TABLE}({COLUMNS})"

  ## Table existence check template
  ## Available template variables:
  ##  {TABLE} - tablename as a quoted identifier
  table_exists_template = "SELECT 1 FROM {TABLE} LIMIT 1"

  ## Initialization SQL
  init_sql = "SET sql_mode='ANSI_QUOTES';"

  ## Maximum amount of time a connection may be idle. "0s" means connections are
  ## never closed due to idle time.
  connection_max_idle_time = "0s"

  ## Maximum amount of time a connection may be reused. "0s" means connections
  ## are never closed due to age.
  connection_max_lifetime = "0s"

  ## Maximum number of connections in the idle connection pool. 0 means unlimited.
  connection_max_idle = 2

  ## Maximum number of open connections to the database. 0 means unlimited.
  connection_max_open = 0

  ## NOTE: Due to the way TOML is parsed, tables must be at the END of the
  ## plugin definition, otherwise additional config options are read as part of the
  ## table

  ## Metric type to SQL type conversion
  ## The values on the left are the data types Telegraf has and the values on
  ## the right are the data types Telegraf will use when sending to a database.
  ##
  ## The database values used must be data types the destination database
  ## understands. It is up to the user to ensure that the selected data type is
  ## available in the database they are using. Refer to your database
  ## documentation for what data types are available and supported.
  #[outputs.sql.convert]
  #  integer              = "INT"
  #  real                 = "DOUBLE"
  #  text                 = "TEXT"
  #  timestamp            = "TIMESTAMP"
  #  defaultvalue         = "TEXT"
  #  unsigned             = "UNSIGNED"
  #  bool                 = "BOOL"
  #  ## This setting controls the behavior of the unsigned value. By default the
  #  ## setting will take the integer value and append the unsigned value to it. The other
  #  ## option is "literal", which will use the actual value the user provides to
  #  ## the unsigned option. This is useful for a database like ClickHouse where
  #  ## the unsigned value should use a value like "uint64".
  #  # conversion_style = "unsigned_suffix"

Input and output integration examples

Icinga

  1. Centralized Monitoring Dashboard: Integrate the Icinga2 plugin with a visualization tool to create a centralized monitoring dashboard that presents real-time statuses of all monitored services and hosts. This setup allows teams to quickly identify issues and to respond proactively, ensuring minimal downtime.

  2. Automated Incident Response: Use the metrics collected by the plugin to trigger automated incident response workflows. For instance, if a service is reported as critical, an automated system could notify relevant team members and even attempt to restart the service, reducing manual intervention and speeding resolution times.

  3. Service Reliability Reporting: Combine data from the Icinga with business reporting systems to generate insights on service reliability. By analyzing trends in service states over time, organizations can identify weak points in their infrastructure and improve service availability based on factual data.

  4. Cross-System Alerting: Leverage the collected metrics to integrate with various alerting systems. This could route notifications based on specific Icinga2 service states to different departments or teams depending on their roles, enabling tailored and timely responses to potential issues in the infrastructure.

MySQL

  1. Real-Time Web Analytics Storage: Leverage the plugin to capture website performance metrics and store them in MySQL. This setup enables teams to monitor user interactions, analyze traffic patterns, and dynamically adjust site features based on real-time data insights.

  2. IoT Device Monitoring: Utilize the plugin to collect metrics from a network of IoT sensors and log them into a MySQL database. This use case supports continuous monitoring of device health and performance, allowing for predictive maintenance and immediate response to anomalies.

  3. Financial Transaction Logging: Record high-frequency financial transaction data with precise timestamps. This approach supports robust audit trails, real-time fraud detection, and comprehensive historical analysis for compliance and reporting purposes.

  4. Application Performance Benchmarking: Integrate the plugin with application performance monitoring systems to log metrics into MySQL. This facilitates detailed benchmarking and trend analysis over time, enabling organizations to identify performance bottlenecks and optimize resource allocation effectively.

Feedback

Thank you for being part of our community! If you have any general feedback or found any bugs on these pages, we welcome and encourage your input. Please submit your feedback in the InfluxDB community Slack.

Powerful Performance, Limitless Scale

Collect, organize, and act on massive volumes of high-velocity data. Any data is more valuable when you think of it as time series data. with InfluxDB, the #1 time series platform built to scale with Telegraf.

See Ways to Get Started

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