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The Enterprise Linux Resource
http://enterprise.linux.com/              Title    Zabbix:
State-of-the-art network monitoring Date    2007.03.12  4:01 Author   
StoneLion Topic
http://enterprise.linux.com/article.pl?sid=07/03/06/1615215
I have used BigBrother <http://www.bb4.org/>  and Nagios
<http://www.nagios.org/>  for a long time to troubleshoot network
problems, and I was happy with them -- until Zabbix
<http://www.zabbix.org/>  came along. Zabbix is an enterprise-class open
source distributed monitoring solution for servers, network services,
and network devices. It's easier to use and provides more functionality
than Nagios or BigBrother.

Zabbix is a server-agent type of monitoring software, meaning you have a
Zabbix server where all gathered data is collected, and a Zabbix agent
running on each host. Note that you can have more than one Zabbix server
installed, but you cannot consolidate data from multiple servers in one
single central server. All Zabbix data, including configuration and
performance data, is stored in a relational database -- MySQL,
PostgreSQL, or Oracle -- on the server. Zabbix server can run on all
Unix/Linux distributions, and Zabbix agents are available for Linux,
Unix (AIX, HP-UX, Mac OS X, Solaris, FreeBSD), Netware, Windows, and
network devices running SNMP v1, v2, and v3.

Zabbix is easy to install and configure. You can download
<http://www.zabbix.com/download.php>  source code from the Zabbix site,
or install the software from a binary package if you're using Debian,
Ubuntu, Fedora, Gentoo, or FreeBSD. To successfully install the Zabbix
server you need to run Apache (with PHP extensions) and a supported
database server. Installation is relatively easy as long as you have all
the requirements
<http://www.zabbix.com/manual/v1.4/install_requirements_software.php> 
met and you follow the step-by-step documentation
<http://www.zabbix.com/manual/v1.4/install_source_server.php> . If you
plan to run the Zabbix server on a Linux Debian server, I recommend
reading this manual <http://www.debianhelp.co.uk/zabbix.htm> . Running
Zabbix server starts by default 15 processes, using a total of 34MB of
RAM and around 1.5% of processor power.

Installing Zabbix agent on a host is easy and takes only a few minutes.
You can compile and install the agent yourself, you can install it from
a distribution repository, or you can download precompiled binaries for
your distribution. The Zabbix agent starts six processes by default and
uses around 3MB of RAM and 0.1% of processor power. Network traffic for
communicating with server is minimal -- a matter of bytes, not
kilobytes.

Features

Zabbix provides distributed monitoring in real time with centralized Web
administration. It allows you to see any host's "health" on your network
from a single point of entry. Performance monitors includes everything
from host memory, processor, and swap space usage to free disk on all
mounted partitions, running processes, disk read/write operations, and
more. Zabbix lets you avoid connecting to each host in order to see its
health.

You can see your network's health status at any time from any machine on
the network by opening a Web browser and pointing it to
http://yourserver/zabbix/ to invoke the administration console. You'll
need to type in your ID and password in order to access the data.

SNMP graphs present a specific monitored component on the host. Zabbix
gives you two choices for viewing a graph: for each host component (e.g.
processor load, memory usage, disk usage, and so on) separately, or one
showing multiple host components from multiple hosts together. This is
useful when you want to monitor only the mission-critical components on
specific hosts -- for example, disk capacity on file and FTP servers.
Setting up such a graph is easy -- just go to Configuration -> Graphs
and select the "New Graph" option. After naming it, you will have a new
option to edit the graph. In Edit menu you have an "Add item" button
where you can configure parameter, type, function, and coordinates of
the new item. By clicking the Save button, your new graph will show up
and you can start monitoring the selected components.

    <http://www.linux.com/blob.pl?id=ee9c973d0ed5923bd53893e9d240e1ae>

Click to enlarge    Zabbix can draw network graphs and mark host errors
on them. You only need to specify the hosts' IP addresses and where in
the graph (coordinates) you want a specific host to appear, and Zabbix
will do the rest for you. You can define how hosts are linked together
in the graphs and choose a specific color for each link to indicate
whether a host is up or down. When the graph is completed and filled
with all your hosts and network devices, below every element in the
graph you can see the number of potential problems on that host/device,
and review the problems by clicking on its icon.

The software not only offers great monitoring -- it also provides great
alerting capabilities. Note that you can set a threshold for variables
as well. When a specific event happens on a host, Zabbix can alert an
administrator via email or external messaging devices such as SMS
messages. Every alarm and alert is logged, so if you miss an email or
SMS message, you can find the history of alerts in the Zabbix monitoring
log in the administration console.

There are quite a few report types available in Zabbix. "Status of
Zabbix" shows you if the server if running, how many hosts are
monitored, and the number of triggers, items, alarms, and alerts.
"Availability report" shows you general statistics (in text and graphs)
of a specific host. For example, for the selected host it shows you the
percentage of availability of each host component, specific network
service (HTTP, FTP, SMTP) status, etc. "Most busy triggers top 100"
presents the triggers that has a largest activity on the hosts. For
example, changing state of services, running out of disk space, lack of
physical memory, etc. If you have a server that is rebooted on a daily
basis, you're going to see all the services running on that server on
that list for sure.

Zabbix provides configuration auditing for all types of configuration
changes -- the changes made to Zabbix configuration and the changes made
to hosts and devices. When a user changes something, it is immediately
logged in the Audit log, which can be viewed under the Configuration ->
Audit menu in the administration console. This is useful when you're
among several administrators using Zabbix and you want to track all new
activities that occurred since you last logged in. Auditing information
includes the ID of the user that logged into the Zabbix administration
console, the resource that was modified, what action was made, and some
additional details regarding the specific event, such as what new host
was added or how is host A linked to host B.

Support for Zabbix comes two ways: Free support
<http://www.zabbix.com/support_free.php/Free>  that is available through
online documentation, Zabbix forums, IRC support channel, or mailing
lists, and commercial support
<http://www.zabbix.com/support_commercial.php>  that is available in
four different levels -- Bronze, Silver, Gold, and Platinum -- which
differ in the number of incidents, type of support (Web, phone, or
email), and response times offered. Zabbix also provides partners for
local support in many countries.

Conclusion

Implementing Zabbix may take quite some time, especially if you have a
large number of hosts. Configuring the Zabbix server exactly as you want
it takes even longer. But once Zabbix is set up and the agents are in
place, monitoring your network becomes a lot easier. Zabbix frees you
from spending time discovering network and resource problems on your
hosts and network.

Anže Vidmar is Linux/Unix and Windows system engineer,network
administrator, and trainer.
Links
    1. "BigBrother" - http://www.bb4.org/
    2. "Nagios" - http://www.nagios.org/
    3. "Zabbix" - http://www.zabbix.org/
    4. "download" - http://www.zabbix.com/download.php
    5. "requirements" -
http://www.zabbix.com/manual/v1.4/install_requirements_software.php
    6. "step-by-step documentation" -
http://www.zabbix.com/manual/v1.4/install_source_server.php
    7. "this manual" - http://www.debianhelp.co.uk/zabbix.htm
    8. "  " -
http://www.linux.com/blob.pl?id=ee9c973d0ed5923bd53893e9d240e1ae
    9. "Free support" - http://www.zabbix.com/support_free.php/Free
   10. "commercial support" -
http://www.zabbix.com/support_commercial.php

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