How to monitor server memory usage with Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE)

Last updated on September 19, 2020 by Sarmed Rahman

In the previous tutorial, we have seen how we can set up Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE) in an existing Nagios setup. However, the scripts and plugins needed to monitor memory usage do not come with stock Nagios. In this tutorial, we will see how we can configure NRPE in Nagios to monitor RAM usage of a remote server.

The script that we will use for monitoring RAM is available at Nagios Exchange, as well as the creators' Github repository.

Assuming that NRPE has already been set up, we start the process by downloading the script in the server that we want to monitor.

Preparing Remote Servers

On Debain/Ubuntu:

# cd /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/
# wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/justintime/nagios-plugins/master/check_mem/check_mem.pl
# mv check_mem.pl check_mem
# chmod +x check_mem

On RHEL/CentOS:

# cd /usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/  (or /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/ for 32-bit)
# wget https://raw.githubusercontent.com/justintime/nagios-plugins/master/check_mem/check_mem.pl
# mv check_mem.pl check_mem
# chmod +x check_mem

You can check whether the script generates output properly by manually running the following command on localhost. When used with NRPE, this command is supposed to check free memory, warn when free memory is less than 20%, and generate critical alarm when free memory is less than 10%.

# ./check_mem -f -w 20 -c 10
OK - 34.0% (2735744 kB) free.|TOTAL=8035340KB;;;; USED=5299596KB;6428272;7231806;; FREE=2735744KB;;;; CACHES=2703504KB;;;;

If you see something like the above as an output, that means the command is working okay.

Now that the script is ready, we define the command to check RAM usage for NRPE. As mentioned before, the command will check free memory, warn when free memory is less than 20%, and generate critical alarm when free memory is less than 10%.

# vim /etc/nagios/nrpe.cfg

For Debian/Ubuntu:

command[check_mem]=/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_mem  -f -w 20 -c 10

For RHEL/CentOS 32 bit:

command[check_mem]=/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_mem  -f -w 20 -c 10

For RHEL/CentOS 64 bit:

command[check_mem]=/usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/check_mem  -f -w 20 -c 10

Preparing Nagios Server

In the Nagios server, we define a custom command for NRPE. The command can be stored in any directory within Nagios. To keep the tutorial simple, we will put the command definition in /etc/nagios directory.

For Debian/Ubuntu:

# vim /etc/nagios3/conf.d/nrpe_command.cfg
define command{
        command_name check_nrpe
        command_line /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_nrpe -H '$HOSTADDRESS$'  -c '$ARG1$'
}

For RHEL/CentOS 32 bit:

# vim /etc/nagios/objects/nrpe_command.cfg
define command{
        command_name check_nrpe
        command_line /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_nrpe -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -c $ARG1$ 
        }

For RHEL/CentOS 64 bit:

# vim /etc/nagios/objects/nrpe_command.cfg
define command{
        command_name check_nrpe
        command_line /usr/lib64/nagios/plugins/check_nrpe -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -c $ARG1$ 
        }

Now we define the service check in Nagios.

On Debian/Ubuntu:

# vim /etc/nagios3/conf.d/nrpe_service_check.cfg
define service{
        use                            local-service
        host_name                      remote-server 
        service_description            Check RAM
        check_command                  check_nrpe!check_mem
}

On RHEL/CentOS:

# vim /etc/nagios/objects/nrpe_service_check.cfg
define service{
        use                            local-service
        host_name                      remote-server 
        service_description            Check RAM
        check_command                  check_nrpe!check_mem
}

Finally, we restart the Nagios service.

On Debian/Ubuntu:

# service nagios3 restart

On RHEL/CentOS 6:

# service nagios restart

On RHEL/CentOS 7:

# systemctl restart nagios.service

Troubleshooting

Nagios should start checking RAM usage of a remote-server using NRPE. If you are having any problem, you could check the following.

  1. Make sure that NRPE port is allowed all the way to the remote host. Default NRPE port is TCP 5666.
  2. You could try manually checking NRPE operation by executing the check_nrpe command: /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_nrpe -H remote-server
  3. You could also try to run the check_mem command manually: /usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_nrpe -H remote-server –c check_mem
  4. In the remote server, set debug=1 in /etc/nagios/nrpe.cfg. Restart the NRPE service and check the log file /var/log/messages (RHEL/CentOS) or /var/log/syslog (Debain/Ubuntu). The log files should contain relevant information if there is any configuration or permission errors. If there are not hits in the log, it is very likely that the requests are not reaching the remote server due to port filtering at some point.

To sum up, this tutorial demonstrated how we can easily tune NRPE to monitor RAM usage of remote servers. The process is as simple as downloading the script, defining the commands, and restarting the services. Hope this helps.

Support Xmodulo

This website is made possible by minimal ads and your gracious donation via PayPal or credit card

Please note that this article is published by Xmodulo.com under a Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 3.0 Unported License. If you would like to use the whole or any part of this article, you need to cite this web page at Xmodulo.com as the original source.

Xmodulo © 2021 ‒ AboutWrite for UsFeed ‒ Powered by DigitalOcean