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Nagios - The Industry Standard in IT Infrastructure Monitoring on Ubuntu 2020





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Note

This page is based on How To Install Nagios 4 and Monitor Your Servers on Ubuntu 14.04.

We may also want to watch following two videos (a little more than half an hour):







Introduction

Nagios is a very popular open source monitoring system, and it is an essential tool for any production server environment.

We will install Nagios 4 on Ubuntu (Nagios Core, Plugins, and NRPE). After some basic configuration, we will be able to monitor host resources via the web interface.

On remote hosts, Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE) and plugins will be installed as an agent to monitor their local resources.

NRPE agent needs to be installed and configured on the remote machines. The NRPE requires Nagios Plugins, so the Pluggins must be installed on the remote Linux machine. Without these, the NRPE daemon will not work and will not monitor anything.





Install Apache2

We also need to install a LAMP stack to make the Web Interface to work.

Let's install Apache using Ubuntu's package manager:

$ sudo apt-get update
$ sudo apt-get install apache2
$ sudo service apache2 restart

We can see the default Ubuntu 14.04 Apache web page:

apache2-localhost.png




Install MySQL

Now that we have our web server is running, it's time to install MySQL.

$ sudo apt-get install mysql-server php5-mysql

After the installation, we need to tell MySQL to create its database directory structure:

$ sudo mysql_install_db

Then, we want to run a security script that will remove some dangerous defaults and lock down access to our database system a little bit. Start the interactive script by running:

$ sudo mysql_secure_installation




Install PHP

PHP will process code to display dynamic content. It can run scripts, connect to our MySQL databases to get information, and hand the processed content over to our web server to display.

$ sudo apt-get install php5 libapache2-mod-php5 php5-mcrypt

If a user requests a directory from the server, Apache will first look for index.html. We need to tell our web server to prefer PHP files, so we'll make Apache look for an index.php file first.

To do this, we need to edit /etc/apache2/mods-enabled/dir.conf file:

<IfModule mod_dir.c>
    DirectoryIndex index.php index.html index.cgi index.pl index.xhtml index.htm
</IfModule>

Now, we need to restart the Apache web server:

$ sudo service apache2 restart

In order to test that our system is configured properly for PHP, we can create a very basic PHP script (/var/www/html/info.php):

<?php
phpinfo();
?>

info-php.png

Our PHP is working as expected!





Create Nagios User and Group

We need to create a user and group that will run the Nagios process. Create a nagios user and nagcmd group, then add the user to the group with these commands:

$ sudo useradd nagios
$ sudo groupadd nagcmd
$ sudo usermod -a -G nagcmd nagios




Adding swap

Let's check the swap size:

$ grep SwapTotal /proc/meminfo
SwapTotal:             0 kB

Because our server does not have a swap device, add 2 GB swap memory with these commands:

$ sudo dd if=/dev/zero of=/swap bs=1024 count=2097152

The command writes 2097152 blocks of 1024 bytes length (= 2GB bytes in total) of binary zeros into /swap.

$ sudo mkswap /swap && sudo chown root. /swap && sudo chmod 0600 /swap && sudo swapon /swap
$ sudo sh -c "echo /swap swap swap defaults 0 0 >> /etc/fstab"
$ sudo sh -c "echo vm.swappiness = 0 >> /etc/sysctl.conf && sysctl -p"




Install Build Dependencies

Because we are building Nagios Core from source, we need to install a few libraries that will allow us to complete the build. We will also install apache2-utils to set up the Nagios web interface.

Let's install the required packages:

$ sudo apt-get install build-essential libgd2-xpm-dev openssl libssl-dev xinetd apache2-utils 




Install Nagios 4

Download the source code for the latest stable release of Nagios Core from .

$ cd ~
$ curl -L -O https://assets.nagios.com/downloads/nagioscore/releases/nagios-4.1.1.tar.gz

Extract the Nagios archive with this command:

$ tar xvzf nagios-*.tar.gz

$ cd nagios-*

We must configure it before building Nagios. If we want to configure it to use postfix (which we can install with apt-get), add --with-mail=/usr/sbin/sendmail to the following command:

$ ./configure --with-nagios-group=nagios --with-command-group=nagcmd 
...
*** Configuration summary for nagios 4.1.1 08-19-2015 ***:

 General Options:
 -------------------------
        Nagios executable:  nagios
        Nagios user/group:  nagios,nagios
       Command user/group:  nagios,nagcmd
             Event Broker:  yes
        Install ${prefix}:  /usr/local/nagios
    Install ${includedir}:  /usr/local/nagios/include/nagios
                Lock file:  ${prefix}/var/nagios.lock
   Check result directory:  ${prefix}/var/spool/checkresults
           Init directory:  /etc/init.d
  Apache conf.d directory:  /etc/apache2/conf.d
             Mail program:  /bin/mail
                  Host OS:  linux-gnu
          IOBroker Method:  epoll

 Web Interface Options:
 ------------------------
                 HTML URL:  http://localhost/nagios/
                  CGI URL:  http://localhost/nagios/cgi-bin/
 Traceroute (used by WAP):  /usr/sbin/traceroute

Now compile Nagios:

$ make all

We can now run these make commands to install Nagios including init scripts and sample configuration files:

$ sudo make install
$ sudo make install-commandmode
$ sudo make install-init
$ sudo make install-config
$ sudo /usr/bin/install -c -m 644 sample-config/httpd.conf /etc/apache2/sites-available/nagios.conf

In order to issue external commands via the web interface to Nagios, we must add the web server user, www-data, to the nagcmd group:

$ sudo usermod -G nagcmd www-data




Install Nagios Plugins

Download the latest release of Nagios Plugins:

$ cd ~
$ curl -L -O http://nagios-plugins.org/download/nagios-plugins-2.1.1.tar.gz
$ tar xvf nagios-plugins-*.tar.gz
$ cd nagios-plugins-*

We must configure Nagios Plugins before building it:

$ ./configure --with-nagios-user=nagios --with-nagios-group=nagios --with-openssl

Now compile Nagios Plugins with this command:

$ make

Then, install it with this command:

$ sudo make install

We can check what's been configured and see if there are any errors:

$ sudo /usr/local/nagios/bin/nagios -v /usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg
...
Running pre-flight check on configuration data...

Checking objects...
	Checked 8 services.
	Checked 1 hosts.
	Checked 1 host groups.
	Checked 0 service groups.
	Checked 1 contacts.
	Checked 1 contact groups.
	Checked 24 commands.
	Checked 5 time periods.
	Checked 0 host escalations.
	Checked 0 service escalations.
Checking for circular paths...
	Checked 1 hosts
	Checked 0 service dependencies
	Checked 0 host dependencies
	Checked 5 timeperiods
Checking global event handlers...
Checking obsessive compulsive processor commands...
Checking misc settings...

Total Warnings: 0
Total Errors:   0




NRPE install

Install the latest stable release of Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE):

$ cd ~
$ curl -L -O http://downloads.sourceforge.net/project/nagios/nrpe-2.x/nrpe-2.15/nrpe-2.15.tar.gz
$ tar xvf nrpe-*.tar.gz
$ cd nrpe-*
$ ./configure --enable-command-args --with-nagios-user=nagios --with-nagios-group=nagios --with-ssl=/usr/bin/openssl --with-ssl-lib=/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu

Let's build and install NRPE and its xinetd startup script:

$ make all
$ sudo make install
$ sudo make install-xinetd
$ sudo make install-daemon-config

Modify the xinetd startup script (/etc/xinetd.d/nrpe) by adding the private IP address of the our Nagios server to the end:

only_from = 127.0.0.1 172.31.22.133

Only the Nagios server will be allowed to communicate with NRPE. Restart the xinetd service to start NRPE:

$ sudo service xinetd restart

Here is the modified file:

# default: on
# description: NRPE (Nagios Remote Plugin Executor)
service nrpe
{
        flags           = REUSE
        socket_type     = stream
        port            = 5666
        wait            = no
        user            = nagios
        group           = nagios
        server          = /usr/local/nagios/bin/nrpe
        server_args     = -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/nrpe.cfg --inetd
        log_on_failure  += USERID
        disable         = no
        only_from       = 127.0.0.1 172.31.22.133
}
  1. The lines with the "#" character at the beginning are comments without any effect on the service.
  2. The socket_type determines the way of data transmission through the service. There are three types: stream, dgram and raw. This last one is useful, when we want to establish a service based on a non-standard protocol.
  3. With the user option it is possible to choose a user to be the owner of the running service. It is highly recommended to choose a non-root user for security reasons.
  4. The disable option is a switch to run a service or not. In most cases the default state is yes. To activate the service change it to no.
  5. When the wait is on yes the xinetd will not receive request for the service if it has a connection. So the number of connections is limited to one. It provides very good protection when we want to establish only one connection per time..




Nagios Configuration!!

Now that Nagios 4 is installed, we need to configure it. Let's edit main Nagios configuration file (/usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg):

cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/servers
#cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/printers
#cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/switches
#cfg_dir=/usr/local/nagios/etc/routers

Let's create the directory that will store the configuration file for each server that we will monitor:

$ sudo mkdir /usr/local/nagios/etc/servers

Edit Nagios contacts configuration file (/usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/contacts.cfg), and replace the email value:

email   k@bogotobogo     ; <<***** CHANGE THIS TO YOUR EMAIL ADDRESS ******

For systemd init, we may need to add the following lines to /etc/systemd/system/nagios.service:

[Unit]
Description=Nagios
BindTo=network.target


[Install]
WantedBy=multi-user.target

[Service]
User=nagios
Group=nagios
Type=simple
ExecStart=/usr/local/nagios/bin/nagios /usr/local/nagios/etc/nagios.cfg




Configure check_nrpe Command

We need to add a new command (check_nrpe) to the end of our Nagios configuration (/usr/local/nagios/etc/objects/commands.cfg):

define command{
        command_name check_nrpe
        command_line $USER1$/check_nrpe -H $HOSTADDRESS$ -c $ARG1$
}




Configure Apache

We need to enable the Apache rewrite and cgi modules:

$ sudo a2enmod rewrite
$ sudo a2enmod cgi

Use htpasswd to create an admin user, called "nagiosadmin", that can access the Nagios web interface:

$ sudo htpasswd -c /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users nagiosadmin
New password: 
Re-type new password: 
Adding password for user nagiosadmin

Here, we can type in "nagiosadmin" for password.


Just for reference, here is the nagios.conf:

ScriptAlias /nagios/cgi-bin "/usr/local/nagios/sbin"

<Directory "/usr/local/nagios/sbin">
#  SSLRequireSSL
   Options ExecCGI
   AllowOverride None
   <IfVersion >= 2.3>
      <RequireAll>
         Require all granted
#        Require host 127.0.0.1

         AuthName "Nagios Access"
         AuthType Basic
         AuthUserFile /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users
         Require valid-user
      </RequireAll>
   </IfVersion>
   <IfVersion < 2.3>
      Order allow,deny
      Allow from all
#     Order deny,allow
#     Deny from all
#     Allow from 127.0.0.1

      AuthName "Nagios Access"
      AuthType Basic
      AuthUserFile /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users
      Require valid-user
   </IfVersion>
</Directory>


Alias /nagios "/usr/local/nagios/share"

<Directory "/usr/local/nagios/share">
#  SSLRequireSSL
   Options None
   AllowOverride None
   <IfVersion >= 2.3>
      <RequireAll>
         Require all granted
#        Require host 127.0.0.1

         AuthName "Nagios Access"
         AuthType Basic
         AuthUserFile /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users
         Require valid-user
      </RequireAll>
   </IfVersion>
   <IfVersion < 2.3>
      Order allow,deny
      Allow from all
#     Order deny,allow
#     Deny from all
#     Allow from 127.0.0.1

      AuthName "Nagios Access"
      AuthType Basic
      AuthUserFile /usr/local/nagios/etc/htpasswd.users
      Require valid-user
   </IfVersion>
</Directory>

Let's create a symbolic link of nagios.conf to the sites-enabled directory:

$ sudo ln -s /etc/apache2/sites-available/nagios.conf /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/

$ ls -la /etc/apache2/sites-enabled/
...
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root   40 Sep 30 00:35 nagios.conf -> /etc/apache2/sites-available/nagios.conf

Let's start nagios and apache2:

$ sudo service nagios start
$ sudo service apache2 restart

Run the following command to enable Nagios to start on server boot:

$ sudo ln -s /etc/init.d/nagios /etc/rcS.d/S99nagios

$ ls -la /etc/rcS.d/S99nagios
lrwxrwxrwx 1 root root 18 Sep 30 00:41 /etc/rcS.d/S99nagios -> /etc/init.d/nagios

For systemd init:

$ sudo systemctl start nagios

For auto-reboot for systemd:

$ sudo systemctl enable /etc/systemd/system/nagios.service




Accessing the Nagios Web Interface

Let's go to our Nagios home page:

NagiosHome.png

Click on the Hosts link, in the left navigation bar, to see which hosts Nagios is monitoring:

Nagios-Host.png



Monitor a Host with NRPE

We'll see how to add a new host to Nagios. On a new server that we want to monitor, update apt-get:

$ sudo apt-get update

Now we need to install Nagios Plugins and Nagios Remote Plugin Executor (NRPE):

$ sudo apt-get install nagios-plugins nagios-nrpe-server

Now, let's update the NRPE configuration file (/etc/nagios/nrpe.cfg), find the allowed_hosts directive, and add the private IP address of our Nagios server to the comma-delimited list:

allowed_hosts=127.0.0.1,172.31.22.133

Now, we configured NRPE to accept requests from our Nagios server, via its private IP address (we need to replace the IPs and disk).

server_address=client_private_IP
allowed_hosts=nagios_server_private_IP
command[check_hda1]=/usr/lib/nagios/plugins/check_disk -w 20% -c 10% -p /dev/xvda1

Note that there are several other "commands" defined in this file that will run if the Nagios server is configured to use them. Also note that NRPE will be listening on port 5666 because server_port=5666.

Let's restart NRPE:

$ sudo service nagios-nrpe-server restart

Now that we've done installing and configuring NRPE on the hosts that we want to monitor, we will have to add these hosts to our Nagios server configuration before it will start monitoring them.





Add Host to Nagios server

On our Nagios server, create a new configuration file for each of the remote hosts that we want to monitor in /usr/local/nagios/etc/servers/agent1.cfg. Replace the highlighted word, "agent1", with the name of your host:

Add the following host definition to the configuration file (/usr/local/nagios/etc/servers/agent1.cfg), replacing the host_name value with our remote hostname, the alias value with a description of the host, and the address value with the private IP address of the remote host:

define host {
        use                             linux-server
        host_name                       agent1
        alias                           Nagios Agent 1
        address                         172.31.27.202
        max_check_attempts              5
        check_period                    24x7
        notification_interval           30
        notification_period             24x7
}

Note that the "agent1" is a network hostname. So, for example, in AWS, we may want to use something like "ip-172-31-3-54" unless we've change the hostname.

With the configuration file above, Nagios will only monitor if the host is up or down. Save and exit then restart Nagios:

$ sudo service nagios start

agent-simple-monitor.png



Adding services

We'll add more services to monitor. We need to modify configuration file on Nagios server (/usr/local/nagios/etc/servers/agent1.cfg):

define host {
        use                             linux-server
        host_name                       agent1
        alias                           Nagios Agent 1
        address                         172.31.27.202
        max_check_attempts              5
        check_period                    24x7
        notification_interval           30
        notification_period             24x7
}

define service {
        use                             generic-service
        host_name                       agent1
        service_description             PING
        check_command                   check_ping!100.0,20%!500.0,60%
}

define service {
        use                             generic-service
        host_name                       agent1
        service_description             SSH
        check_command                   check_ssh
        notifications_enabled           0
}

Note that we added two additional services (PING ans SSH). Now, let's reload Nagios:

$ sudo service nagios reload
Running configuration check...
Reloading nagios configuration...
done

Nagios-Added-Services.png










Ph.D. / Golden Gate Ave, San Francisco / Seoul National Univ / Carnegie Mellon / UC Berkeley / DevOps / Deep Learning / Visualization

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Sponsor Open Source development activities and free contents for everyone.

Thank you.

- K Hong





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Docker & Kubernetes : Deploying WordPress and MariaDB to AWS using Helm 2 Chart

Docker & Kubernetes : Deploying WordPress and MariaDB to AWS using Helm 3 Chart

Docker & Kubernetes : Helm Chart for Node/Express and MySQL with Ingress

Docker & Kubernetes : Docker_Helm_Chart_Node_Expess_MySQL_Ingress.php

Docker & Kubernetes: Deploy Prometheus and Grafana using Helm and Prometheus Operator - Monitoring Kubernetes node resources out of the box

Docker & Kubernetes : Deploy Prometheus and Grafana using kube-prometheus-stack Helm Chart

Docker & Kubernetes : Istio (service mesh) sidecar proxy on GCP Kubernetes

Docker & Kubernetes : Istio on EKS

Docker & Kubernetes : Istio on Minikube with AWS EC2 for Bookinfo Application

Docker & Kubernetes : Deploying .NET Core app to Kubernetes Engine and configuring its traffic managed by Istio (Part I)

Docker & Kubernetes : Deploying .NET Core app to Kubernetes Engine and configuring its traffic managed by Istio (Part II - Prometheus, Grafana, pin a service, split traffic, and inject faults)

Docker & Kubernetes : Helm Package Manager with MySQL on GCP Kubernetes Engine

Docker & Kubernetes : Deploying Memcached on Kubernetes Engine

Docker & Kubernetes : EKS Control Plane (API server) Metrics with Prometheus

Docker & Kubernetes : Spinnaker on EKS with Halyard

Docker & Kubernetes : Continuous Delivery Pipelines with Spinnaker and Kubernetes Engine

Docker & Kubernetes: Multi-node Local Kubernetes cluster - Kubeadm-dind(docker-in-docker)

Docker & Kubernetes: Multi-node Local Kubernetes cluster - Kubeadm-kind(k8s-in-docker)

Docker & Kubernetes : nodeSelector, nodeAffinity, taints/tolerations, pod affinity and anti-affinity - Assigning Pods to Nodes

Docker & Kubernetes : Jenkins-X on EKS

Docker & Kubernetes : ArgoCD App of Apps with Heml on Kubernetes

Docker & Kubernetes : ArgoCD on Kubernetes cluster

Docker & Kubernetes : GitOps with ArgoCD for Continuous Delivery to Kubernetes clusters (minikube) - guestbook





Ansible 2.0



What is Ansible?

Quick Preview - Setting up web servers with Nginx, configure environments, and deploy an App

SSH connection & running commands

Ansible: Playbook for Tomcat 9 on Ubuntu 18.04 systemd with AWS

Modules

Playbooks

Handlers

Roles

Playbook for LAMP HAProxy

Installing Nginx on a Docker container

AWS : Creating an ec2 instance & adding keys to authorized_keys

AWS : Auto Scaling via AMI

AWS : creating an ELB & registers an EC2 instance from the ELB

Deploying Wordpress micro-services with Docker containers on Vagrant box via Ansible

Setting up Apache web server

Deploying a Go app to Minikube

Ansible with Terraform





Terraform



Introduction to Terraform with AWS elb & nginx

Terraform Tutorial - terraform format(tf) and interpolation(variables)

Terraform Tutorial - user_data

Terraform Tutorial - variables

Terraform 12 Tutorial - Loops with count, for_each, and for

Terraform Tutorial - creating multiple instances (count, list type and element() function)

Terraform Tutorial - State (terraform.tfstate) & terraform import

Terraform Tutorial - Output variables

Terraform Tutorial - Destroy

Terraform Tutorial - Modules

Terraform Tutorial - Creating AWS S3 bucket / SQS queue resources and notifying bucket event to queue

Terraform Tutorial - AWS ASG and Modules

Terraform Tutorial - VPC, Subnets, RouteTable, ELB, Security Group, and Apache server I

Terraform Tutorial - VPC, Subnets, RouteTable, ELB, Security Group, and Apache server II

Terraform Tutorial - Docker nginx container with ALB and dynamic autoscaling

Terraform Tutorial - AWS ECS using Fargate : Part I

Hashicorp Vault

HashiCorp Vault Agent

HashiCorp Vault and Consul on AWS with Terraform

Ansible with Terraform

AWS IAM user, group, role, and policies - part 1

AWS IAM user, group, role, and policies - part 2

Delegate Access Across AWS Accounts Using IAM Roles

AWS KMS

terraform import & terraformer import

Terraform commands cheat sheet

Terraform Cloud

Terraform 14

Creating Private TLS Certs





AWS (Amazon Web Services)



AWS : EKS (Elastic Container Service for Kubernetes)

AWS : Creating a snapshot (cloning an image)

AWS : Attaching Amazon EBS volume to an instance

AWS : Adding swap space to an attached volume via mkswap and swapon

AWS : Creating an EC2 instance and attaching Amazon EBS volume to the instance using Python boto module with User data

AWS : Creating an instance to a new region by copying an AMI

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 1

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 2 - Creating and Deleting a Bucket

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 3 - Bucket Versioning

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 4 - Uploading a large file

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 5 - Uploading folders/files recursively

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 6 - Bucket Policy for File/Folder View/Download

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 7 - How to Copy or Move Objects from one region to another

AWS : S3 (Simple Storage Service) 8 - Archiving S3 Data to Glacier

AWS : Creating a CloudFront distribution with an Amazon S3 origin

AWS : Creating VPC with CloudFormation

WAF (Web Application Firewall) with preconfigured CloudFormation template and Web ACL for CloudFront distribution

AWS : CloudWatch & Logs with Lambda Function / S3

AWS : Lambda Serverless Computing with EC2, CloudWatch Alarm, SNS

AWS : Lambda and SNS - cross account

AWS : CLI (Command Line Interface)

AWS : CLI (ECS with ALB & autoscaling)

AWS : ECS with cloudformation and json task definition

AWS : AWS Application Load Balancer (ALB) and ECS with Flask app

AWS : Load Balancing with HAProxy (High Availability Proxy)

AWS : VirtualBox on EC2

AWS : NTP setup on EC2

AWS: jq with AWS

AWS : AWS & OpenSSL : Creating / Installing a Server SSL Certificate

AWS : OpenVPN Access Server 2 Install

AWS : VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) 1 - netmask, subnets, default gateway, and CIDR

AWS : VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) 2 - VPC Wizard

AWS : VPC (Virtual Private Cloud) 3 - VPC Wizard with NAT

AWS : DevOps / Sys Admin Q & A (VI) - AWS VPC setup (public/private subnets with NAT)

AWS : OpenVPN Protocols : PPTP, L2TP/IPsec, and OpenVPN

AWS : Autoscaling group (ASG)

AWS : Setting up Autoscaling Alarms and Notifications via CLI and Cloudformation

AWS : Adding a SSH User Account on Linux Instance

AWS : Windows Servers - Remote Desktop Connections using RDP

AWS : Scheduled stopping and starting an instance - python & cron

AWS : Detecting stopped instance and sending an alert email using Mandrill smtp

AWS : Elastic Beanstalk with NodeJS

AWS : Elastic Beanstalk Inplace/Rolling Blue/Green Deploy

AWS : Identity and Access Management (IAM) Roles for Amazon EC2

AWS : Identity and Access Management (IAM) Policies, sts AssumeRole, and delegate access across AWS accounts

AWS : Identity and Access Management (IAM) sts assume role via aws cli2

AWS : Creating IAM Roles and associating them with EC2 Instances in CloudFormation

AWS Identity and Access Management (IAM) Roles, SSO(Single Sign On), SAML(Security Assertion Markup Language), IdP(identity provider), STS(Security Token Service), and ADFS(Active Directory Federation Services)

AWS : Amazon Route 53

AWS : Amazon Route 53 - DNS (Domain Name Server) setup

AWS : Amazon Route 53 - subdomain setup and virtual host on Nginx

AWS Amazon Route 53 : Private Hosted Zone

AWS : SNS (Simple Notification Service) example with ELB and CloudWatch

AWS : Lambda with AWS CloudTrail

AWS : SQS (Simple Queue Service) with NodeJS and AWS SDK

AWS : Redshift data warehouse

AWS : CloudFormation - templates, change sets, and CLI

AWS : CloudFormation Bootstrap UserData/Metadata

AWS : CloudFormation - Creating an ASG with rolling update

AWS : Cloudformation Cross-stack reference

AWS : OpsWorks

AWS : Network Load Balancer (NLB) with Autoscaling group (ASG)

AWS CodeDeploy : Deploy an Application from GitHub

AWS EC2 Container Service (ECS)

AWS EC2 Container Service (ECS) II

AWS Hello World Lambda Function

AWS Lambda Function Q & A

AWS Node.js Lambda Function & API Gateway

AWS API Gateway endpoint invoking Lambda function

AWS API Gateway invoking Lambda function with Terraform

AWS API Gateway invoking Lambda function with Terraform - Lambda Container

Amazon Kinesis Streams

Kinesis Data Firehose with Lambda and ElasticSearch

Amazon DynamoDB

Amazon DynamoDB with Lambda and CloudWatch

Loading DynamoDB stream to AWS Elasticsearch service with Lambda

Amazon ML (Machine Learning)

Simple Systems Manager (SSM)

AWS : RDS Connecting to a DB Instance Running the SQL Server Database Engine

AWS : RDS Importing and Exporting SQL Server Data

AWS : RDS PostgreSQL & pgAdmin III

AWS : RDS PostgreSQL 2 - Creating/Deleting a Table

AWS : MySQL Replication : Master-slave

AWS : MySQL backup & restore

AWS RDS : Cross-Region Read Replicas for MySQL and Snapshots for PostgreSQL

AWS : Restoring Postgres on EC2 instance from S3 backup

AWS : Q & A

AWS : Security

AWS : Security groups vs. network ACLs

AWS : Scaling-Up

AWS : Networking

AWS : Single Sign-on (SSO) with Okta

AWS : JIT (Just-in-Time) with Okta



Jenkins



Install

Configuration - Manage Jenkins - security setup

Adding job and build

Scheduling jobs

Managing_plugins

Git/GitHub plugins, SSH keys configuration, and Fork/Clone

JDK & Maven setup

Build configuration for GitHub Java application with Maven

Build Action for GitHub Java application with Maven - Console Output, Updating Maven

Commit to changes to GitHub & new test results - Build Failure

Commit to changes to GitHub & new test results - Successful Build

Adding code coverage and metrics

Jenkins on EC2 - creating an EC2 account, ssh to EC2, and install Apache server

Jenkins on EC2 - setting up Jenkins account, plugins, and Configure System (JAVA_HOME, MAVEN_HOME, notification email)

Jenkins on EC2 - Creating a Maven project

Jenkins on EC2 - Configuring GitHub Hook and Notification service to Jenkins server for any changes to the repository

Jenkins on EC2 - Line Coverage with JaCoCo plugin

Setting up Master and Slave nodes

Jenkins Build Pipeline & Dependency Graph Plugins

Jenkins Build Flow Plugin

Pipeline Jenkinsfile with Classic / Blue Ocean

Jenkins Setting up Slave nodes on AWS

Jenkins Q & A





Puppet



Puppet with Amazon AWS I - Puppet accounts

Puppet with Amazon AWS II (ssh & puppetmaster/puppet install)

Puppet with Amazon AWS III - Puppet running Hello World

Puppet Code Basics - Terminology

Puppet with Amazon AWS on CentOS 7 (I) - Master setup on EC2

Puppet with Amazon AWS on CentOS 7 (II) - Configuring a Puppet Master Server with Passenger and Apache

Puppet master /agent ubuntu 14.04 install on EC2 nodes

Puppet master post install tasks - master's names and certificates setup,

Puppet agent post install tasks - configure agent, hostnames, and sign request

EC2 Puppet master/agent basic tasks - main manifest with a file resource/module and immediate execution on an agent node

Setting up puppet master and agent with simple scripts on EC2 / remote install from desktop

EC2 Puppet - Install lamp with a manifest ('puppet apply')

EC2 Puppet - Install lamp with a module

Puppet variable scope

Puppet packages, services, and files

Puppet packages, services, and files II with nginx Puppet templates

Puppet creating and managing user accounts with SSH access

Puppet Locking user accounts & deploying sudoers file

Puppet exec resource

Puppet classes and modules

Puppet Forge modules

Puppet Express

Puppet Express 2

Puppet 4 : Changes

Puppet --configprint

Puppet with Docker

Puppet 6.0.2 install on Ubuntu 18.04





Chef



What is Chef?

Chef install on Ubuntu 14.04 - Local Workstation via omnibus installer

Setting up Hosted Chef server

VirtualBox via Vagrant with Chef client provision

Creating and using cookbooks on a VirtualBox node

Chef server install on Ubuntu 14.04

Chef workstation setup on EC2 Ubuntu 14.04

Chef Client Node - Knife Bootstrapping a node on EC2 ubuntu 14.04





Elasticsearch search engine, Logstash, and Kibana



Elasticsearch, search engine

Logstash with Elasticsearch

Logstash, Elasticsearch, and Kibana 4

Elasticsearch with Redis broker and Logstash Shipper and Indexer

Samples of ELK architecture

Elasticsearch indexing performance



Vagrant



VirtualBox & Vagrant install on Ubuntu 14.04

Creating a VirtualBox using Vagrant

Provisioning

Networking - Port Forwarding

Vagrant Share

Vagrant Rebuild & Teardown

Vagrant & Ansible





GCP (Google Cloud Platform)



GCP: Creating an Instance

GCP: gcloud compute command-line tool

GCP: Deploying Containers

GCP: Kubernetes Quickstart

GCP: Deploying a containerized web application via Kubernetes

GCP: Django Deploy via Kubernetes I (local)

GCP: Django Deploy via Kubernetes II (GKE)





Big Data & Hadoop Tutorials



Hadoop 2.6 - Installing on Ubuntu 14.04 (Single-Node Cluster)

Hadoop 2.6.5 - Installing on Ubuntu 16.04 (Single-Node Cluster)

Hadoop - Running MapReduce Job

Hadoop - Ecosystem

CDH5.3 Install on four EC2 instances (1 Name node and 3 Datanodes) using Cloudera Manager 5

CDH5 APIs

QuickStart VMs for CDH 5.3

QuickStart VMs for CDH 5.3 II - Testing with wordcount

QuickStart VMs for CDH 5.3 II - Hive DB query

Scheduled start and stop CDH services

CDH 5.8 Install with QuickStarts Docker

Zookeeper & Kafka Install

Zookeeper & Kafka - single node single broker

Zookeeper & Kafka - Single node and multiple brokers

OLTP vs OLAP

Apache Hadoop Tutorial I with CDH - Overview

Apache Hadoop Tutorial II with CDH - MapReduce Word Count

Apache Hadoop Tutorial III with CDH - MapReduce Word Count 2

Apache Hadoop (CDH 5) Hive Introduction

CDH5 - Hive Upgrade to 1.3 to from 1.2

Apache Hive 2.1.0 install on Ubuntu 16.04

Apache HBase in Pseudo-Distributed mode

Creating HBase table with HBase shell and HUE

Apache Hadoop : Hue 3.11 install on Ubuntu 16.04

Creating HBase table with Java API

HBase - Map, Persistent, Sparse, Sorted, Distributed and Multidimensional

Flume with CDH5: a single-node Flume deployment (telnet example)

Apache Hadoop (CDH 5) Flume with VirtualBox : syslog example via NettyAvroRpcClient

List of Apache Hadoop hdfs commands

Apache Hadoop : Creating Wordcount Java Project with Eclipse Part 1

Apache Hadoop : Creating Wordcount Java Project with Eclipse Part 2

Apache Hadoop : Creating Card Java Project with Eclipse using Cloudera VM UnoExample for CDH5 - local run

Apache Hadoop : Creating Wordcount Maven Project with Eclipse

Wordcount MapReduce with Oozie workflow with Hue browser - CDH 5.3 Hadoop cluster using VirtualBox and QuickStart VM

Spark 1.2 using VirtualBox and QuickStart VM - wordcount

Spark Programming Model : Resilient Distributed Dataset (RDD) with CDH

Apache Spark 2.0.2 with PySpark (Spark Python API) Shell

Apache Spark 2.0.2 tutorial with PySpark : RDD

Apache Spark 2.0.0 tutorial with PySpark : Analyzing Neuroimaging Data with Thunder

Apache Spark Streaming with Kafka and Cassandra

Apache Spark 1.2 with PySpark (Spark Python API) Wordcount using CDH5

Apache Spark 1.2 Streaming

Apache Drill with ZooKeeper install on Ubuntu 16.04 - Embedded & Distributed

Apache Drill - Query File System, JSON, and Parquet

Apache Drill - HBase query

Apache Drill - Hive query

Apache Drill - MongoDB query





Redis In-Memory Database



Redis vs Memcached

Redis 3.0.1 Install

Setting up multiple server instances on a Linux host

Redis with Python

ELK : Elasticsearch with Redis broker and Logstash Shipper and Indexer





Powershell 4 Tutorial



Powersehll : Introduction

Powersehll : Help System

Powersehll : Running commands

Powersehll : Providers

Powersehll : Pipeline

Powersehll : Objects

Powershell : Remote Control

Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI)

How to Enable Multiple RDP Sessions in Windows 2012 Server

How to install and configure FTP server on IIS 8 in Windows 2012 Server

How to Run Exe as a Service on Windows 2012 Server

SQL Inner, Left, Right, and Outer Joins





Git/GitHub Tutorial



One page express tutorial for GIT and GitHub

Installation

add/status/log

commit and diff

git commit --amend

Deleting and Renaming files

Undoing Things : File Checkout & Unstaging

Reverting commit

Soft Reset - (git reset --soft <SHA key>)

Mixed Reset - Default

Hard Reset - (git reset --hard <SHA key>)

Creating & switching Branches

Fast-forward merge

Rebase & Three-way merge

Merge conflicts with a simple example

GitHub Account and SSH

Uploading to GitHub

GUI

Branching & Merging

Merging conflicts

GIT on Ubuntu and OS X - Focused on Branching

Setting up a remote repository / pushing local project and cloning the remote repo

Fork vs Clone, Origin vs Upstream

Git/GitHub Terminologies

Git/GitHub via SourceTree I : Commit & Push

Git/GitHub via SourceTree II : Branching & Merging

Git/GitHub via SourceTree III : Git Work Flow

Git/GitHub via SourceTree IV : Git Reset

Git Cheat sheet - quick command reference






Subversion

Subversion Install On Ubuntu 14.04

Subversion creating and accessing I

Subversion creating and accessing II








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