NAME

Nagios::Object

DESCRIPTION

This module contains the code for creating perl objects to represent any of the Nagios objects. All of the perl classes are auto-generated at compile-time, so it's pretty trivial to add new attributes or even entire objects. The following is a list of currently supported classes:

Nagios::TimePeriod
Nagios::Command
Nagios::Contact
Nagios::ContactGroup
Nagios::Host
Nagios::Service
Nagios::HostGroup
Nagios::ServiceEscalation
Nagios::HostDependency
Nagios::HostEscalation
Nagios::HostGroupEscalation
Nagios::ServiceDependency

EXAMPLE

use Nagios::Object;
my $generic_host = Nagios::Host->new(
   register                     => 0,
   parents                      => undef,
   check_command                => $some_command,
   max_check_attempts           => 3,
   checks_enabled               => 1,
   event_handler                => $some_command,
   event_handler_enabled        => 0,
   low_flap_threshold          => 0,
   high_flap_threshold         => 0,
   flap_detection_enabled       => 0,
   process_perf_data            => 1,
   retain_status_information    => 1,
   retain_nonstatus_information => 1,
   notification_interval        => $timeperiod,
   notification_options         => [qw(d u r)],
   notifications_enabled        => 1,
   stalking_options             => [qw(o d u)]
);

my $localhost = Nagios::Host->new(
   use       => $generic_host,
   host_name => "localhost",
   alias     => "Loopback",
   address   => "127.0.0.1"
);

my $hostname = $localhost->host_name();
printf "max check attempts for $hostname is %s.\n",
    $localhost->max_check_attempts;

$localhost->set_event_handler(
    Nagios::Command->new(
        command_name => "new_event_handler",
        command_line => "/bin/true"
    )
);

METHODS

new()

Create a new object of one of the types listed above. Nagios::Host->new( ... );

dump()

Output a Nagios define { } block from an object. This is still EXPERIMENTAL, but may eventually be robust enough to use for a configuration GUI.

print $object->dump();
name()

This method is common to all classes created by this module. It should always return the textual name for an object. It is used internally by the Nagios::Object modules to allow polymorphism (which is what makes this module so compact). This is the only way to retrieve the name of a template, since they are identified by their "name" field.

my $svc_desc = $service->name;
my $hostname = $host->name;

Which is just short for:

my $svc_desc = $service->service_description;
my $hostname = $service->host_name;
register()

Returns true/undef to indicate whether the calling object is registerable or not.

if ( $object->register ) { print $object->name, " is registerable." }
has_attribute()

Returns true/undef to indicate whether the calling object has the attribute specified as the only argument.

# check to see if $object has attribute "command_line"
die if ( !$object->has_attribute("command_line") );
list_attributes()

Returns a list of valid attributes for the calling object.

my @host_attributes = $host->list_attributes();
attribute_type()

Returns the type of data expected by the object's set_ method for the given attribute.

my $type = $host->attribute_type("notification_period");
attribute_is_list()

Returns true if the attribute is supposed to be a list (ARRAYREF).

if ( $object->attribute_is_list("members") ) {
   $object->set_members( [$member] );
} else {
   $object->set_members( $member );
}
attribute_allows_undef()

Returns true if the attribute provided is allowed to have a value of undef. Setting an attribute to undef will cause the templates to be searched until a non-undef answer is found.

NOTE: this may go away, since I'm not sure if it's really useful at all.

my $answer = $object->attribute_allows_undef("command_line");

AUTHOR

Al Tobey <tobeya@cpan.org>

Thank you to the fine people of #perl on freenode.net for helping me with some hairy code and silly optimizations.

WARNINGS

See AUTHOR.