User Guide

Setup

Cluster

Service Resource Management

To manage service resources, several scripts have been developed by the NetEye team and are provided with every NetEye installation. These scripts are wrappers of the PCS and DRBD APIs and their use is showcased in section Adding a Service Resource to a Cluster. Examples of commands that are useful for NetEye Cluster troubleshooting are introduced in section Cluster Management Commands.

Adding a Service Resource to a Cluster

Service resources can be added by modifying an existing template, located under the /usr/share/neteye/cluster/templates/ directory, then copying it to a suitable location, and finally using it in a script.

For example, consider the Services-core-nats-server.conf.tpl template.

{
    "volume_group": "vg00",
    "ip_pre" : "192.168.47",
    "Services": [
        {
            "name": "nats-server",
            "ip_post": "48",
            "drbd_minor": 23,
            "drbd_port": 7810,
            "folder": "/neteye/shared/nats-server/",
            "collocation_resource": "cluster_ip",
            "size": "1024"
        }
    ]
}

Copy it, then edit it.

cluster# cd /usr/share/neteye/cluster/templates/
cluster# cp Services-core-nats-server.conf.tpl  /tmp/Services-core-nats-server.conf
cluster# vi /tmp/Services-core-nats-server.conf

Hint

You can copy the edited file to any other location, to be used for reference or in case you need to change settings at any point in the future.

In the file, make sure to change the following values to match your infrastructure network:

  • ip_pre: the corporate network address of the node (i.e., the first three octets).

  • ip_post: the IP address of the node (only the last octet)

Once done, make sure that the JSON file you saved is valid syntactically, for example by using the jq utility:

cluster# jq . /tmp/Services-core-nats-server.conf

A valid file will be displayed on, but if there is some syntactic mistake in the file, an explanatory message will provide a hint to fix the problem. Some possible message is shown next.

parse error: Expected separator between values at line 7, column 21

parse error: Objects must consist of key:value pairs at line 12, column 10

Note

Even if multiple errors are present in the file, only one error message is shown at a time, so always run jq until you see the whole content of the file instead of error messages: this will prove the file contains valid JSON.

Finally, let the cluster pick up the changes and configuration.

cluster# cd /usr/share/neteye/scripts/cluster
cluster# ./cluster_service_setup.pl -c /tmp/Services-core-nats-server.conf

Cluster Management Commands

The most important commands used for checking the status of a (NetEye) Cluster and to troubleshoot problems are:

  • drbdmon, a small utility to monitoring the DRBD devices and connections in real-time

  • drbdadm, DRBD’s primary administration tool

  • pcs, used to manage a cluster, verify its resources, constraints, fencing devices and much more

Hint

You can find more information about all their functionalities and sub-commands in their respective manual pages: drbdmon, drbdadm, and pcs.

In the remainder, we show some typical use of these commands, starting from the simplest one.

cluster# drbdmon

As its name implies, this command monitors what is happening in DRBD and shows in real time a lot of information about the DRDB status. Within the interface, any resource highlighted in red is in a degraded status and therefore requires some inspection and fix. Click p to show only problematic resources.

The next command is the Swiss army knife of DRBD and is used to carry out all configurations, tuning, and management of a DRBD infrastructure. The most important option of the drbdadm command is -d (long option: --dry-run): the command is executed and behaves exactly like without the option, but it makes no changes to the system. This option should always be used before making any change to the configuration, to check for possible problems and unexpected side effects.

The command itself has a lot of options and sub commands, extensively described in the above-mentioned man page. Within a NetEye Cluster, the most used sub command is perhaps

cluster# drbdadm --dry-run adjust all

This command checks the content of the configuration file and synchronises the configuration on all nodes. The given command only shows what would happen, remove the --dry-run option to actually run it and make changes.

The third command is the main tool to manage the corosync/pacemaker stack of a cluster: pcs. Like drbdadm it has a number of sub commands and option.

cluster# pcs status

This command prints the current status of the NetEye Cluster, its nodes, and its resources, and allows to check whether there are any ongoing issues.

In the output, right above the Full list of resources, all the nodes (if any) are shown there, along with their state–Online/Offline and Standby being the most common.

The presence of Offline nodes, that is, nodes disconnected form the cluster or even shut down, is usually a sign of an ongoing problem and requires a quick reaction. Indeed, the only legitimate situation when a node can be Offline is after a planned reboot (like i.e., a kernel update or a hardware upgrade).

On the other hand, nodes should be in Standby state only during updates: if this is not the case, it is worth to check that node for problems.

If in the list of resources there is any resource marked as Stopped, below the list and right above the Daemon status appear some log entries for each stopped service. While these logs should suffice to give some hint about the reason for the resource being stopped, it is possible to check the full status and log files using the commands systemctl status <resource name> and journalctl -u <resource name>.

Additional sub commands of pcs are:

cluster# pcs property list

This command returns some information about the cluster and is similar to the following snippet:

Cluster Properties:
cluster-infrastructure: corosync
cluster-name: NetEye
dc-version: 1.1.23-1.el7_9.1-9acf116022
have-watchdog: false
last-lrm-refresh: 1648467995
stonith-enabled: false
Node Attributes:
neteye02.neteyelocal: standby=on

The important points here are:

  • stonith-enabled: false. This should always be true, a value of false, like in the example, implies that the cluster fencing has been enabled for the node. This should happen only during maintenance windows, otherwise an immediate inspection is required because it may result in a split-brain situation. It is important to remark that Fencing must always be configured on a cluster before starting any resource.

  • neteye02.neteyelocal: standby=on. The node is in Standby status, meaning it can not host any running services or resources, but will still vote in the quorum.

See also

Fencing is described in great details in NetEye’s blog post Configuring Fencing on Dell Servers.

cluster# pcs constraint

Returns a list of all active constraints on the cluster.

cluster# pcs resource show [cluster_ip]

This command shows all the configured resources; if the parameter cluster_ip is added, shows only the Cluster IP address.

See also

For more information, troubleshooting options, and debugging commands, you can refer to RedHat’s Reference Documentation for Pacemaker and high-availability, in particular Chapters 3. The pcs CLI, 9.7 Displaying fencing devices, and 10.3. Displaying Configured Resources.

Satellite

Adding a Service to the Satellite Target

Adding a systemd service to neteye-satellite.target (see Satellite Services), can be useful in the scenario where a custom systemd service needs to be managed together with the other services of the Satellite.

The main use case for this necessity is that the Satellite admins want that a service that they created will be always started automatically when the Satellite Node reboots.

To attach a new systemd service to the Satellite Target you can use the command neteye satellite service add. For example, if you want to add the service telegraf-local@my_custom_instance.service to the neteye-satellite.target you can execute:

sat# neteye satellite service add telegraf-local@my_custom_instance

Warning

The service name passed to the neteye satellite service add command must not contain the .service suffix, which would lead to an incorrect configuration.

The command neteye satellite service remove allows instead to remove a service from the Satellite Target. Removing a service from the Satellite Target can be useful if you previously added a custom service by mistake and must not be used to remove a NetEye service from the Satellite Target.

For example, to remove telegraf-local@my_custom_instance.service from the neteye-satellite.target you can execute:

sat# neteye satellite service remove telegraf-local@my_custom_instance

We remind you that you can verify which services are attached to the Satellite Target with the command:

sat# systemctl list-dependencies neteye-satellite.target

Icinga 2 advanced configuration

You can have a look at NetEye Satellite Nodes for more advanced configurations of Icinga 2 in the NetEye Satellite Nodes.

NGINX advanced configurations

NGINX is installed and enabled by default on Satellites and is responsible to expose local services, like Tornado Webhook collector, and to perform TLS termination. NGINX can be customised to some extent, to be employed in other scenarios like those described below.

Change NGINX Certificates

By default NGINX is configured with self-signed certificates generated at Satellite side. To use your own certificates you must not change the NGINX configuration, but you can overwrite the existing self-signed certificates in the following locations:

  • Certificate: it is mandatory and located in /neteye/local/nginx/conf/tls/certs/neteye_cert.crt

  • Key: it is mandatory and located in /neteye/local/nginx/conf/tls/private/neteye.key

  • CA or CA bundle: it is mandatory and located in /neteye/local/nginx/conf/tls/certs/neteye_ca_bundle.crt

Setup a Reverse Proxy for Https Resource

In this scenario we assume that you want to forward all HTTPS requests for neteyeshare to the master.

If you are familiar with Httpd, the corresponding configuration would look like this:

ProxyPass /neteyeshare https://neteye4master.example.it/neteyeshare
ProxyPassReverse /neteyeshare https://neteye4master.example.it/neteyeshare

To configure NGINX as a reverse proxy you should create file /neteye/local/nginx/conf/conf.d/http/locations/neteyeshare.conf with the following content:

location /neteyeshare/ {
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $host:$server_port;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Server $host;
    proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
    proxy_pass https://neteye4master.example.it/neteyeshare;
}

You need to restart NGINX to apply changes.

Setup a Server in NGINX

By default NGINX on Satellites listen only to port 443. It is possible to start a new server to listen on a different port, for example to set it up as reverse proxy.

In this case you need to create a new file /neteye/local/nginx/conf/conf.d/http/my_custom_server.conf with the following content:

server {
  listen 80;
  server_name my_custom_server;
  location /api/v1/ {
      proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Host $host:$server_port;
      proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-Server $host;
      proxy_set_header X-Forwarded-For $proxy_add_x_forwarded_for;
      proxy_pass http://127.0.0.1:8080/api/v1;
  }
}

You need to restart NGINX to apply changes.

Change SSL settings

Unlike the previous scenarios, this settings must be configured and applied on the Master; then you need to follow the instructions in sections Generate the Satellite Configuration Archive and Configure the Master, Synchronize the Satellite Configuration Archive and Satellite Setup, to deploy configuration on Satellite.

To change NGINX SSL settings you can change optional parameters proxy.ssl_protocol and proxy.ssl_cipher_suite described in NetEye Satellite Configuration.

Suppose the Satellite configuration /etc/neteye-satellite.d/tenant_A/acmesatellite.conf is the following:

{
  "fqdn": "acmesatellite.example.com",
  "name": "acmesatellite",
  "ssh_port": "22",
  "ssh_enabled": true
}

Let’s suppose you want to setup NGINX to support TLSv1.2 only. You have just to set your satellite configuration file /etc/neteye-satellite.d/tenant_A/acmesatellite.conf file as follows:

{
  "fqdn": "acmesatellite.example.com",
  "name": "acmesatellite",
  "ssh_port": "22",
  "ssh_enabled": true,
  "proxy": {
    "ssl_protocol": "TLSv1.2"
  }
}

Security

Trusted Certificate Generation with Windows

The instructions below will help you create a trusted certificate chain in Windows and configure HTTPS in NetEye 4 with the trusted certificate. There are also instructions for how to do this from within the NetEye server.

Requirements

The following requirements should be met before proceeding with configuration of the certificate:

  • A Windows Certification Authority should already be up and running, with a suitable Certificate Template.

  • The Certificate Template should meet recent encryption standards, for example:

    • RSA, SHA256, 4096bit

    • The private key should be marked as exportable

  • You have a Windows domain-joined Server/PC which is allowed to request certificates.

  • You have a Linux machine running NetEye where you can install the CA Chain Certificate. This is necessary for the server certificate to be trusted by the Apache web server.

Procedure

Step 1: Request a new certificate from a Windows domain-joined Server/PC:

  • Open the Microsoft Management Console (Start ‣ mmc.exe)

  • Within MMC, go to File ‣ Add/Remove Snap-in

  • In the popup dialog, navigate to Certificates ‣ Add ‣ Computer Account ‣ Next ‣ Local computer ‣ Finish, and then OK to close the dialog.

  • Expand Certificates ‣ Personal, then right click on Certificates

  • Select All Tasks, then Request new certificate (you may need to skip a “Before You Begin” screen first) and Next when “Active Directory Enrollment Policy” is selected as shown here: Enrollment - Select Policy

  • Select a Certificate Template and click on the link “More information is required to enroll for this certificate…” Enrollment - Request Certificates

  • Fill-in the information for each tab in the Certificate Properties dialog as shown (the fields shown are mandatory; you can optionally add values like Country, Department, Organization, etc.): Enrollment - Subject Properties Enrollment - General Properties Enrollment - Extensions Properties 1 Enrollment - Extensions Properties 2 Enrollment - Private key Properties

  • Click OK and then Enroll and Finish.

Step 2: Export the certificate with its private key in PFX format:

  • Right click on the certificate you just created in the center panel, then click on All Tasks ‣ Export.

  • Select Yes, export the private key, click Next, and select PKCS #12: Enrollment - Export Wizard File Format

  • Provide a password to protect the private key that goes with the certificate (a strong password is advised): Enrollment - Export Wizard Security

  • Then designate the path where the certificate should be stored: Enrollment - Export Wizard File Export

  • Now click Next, and then Finish. You should see the message “The export was successful.”

Step 3: Export your CA Certificate(s) in Base64 format.

Note

If the Certification Authority Infrastructure consists of multiple CAs (for example, Root CA > Subordinate Intermediate CA), you must export all of them and then combine them into a single Certificate.

  • Double click on your new certificate in the center panel. In the popup dialog, click on the Certification Path tab, which should display a Certificate Chain such as the one shown here: Enrollment - Certificate Chain

  • Select for instance the Intermediate Certificate, and then click on the View Certificate button. Then click on the Details > Copy to File: Enrollment - Certification Path

  • Instead of the “DER encoded binary” option, select “Base-64 encoded”: Enrollment - Certificate Export Format

  • In the next dialog, choose a path and filename to save the .CER file, then click Finish.

  • Repeat the procedure above for the Root CA instead of the intermediate certificate.

  • To create the certificate chain, open all of your saved CA certificates in a Text Editor and combine them into a single file, both respecting the proper order (Root/Parent before Subordinate/Child) and paying attention to not leave any blank lines between certificates as shown here: Enrollment - Certificate Base64

Step 4: Copy the CA Chain certificate to the Linux server (NetEye 4) and adjust the Apache configuration:

  • Make a copy of the CA Chain certificate, rename and move both of them to the proper folder according to the settings in /etc/httpd/conf.d/neteye-ssl.conf file:

    SSLCertificateChainFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/neteye_chain.crt
    SSLCACertificateFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/neteye_ca_bundle.crt
    

Step 5: Copy your PFX Server Certificate to the Linux server (NetEye 4), convert it, and adjust the Apache configuration:

  • Put the PFX certificate in a temporary directory, for example /tmp.

  • Extract the public part of the certificate. You will be asked for the Key Password, which is the one you entered when you exported your PFX from the Windows Machine:

    # openssl pkcs12 -in {yourfile.pfx} -nokeys -out {certificate.crt}
    
  • Extract the encrypted private key part of the certificate. You will be asked for the Key Password, which is the one you entered when you exported your PFX file from the Windows Machine. You will also be asked to enter a new Password for the newly generated private key (you can use the same password):

    #  openssl pkcs12 -in {yourfile.pfx} -nocerts -out {keyfile-encrypted.key}
    
  • Now decrypt your private key:

    # openssl rsa -in {keyfile-encrypted.key} -out {keyfile-decrypted.key}
    
  • Rename your certificate and key and move them in the proper folder according to the settings in /etc/httpd/conf.d/neteye-ssl.conf file:

    SSLCertificateFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/neteye_cert.crt
    SSLCertificateKeyFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/private/neteye.key
    

Note

Both the certificate and key must be owned by root and only root must have full read and write access to the files. Also, certificate and key are located in shared directory. Therefore, in a cluster environment, they should be changed only on the node running the httpd resource.

  • Finally, restart Apache.

HTTPS Configuration

Beginning with version 4.2, NetEye has been configured to use HTTPS throughout, using a self-signed certificate based on Apache’s mod_ssl. This certificate is generated automatically during the NetEye install process.

However, it is recommended to create and install as soon as possible a new trusted certificate consisting of the self-signed certificate chained with a valid, external CA certificate.

The importance of using trusted certificates, is clear also from this example use case: if you use the Director’s Self-Service API to first connect to an external Icinga2 agent, the Kickstart initialization script may fail if it determines it cannot trust the self-signed certificate alone. While this restriction can be bypassed as an emergency measure, this is a highly insecure practice and is strongly discouraged.

The following steps will help you configure your NetEye installation to create and deploy a more secure certificate that can be trusted externally and/or in your domain. If you would prefer to create a certificate chain from within Windows, step by step instructions are available in the dedicated section.

Step 1: Obtain Your Signed Certificate from a Certificate Authority

The instructions below assume you already have a valid certificate from an external Certificate Authority (CA). Then for each server/machine you will need to:

  1. Create a private key

  2. Generate a certificate signing request (CSR)

  3. Send or upload the private key and CSR to the CA

  4. Retrieve the certificate signed by the CA

When NetEye is first installed, it configures the initial self-signed certificates in the following directories:

File

Directory

neteye_cert.crt

/neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/

neteye.key

/neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/private/

neteye_chain.crt

/neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/

neteye_ca_bundle.crt

/neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/

neteye-ssl.conf

/etc/httpd/conf.d/

Note

Certificate and key are located in shared directory. Therefore, in a cluster environment, they should be changed only on the node running the httpd resource.

Because the private key is so fundamentally important to your network’s security, you should strongly consider creating a new one. You can create the private key and the CSR file in the appropriate directory with a single command, after moving to the correct directory:

# cd /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/private/
# openssl req -newkey rsa:4096 -nodes -keyout hostname.fqdn.key -out hostname.fqdn.csr
Generating a 4096 bit RSA private key
..................................................................................................++
..................................................++
writing new private key to 'hostname.fqdn.key'
-----
You are about to be asked to enter information that will be incorporated
into your certificate request.
What you are about to enter is what is called a Distinguished Name or a DN.
There are quite a few fields but you can leave some blank
For some fields there will be a default value,
If you enter '.', the field will be left blank.
-----
Country Name (2 letter code) [XX]:IT
State or Province Name (full name) []:BZ
Locality Name (eg, city) [Default City]:Bolzano
Organization Name (eg, company) [Default Company Ltd]:Company
Organizational Unit Name (eg, section) []:Monitoring
Common Name (eg, your name or your server's hostname) []:hostname.fqdn
Email Address []:mail@company.com

Please enter the following 'extra' attributes
to be sent with your certificate request
A challenge password []:
An optional company name []:

The hostname.fqdn.key file is your private key which should be kept secure and not given to anyone. The hostname.fqdn.csr file is what you should send to the Certificate Authority when requesting your SSL certificate (you may need to paste its contents into the web form of the CA).

Note

If you have a large number of systems to monitor, it makes sense to automate this process. For instance, you can keep multiple keys and CSRs manageable by using the host’s FQDN as part of the filename for both the private key and the CSR. And rather than manually answer the CSR questions one by one, you can create an external configuration file (usually called openssl.cnf) that is invoked with the -extfile parameter.

Relevant links:

Step 2: How to Create the Trusted Certificate

The certificate that the CA returns to you (let’s call it countersigned.crt) will be the (self-signed) certificate you sent them, countersigned with the CA’s key. You can then use this new trusted certificate in applications (e.g., browsers or the Icinga2 agent) that in turn trust the CA you used.

To be used with the Icinga2 agent, this certificate should be in PEM format. To check, you can look at the certificate file:

# cat countersigned.crt
-----BEGIN CERTIFICATE-----
MIID3jCCAsagAwIBAgICPnowDQYJKoZIhvcNAQELBQAwgaMxCzAJBgNVBAYTAi0t
...
-----END CERTIFICATE-----

If you do not see BEGIN CERTIFICATE, you will need to export the certificate to PEM format (you can use other tools besides openssl as long as they generate a certificate in PEM format):

# openssl x509 -in countersigned.crt -outform PEM -out countersigned.pem

Step 3: Install the Certificates on the Web Server

You must then rename your certificates and key and move them in the proper folder according to the settings in file /etc/httpd/conf.d/neteye-ssl.conf:

<VirtualHost _default_:443>
SSLEngine on
SSLCertificateFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/neteye_cert.crt
SSLCertificateKeyFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/private/neteye.key
SSLCertificateChainFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/neteye_chain.crt
SSLCACertificateFile /neteye/shared/httpd/conf/tls/certs/neteye_ca_bundle.crt
</VirtualHost>
  • SSLCertificateFile: Your trusted certificate countersigned by the CA, from countersigned.crt (or countersigned.pem if you exported it in .pem format) to neteye_cert.crt

  • SSLCertificateKeyFile: Your private key, renamed from hostname.fqdn.key to neteye.key

  • SSLCertificateChainFile: Certificate chain of the server certificate. If you don’t have a chain you can copy the file neteye_cert.crt naming it neteye_chain.crt

  • SSLCACertificateFile: The CA’s public certificate named neteye_ca_bundle.crt

Note

Do not change setting in file /etc/httpd/conf.d/neteye-ssl.conf because they will be overwritten during update procedure possibly causing NetEye outages.

Step 4: Restart Apache

Finally, restart the HTTPD service so it reloads the configuration files above with the new trusted certificates. If you are on a single-node instance use:

# systemctl restart httpd.service

If you are on a cluster use:

# pcs resource restart httpd

Authentication

User Authentication and Permissions

Configuring authentication for users and groups of users in NetEye requires the following steps:

  • Creating a Resource Backend describing how to connect to an authentication backend

  • Creating an Authentication Backend that describes how to retrieve user credentials

  • Creating one or more Roles, which are sets of permissions that can be applied to either users or user groups

  • Adding, editing or removing Users who must be authenticated

  • Adding, editing or removing User Groups, whose users have commonly defined permissions and restrictions, and receive joint notifications

Users and User Groups can also be imported from authentication backends (e.g., LDAP) but their properties cannot then be modified within NetEye. Roles can only be created locally.

Defining users and groups at Configuration > Authentication will only allow you to set permissions and restrictions for what users can do within NetEye. For other uses of users and groups, such as creating contacts for monitoring notifications, please consult the user guide for those individual modules.

Resource Backends

Resource backends (Configuration > Application > Resources) describe the interface details (e.g., host, port, login) required for connecting to an authentication server or resource. These can be an LDAP or SSH server, an internal or external SQL database, or even a local file. Fig. 7 shows the resource description for an LDAP server.

create LDAP backend

Fig. 7 Creating an LDAP resource backend

Authentication Backends

Authentication Backends (Configuration > Application > Authentication) tell NetEye how to access user credentials or user group membership from a given resource backend. Authentication backends can be sources such as LDAP, Active Directory, an SQL-compatible database, or a regular expression in the case of an external file resource. You can define multiple authentication backends, which NetEye will then consult in the order listed in the tables shown in Fig. 8. For user authentication, you can change the relative priority of the backends using the arrows.

list of authentication backend

Fig. 8 The User and User Group authentication backend list.

User and user group authorization backends can share the same resource backend if they are both stored in the same object with identical external connection details.

To create a new user authentication backend, click on the action Create a New User Backend and select the desired backend type as shown in Fig. 9. If you do not see the expected items in that dropdown menu, double check the configuration of your resource backends.

backend type selection

Fig. 9 Selecting the backend type for a new user backend.

Once selected, the form will expand to show the options available for the type chosen. You can now fill in the remaining values (shown in Fig. 7) that tell NetEye how to retrieve user credentials from that source. The official IcingaWeb2 documentation describes these fields in more detail.

create user backend

Fig. 10 Inserting user backend details.

The procedure for creating an authentication resource for user groups is very similar to that for users. Please consult the official IcingaWeb2 documentation on User Groups Authentication for further details.

create user group

Fig. 11 Inserting user group backend details.

Roles

Roles (Configuration > Authentication > Roles) are named sets of permissions and restrictions that make it easier to allow many similar users to carry out common tasks, or to assign permissions in sets if multiple users have overlapping needs for different modules. If you have multiple users or groups of users needing similar sets of permissions, assigning a single role is much faster than assigning a large number of permissions one at a time to multiple users.

As the Icinga 2 documentation explains, by default all actions are prohibited. Permissions granted by multiple roles are summed together, while multiple restrictions have a bit more complex behavior.

In general, permissions allow users to perform a certain set of actions. They are separated into hierarchical namespaces corresponding to the names of modules, where the * (wildcard) character can be used to designate all permissions within a given namespace. Restrictions instead are used limit information that can be viewed in forms, dashboards, reports, etc. and support the same filtering expressions used in monitoring.

Some examples of roles include:

  • A root role can give all permissions at once by enabling the Administrative Access setting.

  • Assigning users permissions per module such as:

    • Access to the Analytics module

    • Configuring elements in Director

    • Showing all business processes (see the example in Fig. 13)

  • Allowing operators to do only specific tasks like:

    • Allow configuration of notifications (director/notifications)

    • Allow processing commands for toggling active checks on host and service objects (monitoring/command/feature/object/active-checks)

    • Allow adding comments but not necessarily deleting them (monitoring/command/comment/add)

To create a new role, click on the action Create a New Role as shown in Fig. 12. You can also edit an existing role by clicking on the role’s Name in the table, and remove a role by clicking on the at the right side of that role’s row.

list of existing roles

Fig. 12 The list of existing roles.

Permissions can be granted on a per-module basis using the form at the bottom of the New Role panel as shown in:numref:figure-create-role. An incomplete list of permissions can be found in Icinga’s official documentation. For restrictions, you must enter the appropriate filtering expression. These expressions can reference defined variables such as user and group names and use regular expressions.

Note

Whenever you change permissions or restrictions for any module, you will need to log out of NetEye and then log back in before the new settings will take effect.

create new role

Fig. 13 Adding a new role with permissions and restrictions.

Users

A User (Configuration > Authentication > Users) in NetEye follows standard usage where a person is connected to the system via a user name, password, and set of permissions. If you choose a database as the authentication backend, then user properties can be directly edited in NetEye. If users are instead derived from another source, such as LDAP, then the user properties must be changed in those data sources, and you will only be able to change their roles and user groups.

To create a new user manually, click on the Add a New User action (Fig. 14). By convention, user names start with a lower case letter, while user groups begin with an upper case letter. If the user is defined in a database, you can change that user’s details by clicking on the user name and then on the Edit User action in the panel that appears to the right. You can also remove that user with the icon at the right in the Remove column.

If you have more than one user backend, you can choose one in the dropdown box at the top left. Because there are potentially a large number of users, the standard filtering and paging controls are available. If instead you want to view users imported from an external backend but you only see “icingaweb2” listed in the dropdown box, then you should check that you have properly created your user backend.

list of users in backend

Fig. 14 Figure 8: The list of users from the current user backend.

User Groups

User Groups, like Roles, allow you to save time by dynamically creating groups that together should receive the same permissions, restrictions, and monitoring notifications (Configuration > Authentication > User Groups).

manage groups of users

Fig. 15 Adding and removing groups of users.

If instead of seeing a list of user groups as in Fig. 15, you see the message “No backend found which is able to list user groups”, please make sure you have properly created your user group backend.

As with Users, you cannot modify groups that have been imported from a non-database backend. Otherwise you can add a new user group or remove an existing one (Fig. 15), add and remove the users in a given group (Fig. 16), and edit the group name using the edit icon.

manage user groups

Fig. 16 Adding users to and removing users from a group.

JWT Authentication Backend

In this section, we describe a custom authentication backend which enables authenticating users via JSON Web Tokens (JWT). JWT is an open industry standard defined in RFC 7519 that defines a compact and self-contained way for securely transmitting information between parties as a JSON object.

This backend can be used to authenticate users via an external entity (SSO) e.g. a centralized company login portal, outside of NetEye.

When the JWT authentication backend is enabled and the Authorization Header with the JWT token is included in the request, NetEye will validate the JWT token using the previously configured Public Key. If this is successful, the user defined in the token will be logged in with the provided username.

To configure the JWT Authentication backend, you need to add the JWT authentication backend in the /neteye/shared/icingaweb2/conf/authentication.ini. For example:

[jwt_example]
backend = "jwt"
hash_algorithm = "RS256"
pub_key = "jwt-example-pubkey.pem"
username_format = "${sub}"
expiration_field = "exp"
  • backend: is always jwt for this backend

  • hash_algorithm: an algorithm for the verification of the token to be chosen between RS256, RS384, and RS512

  • pub_key: the public key used to verify the JWT token

    • the public key must be located in /neteye/shared/icingaweb2/conf/modules/neteye/jwt-keys/

    • if you have a pem certificate, you may need to extract the public key with the following command:

      openssl x509 -pubkey -noout -in jwt-example-cert.pem > jwt-example-pubkey.pem
      
  • username_format: this variable can be used to configure the key(s) of the JWT payload to be used as the username of the user to be authenticated.

    • this support variable extraction from the JWT payload by using the following pattern: $key.

  • expiration_field: if you want to use a custom expiration field of the JWT payload. The default value is $exp.

Let’s suppose the following JWT token payload:

{
  "sub": "user1",
  "domain": "example.com"
  "exp": "0123456789"
}

I want to authenticate the user with the following username: “user1.example.com”, using the verification algorithm RSA Signature with SHA-256, and the public key /neteye/shared/icingaweb2/conf/modules/neteye/jwt-keys/my-jwt-pubkey.pem and the field expiration taken from exp the config looks like:

[jwt_example]
backend = "jwt"
hash_algorithm = "RS256"
pub_key = "my-jwt-pubkey.pem"
username_format = "${sub}.${domain}"
expiration_field = "exp"

The user authorization (e.g., mapping a user with one or more module’s permissions or restrictions) is managed as already described in the user authorization section.

Request Header Authentication Backend

In this section, we describe a custom authentication backend which enables authenticating users via a Request Header which contains the username of the user to log in. The prerequisite is that also a valid certificate is sent with the request for the header to be considered.

This backend can be used to authenticate users via an external (SSO) entity, like e.g., an F5 proxy.

When the Request Header authentication backend is enabled, NetEye searches for the X-REMOTE-USER HTTP header, only for the requests that are using a client certificate signed by one of the CAs trusted by httpd. If it finds it, then it checks if the certificate has an allowed Common Name. If everything looks fine, the user defined in the header will be logged in with the provided username.

The client certificate that must be used for the requests has to be provided by the manager of the CA used by httpd for the validation.

To configure the Request Header Authentication backend, you need to configure it in the file /neteye/shared/icingaweb2/conf/authentication.ini. For example:

[request_header_example]
backend = "request-header"
authorized_common_names = [ "..." ]
  • backend: is always request-header for this backend

  • authorized_common_names: a list of authorized common names for this backend

Let’s suppose to send the X-REMOTE-USER: user1.example.com header in the request, using a certificate with the neteye-sso.example.com Common Name, the config should look like:

[request_header_example]
backend = "request-header"
authorized_common_names = [ "neteye-sso.example.com", "other-allowed-cn" ]

The user authorization (e.g., mapping a user with one or more module’s permissions or restrictions) is managed as already described in the user authorization section.

Authorization

Single Page Application in NetEye

NetEye implements the possibility to work in Single Page Application mode, in order to meet the requirements of all those users that need to use a single NetEye module.

For all the users belonging to roles where the Single Page Application is configured, NetEye will redirect them immediately to the configured application right after the login. This means that the user will not have access to the full NetEye sidebar and dashboard, but will see only the applicationq he is allowed to use in fullscreen mode (i.e. without topbar and sidebar).

How to correctly setup a role for Single Page Application

The Single Page Application is managed as an additional restriction. To correctly set up a role for users that have access only to one of the NetEye modules you should:

  • set desired module permission as usual; for example if you want to grant user access to GLPI, you can follow the GLPI configuration guide <glpi-permissions>

  • set the correct redirect URL in the icingaweb2-module-neteye restriction section, where you will find the option single-page-application/redirect-url. Here, put the URL the user will be redirected to, upon login.

Note

If a user belongs to more than one role with Single Page Application enabled, he will see the NetEye interface as usual, this means that he will not be redirected to one of the module, but he will land to NetEye main dashboard, and he will be able to navigate through NetEye using the sidebar.

Module Permissions and Single Sign On Within NetEye

NetEye modular architecture allows to integrate third-party modules to increase its functionalities. However, accessing some module in NetEye may require a dedicated user, proper of the module. This situation therefore implies that to carry out some activities within NetEye different users are required: one for NetEye itself, one for the module.

In order to ease access to all third-party modules installed on NetEye 4, the Single Sign On (SSO) functionality has been implemented for a few modules and will be soon extended to other. This chapter describes how module permissions work in NetEye and then presents the SSO’s underlying logic.

Users, Roles, and Module Permissions

In this section we define and quickly outline the main properties and interaction of Users, roles, and permissions on modules.

  1. A User is an account that allows to login to NetEye and can have different Roles.

  2. A Role is a set of permissions on one or multiple modules.

  3. A Permission on a module is a rule that define the level of access to a module. Modules offer usually different levels of access; there are however two permissions common to every module:

    • Full Module Access grants administrative access to the module. In other words, every functionality of the module is available.

    • General Module Access permits only to see the module in the menu, but is a requirement to assign other permissions, if available for that module.

  4. A Restrictions allow to specify one or more subsets of either allowed actions, or accessible entities for the Role.

    Except these two permissions Full Module Access and General Module Access, each module can have extra permissions and restrictions. Those are defined in their respective modules and explained how to use them.

Note

If a user has more than one Role, the “merging” behaviour is up to each module

Single Sign On Architecture

The SSO mechanism implemented in NetEye allows one to log in to NetEye with a unique user, call it john-acme, and access all modules configured for SSO, provided the role associated to john-acme, has the corresponding permissions on those modules.

If john-acme has role with the permission to access the SSO-enabled module, when first time he tries to access module from neteye, a new profile for john-acme will be created automatically with defined permission and restriction in the module.

Resources Tuning

This section will contain a collection of suggested settings for various services running on NetEye.

MariaDB

MariaDB is started with default upstream settings. If the size of an installation requires it, resource usage of MariaDB can be adjusted to meet the higher requirements for performance. The following settings can be added to a file /neteye/shared/mysql/conf/my.cnf.d/custom.conf:

[mysqld]
innodb_buffer_pool_size=16G
tmp_table_size = 512M
max_heap_table_size = 512M
innodb_sort_buffer_size=16000000
sort_buffer_size=32M

Icingaweb2 GUI

Performance of the Icingaweb2 Graphical User Interface, can significantly be improved in high load environments by adding INDEX and updating the COLUMN definition of hostgroups and history related tables. To do this, execute the below queries manually:

ALTER TABLE icinga_hostgroups MODIFY hostgroup_object_id bigint(20) unsigned NOT NULL;
ALTER TABLE icinga_hostgroups ADD UNIQUE INDEX idx_hostgroups_hostgroup_object_id (hostgroup_object_id);
ALTER TABLE icinga_commenthistory ADD INDEX idx_icinga_commenthistory_entry_time (entry_time);
ALTER TABLE icinga_downtimehistory ADD INDEX idx_icinga_downtimehistory_entry_time (entry_time);
ALTER TABLE icinga_notifications ADD INDEX idx_icinga_notifications_start_time (start_time);
ALTER TABLE icinga_statehistory ADD INDEX idx_icinga_statehistory_state_time (state_time);

InfluxDB

InfluxDB is a time series database designed to handle high volumes of write and query loads in NetEye. If you want to learn more about InfluxDB you can refer to the official InfluxDB documentation

Migration of inmem (in-memory) indices to TSI (time-series)

From NetEye 4.14, InfluxDB will use the Time Series Index (TSI).

However, the existing setup will still use the TSM index for writing and fetching data until you perform the migration procedure, which consists of the following steps.

  1. Build TSI by running the influx_inspect buildtsi command:

    In a cluster environment, the below command must be executed on the node on which the InfluxDB resource is running:

    sudo -u influxdb influx_inspect buildtsi -datadir /neteye/shared/influxdb/data/data -waldir /neteye/shared/influxdb/data/wal -v
    

    Upon execution, the above command will build TSI for all the databases that exist in *

    Note

    If you want to build TSI only for a specific database then add the -database <database_name> parameter to the above command.

  2. Restart the influxdb service:

  • Single node:

    systemctl restart influxdb
    
  • Cluster environment:

    pcs resource restart influxdb
    

The official documentation of InfluxDB Upgrade contains more information about the inmem (in-memory) to TSI (time-series) migration process.

Log Analytics (Elastic Stack) Performance Tuning

This guide summarises the relevant configuration optimisations that allows to optimize Elastic Stack and boost the performance to optimise the use on Netye 4. Applying these suggestions proves very useful and is suggested, especially on larger Elastic deployments.

Elasticsearch JVM Optimization

In Elasticsearch, the default options for the JVM are specified in the /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/jvm.options and /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/jvm.options.d/01_neteye_jvm.options files. Please note how these files must not be modified, since they will be overwritten at each update.

If you would like to specify or override some options, a new .options file should be created in the /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/jvm.options.d/ folder, containing the desired options, one per line. Please note that the JVM processes the options files according to the lexicographic order.

For example, we can set the encoding used by Java for reading and saving files to UTF-8 by creating a /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/jvm.options.d/02_custom_jvm.options with the following content:

-Dfile.encoding=UTF-8

This file will be read after /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/jvm.options.d/01_neteye_jvm.options. For more information about the available JVM options and their syntax, please refer to the official documentation.

Elasticsearch Database Tuning

Swapping

Swapping is very bad for performance, for node stability, and should be avoided at any costs, because it can cause garbage collections to last for minutes instead of milliseconds, it can cause nodes to respond slowly, or even to disconnect from the cluster. In a resilient distributed system, it proves more effective to let the operating system kill the node than allowing swapping.

Moreover, Elasticsearch performs poorly when the system is swapping the memory to disk. Therefore, it is vitally important to the health of your node that none of the JVM is ever swapped out to disk. The following steps allow to achieve this goal.

  1. Configure swappiness. Ensure that the sysctl value vm.swappiness is set to 1. This reduces the kernel’s tendency to swap and should not lead to swapping under normal circumstances, while still allowing the whole system to swap in emergency conditions. Execute the following commands on each Elastic Node and made changes persistent:

    sysctl vm.swappiness=1
    echo "vm.swappiness=1" > /etc/sysctl.d/zzz-swappiness.conf
    sysctl -p
    
  2. Memory locking. Another best practice on Elastic nodes is use mlockall option, to try to lock the process address space into RAM, preventing any Elasticsearch memory from being swapped out. Set the bootstrap.memory_lock setting to true, so Elasticsearch will lock the process address space into RAM, preventing any portion of memory used by Elasticsearch from being swapped out.

    1. Uncomment or add this line to the /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/elasticsearch.yml file:

      bootstrap.memory_lock: true
      
    2. Edit limit of system resources on Service section creating the new file /etc/systemd/system/elasticsearch.service.d/neteye-limits.conf with the following content:

      [Service]     LimitMEMLOCK=infinity
      
    3. Restart resources:

      systemctl daemon-reload     systemctl restart elasticsearch
      
    4. After starting Elasticsearch, you can see whether this setting was applied successfully by checking the value of mlockall in the output from this request:

      sh /usr/share/neteye/elasticsearch/scripts/es_curl.sh -XGET 'https://elasticsearch.neteyelocal:9200/_nodes?filter_path=**.mlockall&pretty'``
      

Increase file descriptor

Check if the amount of file descriptor suffices by using the command lsof -p <elastic-pid> | wc -l on each nodes. By default the setting on Neteye is 65,535.

To increase the default value this create a file in /etc/systemd/system/elasticsearch.service.d/neteye-open-file-limit.conf with content such as:

[Service]
LimitNOFILE=100000

For more information, see the official documentation

DNS cache settings

By default, Elasticsearch runs with a security manager in place, which implies that the JVM defaults to caching positive hostname resolutions indefinitely and defaults to caching negative hostname resolutions for ten seconds. Elasticsearch overrides this behavior with default values to cache positive lookups for 60 seconds, and to cache negative lookups for 10 seconds.

These values should be suitable for most environments, including environments where DNS resolutions vary with time. If not, you can edit the values es.networkaddress.cache.ttl and es.networkaddress.cache.negative.ttl in the JVM options /neteye/local/elasticsearch/conf/jvm.options.

SIEM Additional Tuning (X-Pack)

Encrypt sensitive data check

If you use Watcher and have chosen to encrypt sensitive data (by setting xpack.watcher.encrypt_sensitive_data to true), you must also place a key in the secure settings store.

To pass this bootstrap check, you must set the xpack.watcher.encryption_key on each node in the cluster. For more information, see the official documentation.

Kibana Configuration tuning

There are same interesting tuning that could be done also on Kibana settings to improve performance on production.

For more information, see the official documentation.

Require Content Security Policy (CSP)

Kibana uses a Content Security Policy to help prevent the browser from allowing unsafe scripting, but older browsers will silently ignore this policy. If your organization does not need to support Internet Explorer 11 or much older versions of our other supported browsers, we recommend that you enable Kibana’s strict mode for content security policy, which will block access to Kibana for any browser that does not enforce even a rudimentary set of CSP protections.

To do this, set csp.strict to true in file /neteye/shared/kibana/conf/kibana.yml.

Memory

Kibana has a default maximum memory limit of 1.4 GB, and in most cases, we recommend leaving this setting to its default value. However, in some scenarios, such as large reporting jobs, it may make sense to tweak limits to meet more specific requirements.

You can modify this limit by setting --max-old-space-size in the NODE_OPTIONS environment variable. In Neteye this can be configured creating a file /etc/systemd/system/kibana-logmanager.service.d/memory.conf containing a limit in MB such as:

[Service]
NODE_OPTIONS="--max-old-space-size=2048"

For more information, see the official documentation.

User Customization

The Kibana environment file /neteye/shared/kibana/conf/sysconfig/kibana contains some options used by the Kibana service. Please note how this file must not be modified, since it will be overwritten at each update.

The dedicated file /neteye/shared/kibana/conf/sysconfig/kibana-user-customization can be used to specify or override one or more Kibana environment variables.

How to Enable Load Balancing For Logstash

Warning

This functionality is in beta stage and may be subject to changes. Beta features may break during minor upgrades and their quality is not ensured by regression testing.

The load balancing feature for logstash exploits NGINX ability to act as a reverse proxy and distribute incoming (logstash) connections among all nodes in the cluster. In this way, logstash will no longer be a cluster resource anymore, but a standalone service running on each node of the cluster.

Note however, that if you enable this feature, you will lose the ability to sign the log files. This happens because with this setup, logmanager has access only to the log files that are present on file systems mounted on the node where it is running.

Indeed, rsyslog can not take advantage of the load balancing feature, therefore only the logs on the node on which logmanager is running will be signed.

In the case of Beat, log files will be sent through the load balancer and therefore they will not be signed.

This how-to will guide you in setting up load balancing for logstash. In a nutshell, you need first to disable the logstash cluster resource, then to modify or to add logstash and NGINX configurations, and finally to keep the logstash configuration in sync on all nodes.

More in details, this are the steps:

  1. Permanently disable the cluster resource for logstash: run pcs resource disable logstash

  2. Create a local service of logstash on each node in the cluster, by following these steps:

    1. The configuration files will be stored in /neteye/local/logstash/conf, so copy them over from /neteye/shared/logstash/conf

      1. Fix all the paths into the conf files:

        find /neteye/local/logstash/conf -type f -exec sed -i 's/shared/local/g' "{}" \;
        
    2. Edit both the /neteye/shared/logstash/conf/sysconfig/logstash and /neteye/local/logstash/conf/sysconfig/logstash files and add to them the following lines:

      LS_SETTINGS_DIR="/neteye/local/logstash/conf/"   OPTIONS="--config.reload.automatic"
      
    3. Add the host directive in /neteye/local/logstash/conf/conf.d/0_i03_agent_beats.input (use the cluster internal network IP): host => “192.168.xxx.xxx”

    4. Create a new logstash service (call it e.g., logstash-local.service) with the following content:

      [Unit]
      Description=logstash local
      
      [Service]
      Type=simple
      User=logstash
      Group=logstash
      EnvironmentFile=-/etc/default/logstash
      EnvironmentFile=-/neteye/local/logstash/conf/sysconfig/logstash
      ExecStartPre=/usr/share/logstash/bin/generate-config.sh
      ExecStart=/usr/share/logstash/bin/logstash "--path.settings" "/neteye/local/logstash/conf/" $OPTIONS Restart=always
      WorkingDirectory=/
      Nice=19
      LimitNOFILE=16384
      
      [Install]
      WantedBy=multi-user.target
      
    5. Add the service into the neteye cluster local systemd targets. You can refer to the Cluster Technology and Architecture chapter of the user guide for more information.

    6. Edit file /etc/hosts to point the host logstash.neteyelocal to the cluster IP.

  3. Add the NGINX load-balancing configuration in a file called logstash-loadbalanced.j2 The name is very imporant because it will be used by neteye_secure_install to setup the correct mapping between the logstash service and NGINX. The file needs to have the following content. Please, pay special attention in copying the whole snippet AS-IS, especially the three-line of the for cycle, because it is essential in configuring NGINX on all the cluster nodes:

    upstream logstash\_ingest {
       {% for node in nodes %}
         server {{ hostvars[node].internal\_node\_addr }}:5044;
       {% endfor %}
    }
    
     server {
       listen logstash.neteyelocal:5044;
       proxy_pass logstash_ingest;
     }
    
  4. Remember that the logstash standalone configuration must be kept in sync on all nodes, therefore the /neteye/local/logstash/conf/ directory must have the same content on all nodes. To achieve this goal you can for example set up a cron job that uses rsync to maintain the synchronisation.

  5. Run neteye_secure_install on the node where the NGINX resource is running

  6. Start the local logstash service on every node: systemctl start logstash-local on every node