Tuesday, December 31, 2013

Simple way to integrate Nagios with Slack messaging

At work we recently switched messaging applications from Skype to a new platform called Slack. Slack just launched in August 2013. I have read it is similar to Campfire but I've never used that platform so I can't really comment on that but it is much more useful than a basic chat client like Skype. With Slack you can share files, easily search message history for text or files and integrate with 3rd party applications. Plus it is private for just your team or company. Slack has quite a few preconfigured integrations plus the ability to create your own custom integrations. First we setup the Github integration which allows all of our commit messages to dump into a channel. Next we setup the Trello integration to dump card changes from our main board into another channel. Then I went to setup the Nagios integration and ran into problems. They have a prebuilt integration for Nagios but I could not get it to work. It would post alert messages into the channel but the messages contained no information:


I mucked with their provided perl script quite a bit but I simply could not get it to work. It just kept posting empty messages. Being impatient and a do-it-yourselfer I set about trying to find another way to accomplish this. I looked through the list of integrations and noticed that they had a custom one called Incoming WebHooks which is an easy way to get messages from external sources posted into Slack. The simplest way to utilize Incoming WebHooks is to use curl to post the message to Slack's API. I wrote a little bash script that provides a detailed Nagios alert, a link back to the Nagios web page and conditional emoji's! Each warning level (OK, WARNING, CRITICAL and UNKNOWN) has it's own emoji icon. Here are some example messages in my Slack client:


Here is my bash script that posts to Slack. I placed it in /usr/local/bin

Here are the Nagios config lines that are added to commands.cfg

And finally lines I added to contacts.cfg

I'm not sure why Slack's prebuilt Nagios integration didn't work for me but I really like what I came up with. No Perl modules to install and the only outside dependency is curl. It's also pretty easy to modify the info in the alert message by adding or removing NAGIOS_ env variables in the curl statement.