ansible-personal/roles/munin/templates/munin-node.conf.j2
Alan Orth f16b143eac
roles/munin: Update munin-node.conf template
We actually need to use /var/log/munin for munin-node on Debian
too, as that's what is created by the package manager during
installation.

Signed-off-by: Alan Orth <alan.orth@gmail.com>
2015-09-26 23:30:22 +03:00

72 lines
1.6 KiB
Django/Jinja

#
# Example config-file for munin-node
#
log_level 4
{% if ansible_os_family == "Debian" %}
log_file /var/log/munin/munin-node.log
{% else %}
log_file /var/log/munin-node/munin-node.log
{% endif %}
pid_file /var/run/munin/munin-node.pid
background 1
setsid 1
user root
group root
# This is the timeout for the whole transaction.
# Units are in sec. Default is 15 min
#
# global_timeout 900
# This is the timeout for each plugin.
# Units are in sec. Default is 1 min
#
# timeout 60
# Regexps for files to ignore
ignore_file [\#~]$
ignore_file DEADJOE$
ignore_file \.bak$
ignore_file %$
ignore_file \.dpkg-(tmp|new|old|dist)$
ignore_file \.rpm(save|new)$
ignore_file \.pod$
# Set this if the client doesn't report the correct hostname when
# telnetting to localhost, port 4949
#
host_name {{ inventory_hostname }}
# A list of addresses that are allowed to connect. This must be a
# regular expression, since Net::Server does not understand CIDR-style
# network notation unless the perl module Net::CIDR is installed. You
# may repeat the allow line as many times as you'd like
allow ^127\.0\.0\.1$
allow ^::1$
# If you have installed the Net::CIDR perl module, you can use one or more
# cidr_allow and cidr_deny address/mask patterns. A connecting client must
# match any cidr_allow, and not match any cidr_deny. Note that a netmask
# *must* be provided, even if it's /32
#
# Example:
#
# cidr_allow 127.0.0.1/32
# cidr_allow 192.0.2.0/24
# cidr_deny 192.0.2.42/32
{% if munin_master_host is defined %}
cidr_allow {{ munin_master_host }}
{% endif %}
# Which address to bind to;
host *
# host 127.0.0.1
# And which port
port 4949