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NAME
    Monitor::Simple - Simple monitoring of applications and services

VERSION
    version 0.2.5

SYNOPSIS
       # check services defined in 'my.cfg' and report to the STDOUT
       use Monitor::Simple;
       my $args = { config_file => 'my.cfg' };
       Monitor::Simple->check_services ($args);

       It displays something like this:

       DATE                           SERVICE           STATUS  MESSAGE
       Tue Sep 20 12:15:00 2011       Memory Check           1  Memory WARNING - 70.7% (1064960 kB) used
       Tue Sep 20 12:15:01 2011       NCBI PubMed page       0  OK

       --- or using a ready-to-use script:

       smonitor -cfg my.cfg

DESCRIPTION
    The Monitor::Simple allows simple monitoring of applications and
    services of your IT infrastructure. There are many such tools, some of
    them very complex and sophisticated. For example, one widely used is
    *Nagios* (<http://www.nagios.org/>). The *Monitor::Simple* does not aim,
    as its name indicates, for all features provided by those tools. It
    allows, however, to check whether your applications and services are
    running correctly. Its simple command-line interface can be used in cron
    jobs and reports can be viewed as a single HTML or text page.

    Regarding what it checks, it uses the same concept as *Nagios*: all
    checking is done by plugins, standalone scripts. And more to it: these
    plugins are fully compatible with the Nagios plugins. Which means that
    you either write your own plugins and use them either with
    *Monitor::Simple* or with *Nagios*, or you can use many existing Nagios
    plugins and use them directly with the *Monitor::Simple*. For example,
    the "Memory check" in the synopsis above is an unchanged Nagios plugin.

    Another concept used by *Monitor::Simple* are notifiers. These are again
    standalone scripts that are called whenever a service/application check
    is done and there is a notifier (or notifiers) defined to be used. The
    notification can be sent (or ignored) for every possible check result
    (errors, OK, all, etc.). Because these *notifiers* are just standalone
    scripts, one can easily wrapped many existing notifying tools (pagers,
    SMS senders, etc.); again, many of them are known to Nagios and similar
    programs.

    Finally, the last "concept" in *Monitor::Simple* is the configuration.
    The Monitor::Simple uses an XML configuration file defining what
    services should be checked, how to check them (meaning, what plugins to
    use) and whom to notify (meaning, what notifiers to use). You can use
    Monitor::Simple without any Perl programming, just by creating a
    configuration file (because only you know what services you wish to
    check) and use it with the provided ready-to-use script smonitor,
    providing that the few plugins and notifiers distributed with
    Monitor::Simple are good enough (at least as a starting point). The
    *smonitor* has its own documentation describing its command-line
    parameters in details:

       smonitor -man

    However, either way (using *smonitor* or embedding *Monitor::Simple*
    into your Perl code), you need to write a configuration file. So, let's
    start with it:

  Configuration file
    The simplest configuration file is:

       <smon/>

    It does nothing but also it does not complain. Even the root tag "smon"
    can be anything. But let's talk about more useful configuration files.
    They have a "general" section and a list of services to be checked in
    "services" section:

       <smon>
         <general></general>
         <services></services>
       </smon>

    However, it still does nothing. We need to add some services. Each
    service must have its "id" attribute and a "plugin" section where must
    be a "command" attribute:

       <smon>
         <services>
           <service id="service1">
             <plugin command="get-date.pl" />
           </service>
         </services>
       </smon>

    This configuration file, finally, does something. It invokes the plugin
    script "get-date.pl". The script only returns the current date (so it
    does not do much of the checking) but it returns it in compatible way
    with all other plugins (also with Nagios plugins). It is good for
    testing. Here is how it reports (assuming that we named our
    configuration file "my.cfg"):

       $> smonitor -cfg my.cfg
       DATE                           SERVICE   STATUS  MESSAGE
       Tue Sep 20 14:05:29 2011       service1       0  Tue Sep 20 14:05:29 2011

    The "service" tag can also have a "name" attribute for a more human
    readable display name and a "description" tag (used in the HTML format
    of reports). The "plugin" tag can also have (and usually it has) more
    sub-tags. They varies depending on the plugin's command. Generally, all
    additional arguments for a plugin can be defined by the "args" and "arg"
    tags. They simply specify what will get the plugin on its command-line.
    For example, the Nagios plugin for checking available memory accepts
    these arguments:

       <smon>
         <services>
           <service id="memory" name="Memory Check">
             <plugin command="check_mem.pl">
               <args>
                 <arg>-u</arg> <!-- check USED memory -->
                 <arg>-w</arg> <!-- -w PERCENT   Percent free/used when to warn -->
                 <arg>55</arg>
                 <arg>-c</arg> <!-- -c PERCENT   Percent free/used when critical -->
                 <arg>80</arg>
               </args>
             </plugin>
           </service>
         </services>
       </smon>

       $> smonitor -cfg my.cfg
       DATE                       SERVICE       STATUS  MESSAGE
       Tue Sep 20 14:23:09 2011   Memory Check       1  Memory WARNING - 66.5% (893584 kB) used

    Read more about specific tags for plugins distributed with
    *Monitor::Simple* in the "Plugins" section.

    Each service can also have one or more notifiers. Each notifier (see
    "Notifiers") is an external script defined by the "command" attribute.
    The script will be executed if the attribute "on" is satisfied. The "on"
    attribute contains a code or a comma-separated list of codes
    representing the result of the service check. If the result matches the
    attribute value (or, in case of a list, any of the values), the notifier
    is invoked. If you need to use the codes in your Perl programming, they
    are available as constants *Monitor::Simple::NOTIFY_**. The code values
    in the configuration files are these:

        NOTIFY_OK       => 'ok',
        NOTIFY_WARNING  => 'w',
        NOTIFY_CRITICAL => 'c',
        NOTIFY_UNKNOWN  => 'u',
        NOTIFY_ALL      => 'all',
        NOTIFY_ERRORS   => 'err',
        NOTIFY_NONE     => 'none',

    There are few other attributes and sub-tags for notifiers, such as
    *whom* the notification should be sent to. They depend on the type of
    the notifier - read more about specific attributes and tags for
    notifiers distributed with *Monitor::Simple* in the "Notifiers" section.
    Here is an example of a service with two configured notifiers:

       <smon>
         <services>
           <service id="date">
             <plugin command="get-date.pl" />
             <notifier command="send-email"   on="err" email="senger@localhost" />
             <notifier command="copy-to-file" on="all">
               <args>
                 <arg>-file</arg> <arg>report.txt</arg>
               </args>
             </notifier>
           </service>
         </services>
       </smon>

    Each notifier can also have an attribute "format" specifying the format
    of the notification. The formats are "tsv" (TAB-separated values),
    "html" and "human" (plain text). But read about pitfalls of some of
    these formats in the "Notifiers" section.

    Finally, the notifiers can be also specified in the "general" section of
    the configuration file. These notifiers are then used for every service
    (additionally to the notifiers defined in individual services):

       <smon>
         <general>
           <notifier command="copy-to-file" on="all" format="tsv">
             <args>
               <arg>-file</arg> <arg>report.tsv</arg>
             </args>
           </notifier>
         </general>
         ...
       </smon>

    Sometimes, you have a service for which you wish to exclude (to ignore)
    the general notifiers (those defined in the "general" tag). In such case
    use the "ignore-general-notifiers" tag:

       <service id="ping-git" name="Ping Git Repository">
         <ignore-general-notifiers />
         <plugin command="check-ping">
           <args>
              ...
           </args>
         </plugin>
       </service>

    For exploring configuration, the *Monitor::Simple* distribution has
    directory Monitor/Simple/configs with few examples of configuration
    files.

  Plugins
    The plugins are external scripts that are invoked to do the real service
    checking. Each service has its plugin defined in the configuration file:

       <service id="service1">
          <plugin command="check-my-service.pl" />
       </service>

    The plugins usually take some parameters - which are also specified in
    the configuration files (examples below).

    Because plugins are just external scripts they can be anywhere on your
    machine. For such cases, you can use the full (absolute) path in the
    "command" attribute of the plugin. But usually, all (or most) plugins
    are in a single directory which you can specify in the "general" section
    of the configuration file:

       <general>
          <plugins-dir>/some/directory/on/my/computer</plugins-dir>
       </general>

    Default location for all plugins is a directory "plugins" in the
    directory where sub-modules of Monitor::Simple are installed. Which
    means "...somewhere/Monitor/Simple/plugins/".

    There are several rather general plugins distributed with the
    *Monitor::Simple*:

   Plugin: check-url.pl
    A general plugin for checking availability of a single URL, using the
    *HTTP HEAD* method. You can use this plugin to check if the URL of your
    service or application is not broken, or/and if it returns within a
    specified timeout period. The configuration is the following:

       <plugin command="check-url.pl">
         <head-test>
           <url>http://you.server.org/home/applications.php</url>
           <timeout>5</timeout>
         </head-test>
         ... more <head-test>s can be here...
       </plugin>

    The "url" tag is mandatory, the "timeout" tag is only optional. There
    may be more "head-test" sections if you wish to check more URLs by the
    same plugin call.

    The plugin script is very simple; all the work is actually done by the
    method "Monitor::Simple::UserAgent->head_or_exit()".

   Plugin: check-post.pl
    This is a slightly generalized check-url.pl plugin. It can do also the
    "head-test"s (as the "check-url.pl" does) but its main purpose is to
    send data to the service using the *HTTP POST* method. It allows you to
    check whether your service returns expected data. The full configuration
    is the following:

       <plugin command="check-post.pl">
         <head-test>
           <url>...</url>
         </head-test>
         <post-test>
           <timeout>5</timeout>
           <url>...</url>
           <data><![CDATA[name=brca1&namespace=geneid&format=html]]></data>
           <response>
             <content-type>text/json</content-type>
             <contains>BRCA1</contains>
           </response>
         </post-test>
         <post-test>
           <url></url>
           <data><![CDATA[namespace=geneid&action=table]]></data>
           <response>
             <content-type>text/json</content-type>
             <contains>Alternate_name</contains>
             <contains>Gene_Symbol</contains>
             <equal>...</equal>
           </response>
         </post-test>
       </plugin>

    At least one "post-test" section is mandatory, and it has to have a
    "url" and "data". The response can be checked for the returned *HTTP
    Content type* or for text anywhere within the response body, or for
    equality (after trimming heading and trailing white-spaces). More
    "contains" tags means that all such texts must be found in the response
    body.

    The plugin script is also simple; all the work is actually done by the
    method "Monitor::Simple::UserAgent->post_or_exit()".

   Plugin: check-get.pl
    This is very similar to check-post.pl plugin, except it uses *HTTP GET*
    method. And, therefore, it does not use "data" tag in the configuration
    file (because all input data are already part of the "url" tag). It does
    not use *HTTP HEAD* method.

    Again, it allows you to check whether your service returns expected
    data. The full configuration is the following:

       <plugin command="check-get.pl">
         <get-test>
           <timeout>5</timeout>
           <url>![CDATA[...]]></url>
           <response>
             <content-type>text/json</content-type>
             <contains>...</contains>
             <equal>...</equal>
           </response>
         </get-test>
         <get-test>
            ...
         </get-test>
       </plugin>

    At least one "get-test" section is mandatory, and it has to have a
    "url". The response can be checked for the returned *HTTP Content type*
    or for text anywhere within the response body, or for equality (after
    trimming heading and trailing white-spaces). More "contains" tags means
    that all such texts must be found in the response body.

    The plugin script is also simple; all the work is actually done by the
    method "Monitor::Simple::UserAgent->get_or_exit()".

   Plugin: check-prg.pl
    A general plugin that executes any command-line program with the given
    arguments and then it reports warning if there was any STDERR and it
    checks the STDOUT for expected values. The full configuration is the
    following:

       <plugin command="check-prg.pl">
         <prg-test>
           <program>...</program>
           <timeout>...</timeout>
           <args>
             <arg>...</arg>
             <arg>...</arg>
           </args>
           <stdout>
             <contains>...</contains>
             <contains>...</contains>
           </stdout>
         </prg-test>
         <prg-test>
           <program>...</program>
           <timeout>...</timeout>
           <args>
             <arg>...</arg>
           </args>
           <stdout>
             <is-integer/>
           </stdout>
         </prg-test>
       </plugin>

    At least one "prg-test" section is mandatory, and it has to have a
    "program" tag (a program that will be invoked). The STDOUT of the
    invoked program can be checked that it contains given text. More
    "contains" tags means that all such texts must be present. It can also
    make a test that the produced STDOUT is nothing than white-spaces and an
    integer.

    The "timeout" tag may specify how many seconds to wait for the program
    completion before it reports timeout warning.

    Again, the plugin script is simple; all the work is actually done by the
    method "Monitor::Simple::Utils->exec_or_exit()".

  Creating your own plugins
    Plugins are executed from inside of the main method
    "Monitor::Simple->check_services()". The method creates one of the two
    possible types of command-line. One is used for native *Monitor::Simple*
    plugins. This type is created if there are no "arg" tags in the plugin
    configuration:

       <plugin-command> -service <id>              \
                        -cfg <config-file>         \
                        -logfile <logfile>         \
                        -loglevel <level>          \
                        -logformat <format>

    The "service id" identifies what service this plugin was invoked for.
    The "-cfg config-file" contains a filename with the XML configuration.
    From this file, you can get the full configuration by using:

       my $config = Monitor::Simple::Config->get_config ($config_file);

    All command-line arguments can be parsed by calling
    "Monitor::Simple::Utils->parse_plugin_args()". Therefore, the
    *Monitor::Simple* native plugin scripts usually start with:

       use Monitor::Simple;
       use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);

       # read command-line arguments and configuration
       my ($config_file, $service_id) = Monitor::Simple::Utils->parse_plugin_args ('', @ARGV);
       LOGDIE ("Unknown service (missing parameter '-service <id>')\n")
          unless $service_id;
       my $config = Monitor::Simple::Config->get_config ($config_file);

    As you see in this example, you can use the logging system by calling
    "Log::Log4perl" so-called "easy" methods: DEBUG(), INFO(), WARN(),
    ERROR(), LOGDIE() and LOGWARN(), without doing anything with the
    log-related arguments.

    If the plugin configuration contains "arg" tags, then the plugin will be
    invoked with the command-line exactly as defined by these "args" tags.
    This is how to use plugins written without *Monitor::Simple* support. An
    example is the Nagios plugin "check-mem.pl". Its configuration looks
    like this:

       <plugin command="check_mem.pl">
          <args>
             <arg>-u</arg>
             <arg>-w</arg> <arg>75</arg>
             <arg>-c</arg> <arg>80</arg>
          </args>
       </plugin>

    and it will be called with this command-line:

       check_mem.pl -u -w 75 -c 80

    Regarding the results, each plugin is expected to comply with the Nagios
    plugins standard <http://nagios.sourceforge.net/docs/3_0/pluginapi.html>
    which means:

    Exit code
        The exit code should be zero for success and 1, 2 or 3 when the
        checking failed:

           Exit code   Service State
              0           OK
              1           WARNING
              2           CRITICAL
              3           UNKNOWN

        In your programming you may use the predefined constants in
        *Monitor::Simple* module:

           use constant {
              RETURN_OK       => 0,
              RETURN_WARNING  => 1,
              RETURN_CRITICAL => 2,
              RETURN_UNKNOWN  => 3,
           }

    STDOUT
        The output can be a single line of text (which is mandatory), or it
        can be more lines (they are optional).

           TEXT OUTPUT
           LONG TEXT LINE 1
           LONG TEXT LINE 2
           ...
           LONG TEXT LINE N

        Additionally, the first and the last line can be extended by
        "performance data" separated by a bar ("|") character:

           TEXT OUTPUT | OPTIONAL PERFDATA
           LONG TEXT LINE 1
           LONG TEXT LINE 2
           ...
           LONG TEXT LINE N | PERFDATA LINE 2
           PERFDATA LINE 3
           ...
           PERFDATA LINE N

        The *Monitor::Simple* does not do anything special with the
        performance data, it just leaves them in the report. But you should
        be aware of it and not to use bar characters in the output of your
        plugins.

    The *Monitor::Simple* provides few methods that can be useful in your
    plugins. For example, for checking availability of a URL or for checking
    contents of a checked web page. See the distributed plugins (and their
    documentation above) for more details.

  Notifiers
    The notifiers are external scripts that are called whenever a need for a
    notification occurs. The notifiers can be specified for individual
    services, or for all services (see examples in "Configuration file").

    Each notifier is used independently on other notifiers; there is no
    mechanism collecting them together and sending all notifications in one
    go. If you need a "collective report" (which you often do) for all
    services, use rather STDOUT produced by the
    "Monitor::Simple->check_services()" method. This method can be used in a
    program (do not forget the ready-to-use such program "smonitor") that is
    called in a cron job - and the cron job itself takes care about sending
    an email with the full result, without any notifier. Sending email
    notifications by using notifiers is more fine-grained: with the
    notifiers you can send notifications to different email addresses for
    each service or a group of services.

    Because of the independence of notifiers, some notification formats may
    be less convenient. You can use without problems the "tsv"
    (TAB-separated values) format because this format does not produce any
    header or footer lines. All such notifications can be, therefore,
    conveniently, appended to a single file keeping the full history of all
    checking. Other formats, such as "html", are better used for
    not-so-frequent notifications, such as sending an email if a service
    failed.

    A notifier is invoked only if the result of a service check matches the
    code in the "on" attribute of this notifier (again, see the
    "Configuration file").

    Because notifiers are just external scripts they can be anywhere on your
    machine. For such cases, you can use the full (absolute) path in the
    "command" attribute of the notifier. But usually, all (or most)
    notifiers are in a single directory which you can specify in the
    "general" section of the configuration file:

       <general>
          <notifiers-dir>/some/directory/on/my/computer</notifiers-dir>
       </general>

    Default location for all notifiers is a directory "notifiers" in the
    directory where sub-modules of *Monitor::Simple* are installed. Which
    means "...somewhere/Monitor/Simple/notifiers/". This is also the place
    where you can find the ready-to-use notifiers coming with the
    *Monitor::Simple* distribution. Each of them has slightly different
    needs for the configuration:

   Notifier: copy-to-file
    A notifier appending its notification to a file. Here is how to
    configure this notifier (either within the "service" tag or within the
    "general" tag):

       <notifier command="copy-to-file" on="all" format="tsv">
          <args>
             <arg>-file</arg>  <arg>report.tsv</arg>
             <arg>-login</arg> <arg>senger@allele</arg>
          </args>
       </notifier>

    The mandatory "-file" argument specifies the name of a file (usually
    with the full path) where the notification will be appended. The
    argument "-login" allows to use a file on a remote machine, providing
    the SSH login name. This notifier does not have any provision for
    specifying a password. Therefore, the user from the "-login" argument
    must have its public key already installed on the remote machine.

   Notifier: send-email
    A notifier sending notification to one or more email addresses. Be aware
    that this could work only if your computer can send emails. If not check
    the following notifier "send-email-via-ssh".

    Configuration of this notifier uses either attribute "email" or
    "email-group" or both. Each of this attributes can have one or more,
    comma-separated, values. Examples are:

       <notifier command="send-email" on="err" email="senger@localhost" />
       <notifier command="send-email" on="err" email="senger@localhost,kim@localhost" />
       <notifier command="send-email" on="err" email-group="watch-dogs" />
       <notifier command="send-email" on="err" email-group="watch-dogs, others" />
       <notifier command="send-email" on="err" email-group="secrets" email="senger@localhost"/>

    If you use the "email-group" attribute, you need also to tell what
    addresses this group contains. It is done in the "general" section. For
    example:

       <general>
          <email-group id="others">
             <email>jitka@localhost</email>
             <email>guest@localhost</email>
          </email-group>
          <email-group id="secrets">
             <email>top.secret@elsewhere.com</email>
          </email-group>
       </general>

   Notifier: send-email-via-ssh
    This notifier does the same as the previous *send-email* except that it
    first logs-in to a remote machine using SSH and executes the "mail"
    command there. It is useful when your computer cannot directly send
    emails - but it requires that you have an SSH account somewhere and that
    machine has your SSH public key installed (there is no provision for
    specifying a password in this notifier configuration).

    The configuration attributes for this notifier are the same as for
    "send-email" (except the different name of the command) and additionally
    it has the "-login" argument:

       <notifier command="send-email-via-ssh" on="err" email="martin.senger@gmail.com">
          <args>
             <arg>-login</arg>
             <arg>senger@open-bio.org</arg>
          </args>
       </notifier>

  Creating your own notifiers
    The notifiers are invoked - whenever necessary - from inside of the main
    method "Monitor::Simple->check_services()". The method creates the
    following command-line:

       <notifier-command> -service <id>              \
                          -msg <file>                \
                          -emails email1 [email2...] \
                          -logfile <logfile>         \
                          -loglevel <level>          \
                          -logformat <format>        \
                          <additional arguments>

    where additional arguments comes from the configuration file from the
    "arg" tags specified for this notifier. The "service id" identifies what
    service this notifier was invoked for. The "-msg file" is a filename
    with already formatted notification message. Read this file but do not
    destroy it - other notifiers may want to read it, too. The "-emails..."
    may not be relevant to your notifier but if there were attributes
    "email" and/or "email-group" in the notifier configuration they are
    passed here.

    All basic (not additional) arguments can be parsed by calling
    "Monitor::Simple::Utils->parse_notifier_args()". Therefore, the notifier
    script usually starts with:

       use Monitor::Simple;
       use Log::Log4perl qw(:easy);

       # read command-line arguments
       my ($service_id, $msgfile, $emails) = Monitor::Simple::Utils->parse_notifier_args (\@ARGV);

    You can continue by parsing the additional arguments (if any). Here is
    an example from "send-email-via-ssh" notifier:

       # read more command-line arguments specific for this notifier
       my ($login_name);
       Getopt::Long::Configure ('no_ignore_case', 'pass_through');
       GetOptionsFromArray (\@ARGV,
                            'login=s' => \$login_name,
                           );
       LOGDIE ("Missing parameter '-login' with hostname or user\@hostname\n")
               unless $login_name;

    And then you do whatever your notifier needs to do. You can use the
    logging system by calling "Log::Log4perl" so-called "easy" methods:
    DEBUG(), INFO(), WARN(), ERROR(), LOGDIE() and LOGWARN().

MODULES and METHODS
    The best way to explore modules, methods and how to use them is to look
    the *smonitor* script. Here is a short summary what methods are
    available. The main focus is on methods helping to write your own
    plugins and notifiers.

  Monitor::Simple
    This module is a wrapper for all other modules and has only one, but
    important, method (it is a class method):

   check_services ($args)
    It loops over all services and checks them (by invoking their plugins).
    If necessary, it invokes their notifiers. And it produces a summary
    report about all checks. The $args is a hashref with the following keys
    and values:

    config_file -> $file
        A mandatory argument. It specifies what configuration to use.

    outputter => an instance of *Monitor::Simple::Output*
        This outputter will be responsible for creating the summary report
        of all checks. If not given, a default outputter is used.

    filter => hashref or arrayref or scalar
        If any filter given then it contains IDs of services that will be
        checked (and only them will be checked). Of course, it can still be
        only services that are defined in the configuration file.

        The scalar is use if you need to check only one service. The
        arrayref points to a list of service IDs. The hashref has service
        IDs as keys (values are ignored).

    nonotif => boolean
        If set to true all notifications (for all services) will be
        disabled. Default is false.

    npp => integer
        Maximum number of service checks done in parallel. Default is 10.

  Monitor::Simple::Config
    This module helps to find and explore the configuration file (that
    defines what should be monitored). There are no instances of this module
    (no "new" or similar method), all methods are class methods (but still
    methods - so use "Monitor::Simple::Config->" to call them).

   resolve_config_file ($filename)
    It tries to locate given $filename and return its full path:

    a) as it is - if such file exists
    b) as $ENV{MONITOR_SIMPLE_CFG_DIR}/$filename
    c) in the directory where the main invoker (e.g. your program) is
    located
    d) in one of the @INC directories
    e) return undef

   get_config ([$filename])
    It reads configuration from a file and returns it as a hashref. The
    configuration is looked for in the given $filename or in a default
    configuration file name. The path to both given and default
    configuration file is resolved by rules defined in
    resolve_config_file(). The default configuration file name is in
    $Monitor::Simple::DEFAULT_CONFIG_FILE.

   extract_service_config ($service_id, $config)
    Return a hashref with configuration for a given service (identified by
    its $service_id). If such configuration cannot be found, a warning is
    issued and undef is returned. The service configuration is looked for in
    the given hashref $config containing the full configuration (usually
    obtained by get_config()).

  Monitor::Simple::UserAgent
    This module deals with the Web communication. It uses *LWP::UserAgent*
    module to do the communication. It uses only class methods.

   head_or_exit ($service_id, $config)
    It makes the *HTTP HEAD* test described in check_url.pl plugin. If
    everything okay it just returns. Otherwise, it exits with the
    Nagios-compliant reporting (see more about it in report_and_exit()).

    This method uses "head-test" portion of this service configuration.

   post_or_exit ($service_id, $config)
    It makes the *HTTP POST* test described in check_post.pl plugin. If
    everything okay it just returns. Otherwise, it exits with the
    Nagios-compliant reporting (see more about it in report_and_exit()).

    This method uses "post-test" portion of this service configuration.

  Monitor::Simple::Output
    This module is responsible for outputting the results of service checks
    in several different formats. It is also used by notifiers to format
    their notification messages. The main method is "out()" that prints the
    given message in the given format to the given target, both as defined
    in the "new()" constructor method.

   new (%args)
    It creates an instance (an *outputter*) with the given arguments. The
    recognized keys are:

    config => $config
        A configuration - the only mandatory argument.

    outfile => $file
        A destination of the messages.

    onlyerr => 1 | 0
        It influences where the method "out()" prints its messages. If
        "onlyerr" is set to 1 (default is 0) only the erroneous messages
        will be sent to STDOUT. Here are various combinations of "outfile"
        and "onlyerr" arguments:

           outfile    onlyerr    what will be done
           --------------------------------------------
           yes        no         all output to file

           yes        yes        all output to file
                                 + errors also on STDOUT

           no         no         all output to STDOUT

           no         yes        only errors to STDOUT
           ---------------------------------------------

    format => tsv | human | html
        How to format output messages. Default is "human". The list of
        actually supported formats can be obtained by calling a class method
        "Monitor::Simple::Output->list_formats()".

    cssurl => $url
        Used only for "html" format . It points to a URL with the
        CSS-stylesheet for the output. By default, it uses stylesheet
        similar to the one shown in the distribution in file
        Monitor/Simple/configs/monitor-default.css.

   list_formats
    A class method. It returns a hashref with a list of actually supported
    formats (keys) and their description (values). At the time of writing
    this document, it returns:

       { tsv    => 'TAB-separated (good for machines)',
         human  => 'Easier readable by humans',
         html   => 'Formatted as an HTML document' }

   out ($service_id, $code, $message)
    It formats and outputs one message about a just finished service check
    (with an additional date field). $service_id defines what service is the
    report about, $code indicates what kind of message is being outputted
    (see $Monitor::Simple::RETURN* constants) and $msg is the real message.

    This method outputs one message, nothing before and nothing after it.
    Because some formats needs also a header and possible a footer, there
    are also methods "header" and "footer".

   header ([$header])
    It outputs a header line (in the format specified in the "new()"
    constructor). The content of the header is either taken from the $header
    argument or a default one is used.

   footer ([$footer])
    It outputs a footer line (in the format specified in the "new()"
    constructor). The content of the footer is either taken from the $footer
    argument or a default one is used.

  Monitor::Simple::Notifier
    This module is responsible for deciding whether a notification should be
    sent and for sending it. The main method is "notify()" that actually
    does first the decision if the notification should be sent and then
    sending it using its own "outputter", an instance of
    *Monitor::Simple::Output*.

   new (%args)
    It creates an instance (an *outputter*) with the given arguments. The
    recognized keys are:

    config => $config
        A configuration - the only mandatory argument. Actually, so far, the
        only argument.

   notify ($result)
    Given a $result of a service check, it makes all expected notifications
    (as defined in the $config given in the "new()" constructor). The
    $result is a hashref with this content:

       { service => $service_id,
         code    => $code,
         msg     => $msg }

  Monitor::Simple::Log
   log_init ($logging_options)
    It initiates logging (using the *Log::Log4perl* module).
    $logging_options is a hashref with the keys "level", "file" and "layout"
    (some or all keys may be missing). The level is a (case-insensitive)
    text acceptable by the method "Log::Log4perl::Level::to_priority()":
    "debug", "info", "warn", "error" or "fatal". The file is where the log
    will be created to. Value STDOUT is also accepted. Finally, the layout
    is a format of the log messages as defined by in Log::Log4Perl; default
    value being

       %d (%r) %p> %m%n

    When writing a plugin or a notifier, this method is called for you
    automatically from the parse_plugin_args() or parse_notifier_args().

   get_logging_options
    It returns currently used logging options - in the same format as the
    same options are define in log_init().

  Monitor::Simple::Utils
    This module is a container for various methods that did not fit
    elsewhere. There are no instances of this module (no "new" or similar
    method), all methods are class methods (but still methods - so use
    "Monitor::Simple::Util->" to call them).

   parse_plugin_args ($default_service_id, @args)
    It reads plugin's command-line arguments @args. It returns two-element
    array with the configuration file name (may be undef) and service ID (if
    the service id is found in @args, it uses $default_service_id). It uses
    logging options (if any found in @args) to set the logging system. Read
    about possible arguments in @args in "Plugins".

   report_and_exit ($service_id, $config, $exit_code, $return_msg)
    It prints $return_msg on the STDOUT and exits with the $exit_code.
    $config is not used (at least now) and can be undef. This method is
    usually the last call in your plugin.

   exec_or_exit ($service_id, $config)
    It executes an external program with the given arguments and
    (optionally) checks its STDOUT for the given content. If everything okay
    it just returns. Otherwise, it exits with the Nagios-compliant reporting
    (see more about it in report_and_exit()).

    This method uses "prg-test" portion of this service configuration.

   parse_notifier_args ($args)
    It reads plugin's command-line arguments $args (an arrayref - so the
    recognized arguments can be removed from the provided array). It returns
    a three-element array with a service ID, a file name with the
    notification message and a reference to an array with all email
    addresses (may be empty for some notifiers). It uses logging options (if
    any found in $args) to set the logging system. Read about possible
    arguments in $args in "Notifiers".

AUTHOR
    Martin Senger, "<martin.senger at gmail.com>"

BUGS
    Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-monitor-simple at
    rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at
    <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Monitor-Simple>. I will
    be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on
    your bug as I make changes.

  Known bugs and limitations
    Locking remote files
        The *copy-to-file* notifier adds notification messages to a file on
        a remote machine (if it is configured to use SSH) and it does it
        without any concern about the potential need of exclusively locking
        that file (it may be accessed in the same time by many notifiers).
        It is this way because it uses program "cat" which, as far as I
        know, does not do locking.

        Similarly, log files are not using any locking.

SUPPORT
    You can find documentation for this module with the perldoc command.

        perldoc Monitor::Simple

    You can also look for information at:

    *   RT: CPAN's request tracker

        <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/Bugs.html?Dist=Monitor-Simple>

    *   AnnoCPAN: Annotated CPAN documentation

        <http://annocpan.org/dist/Monitor-Simple>

    *   CPAN Ratings

        <http://cpanratings.perl.org/d/Monitor-Simple>

    *   Search CPAN

        <http://search.cpan.org/dist/Monitor-Simple/>

AUTHOR
    Martin Senger <martin.senger@gmail.com>

COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
    This software is copyright (c) 2012 by Martin Senger, CBRC-KAUST
    (Computational Biology Research Center - King Abdullah University of
    Science and Technology) All Rights Reserved.

    This is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under
    the same terms as the Perl 5 programming language system itself.