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- MongoDB Agent Prerequisites
MongoDB Agent Prerequisites¶
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This section describes the requirements for the hosts that run the MongoDB Agent.
Hardware Requirements¶
Use 64-bit Chip Architectures¶
The MongoDB Agent must run on 64-bit architectures.
Provide Backup Host with Sufficient Resources¶
If you activate backup, all MongoDB Agent hosts require at least 2 CPU cores and 3 GB of RAM beyond basic platform requirements. Each backup job that the MongoDB Agent runs further impacts host performance.
Set Host Network Access¶
The hosts that serve the MongoDB deployments must:
- Have full networking access to each other through their fully qualified domain names (FQDNs). Each host must be able to reach every other host through the FQDN.
- Windows
- Ubuntu/Debian
- RHEL/CentOS/SLES/AMZ
- Linux
Find the FQDN for each host. Run the following command in Powershell:
Download and install the Windows BIND tools.
Find the FQDN for each host. Run the following command in the shell:
Find the FQDN for each host. Run the following command in the shell:
Find the FQDN for each host. Run the following command in the shell:
Resolve each FQDN to a unique IP address. Run the following command in the shell to resolve the FQDN:
Set the Common Name or Subject Alternative Name value of any SSL certificates to the MongoDB host’s FQDN.
The network configuration must allow each MongoDB Agent to make a direct connection to every MongoDB deployment listed on the Deployment page. Ops Manager does not support port forwarding.
- Windows
Disable Windows Firewall Stealth Mode
For best performance, Disable Windows Firewall stealth mode on the MongoDB hosts on which you installed the MongoDB Agent.
Set Host Permissions¶
On a Host that Already Runs MongoDB¶
If you install the MongoDB Agent to a host that is running a MongoDB process, the agent must have:
- Permission to stop any MongoDB processes. The MongoDB Agent restarts the process using the Agent’s own set of MongoDB binaries. If you had installed MongoDB with a package manager, use the same package manager to install the MongoDB Agent. This gives the agent the same owner as MongoDB.
Read
andWrite
permissions on the MongoDB data directory and log directory.
On a Host Before Installing MongoDB¶
If you deploy the MongoDB Agent to a host that doesn’t have MongoDB
installed, ensure the user that owns the MongoDB Agent has Read
and
Write
permissions on the MongoDB data and log directories you plan
to use.
- Ubuntu/Debian
- RHEL/CentOS/SLES/AMZ
- Linux
Root Access
To install the MongoDB Agent using a deb
package, you need to
be logged in as root
or a user with sudo
privileges to
install packages.
To install the MongoDB Agent using a .rpm
package, you
need to be logged in as root
or a user with sudo
privileges to install packages.
To install the MongoDB Agent using a .tar
package, you need
to be logged in as root
or a user with sudo
privileges to
install packages.
Acquire an Agent API Key¶
The MongoDB Agent requires one Agent API Key per project to communicate with the Ops Manager Application.
If you do not have an existing Agent API Key for your Ops Manager project, you need to create one:
Click Deployment.
Navigate to Agents.
Click Agent API Keys.
Click plus icon Generate.
Note
This button appears if:
- The current user is the
Project Owner
and - The project has no Agent API Keys other than the Original Group API Key with an exclamation exclamation circle icon next to it. This type of key exists in projects created before the new Agent API Key model. In the new model, you can create multiple Agent API Keys in a project, and any the project’s MongoDB Agents can use any of the keys.
- The current user is the
In the Generate Key modal, provide a description of the new Agent API Key in the Description box.
Click Generate.
Important
When you generate an Agent API Key, Ops Manager displays it one time only. You must copy this key. Treat it like a password; store it in a secure place. Ops Manager never displays the full key again.