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Monitor MongoDB With SNMP on Linux

On this page

  • Overview
  • Considerations
  • Configuration Files
  • Procedure
  • Optional: Run MongoDB as SNMP Master

Warning

Enterprise Feature Removed

Starting in MongoDB 6.1, SNMP is removed. All related command line options prevent mongod from starting. To monitor your deployment, use MongoDB Ops Manager.

MongoDB Enterprise can provide database metrics via SNMP, in support of centralized data collection and aggregation. This procedure explains the setup and configuration of a mongod instance as an SNMP subagent, as well as initializing and testing of SNMP support with MongoDB Enterprise.

Tip

See also:

Troubleshoot SNMP and Monitor MongoDB Windows with SNMP for complete instructions on using MongoDB with SNMP on Windows systems.

  • SNMP support is only available in mongod. Other MongoDB tools such as mongos do not support SNMP.

  • mongod does not support the use of SNMP traps.

MongoDB Enterprise includes the following SNMP configuration files:

  • MONGOD-MIB.txt:

    The management information base (MIB) file that defines MongoDB's SNMP output. On Ubuntu and Debian platforms, this file is shipped compressed as MONGOD-MIB.txt.gz and must be decompressed with gunzip.

  • mongod.conf.subagent:

    The configuration file to run mongod as the SNMP subagent. This file sets SNMP run-time configuration options, including the agentXSocket to connect to the SNMP master.

  • mongod.conf.master:

    The configuration file to run mongod as the SNMP master. This file sets SNMP run-time configuration options, including the agentaddress to run on.

The MongoDB SNMP configuration files are provided with your MongoDB Enterprise installation, as follows:

  • If you installed MongoDB Enterprise via a package manager, these files are installed to the following directory as part of the package installation process:

    Platform
    Path
    RHEL / CentOS
    /usr/share/doc/mongodb-enterprise-server-6.3.1
    Ubuntu / Debian
    /usr/share/doc/mongodb-enterprise-server
    SUSE
    /usr/share/doc/packages/mongodb-enterprise-server
  • If you installed MongoDB Enterprise from a .tgz tarball, these files were included in the tarball.

1

Copy the MongoDB SNMP configuration files from their installation location to their target directories, according to your platform:

  1. Navigate to the location where the SNMP files were installed. For example, if you installed the latest version of MongoDB via the yum package manager:

    cd /usr/share/doc/mongodb-enterprise-server-6.3.1
  2. Copy the two MongoDB SNMP files to their target directories:

    sudo cp MONGOD-MIB.txt /usr/share/snmp/mibs/
    sudo cp mongod.conf.subagent /etc/snmp/mongod.conf
  1. Navigate to the location where the SNMP files were installed. For example, if you installed MongoDB via the apt package manager:

    cd /usr/share/doc/mongodb-enterprise-server
  2. Copy the MONGOD-MIB.txt.gz file to its target directory, and unzip it:

    sudo cp MONGOD-MIB.txt.gz /usr/share/snmp/mibs/
    sudo gunzip /usr/share/snmp/mibs/MONGOD-MIB.txt.gz
  3. Copy the mongod.conf.subagent file to its target directory:

    sudo cp mongod.conf.subagent /etc/snmp/mongod.conf
  1. Navigate to the location where the SNMP files were installed. For example, if you installed the latest version of MongoDB via the zypper package manager:

    cd /usr/share/doc/packages/mongodb-enterprise-server
  2. Copy the two MongoDB SNMP files to their target directories:

    sudo cp MONGOD-MIB.txt /usr/share/snmp/mibs/
    sudo cp mongod.conf.subagent /etc/snmp/mongod.conf
2

Edit the /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf file, and add the following:

# sec.name source community
com2sec local localhost mongodb
# group.name sec.model sec.name
group MyRWGroup any local
# incl/excl subtree mask
view all included .1 80
# context sec.model sec.level prefix read write notif
access MyRWGroup "" any noauth 0 all all all
master agentx
AgentXSocket /tmp/agentx/master
AgentXPerms 0777 0777 mongod mongod
  1. Install snmpd if it is not already installed:

    sudo apt-get install snmpd
  2. Edit the /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf file, and add the following:

    # sec.name source community
    com2sec local localhost mongodb
    # group.name sec.model sec.name
    group MyRWGroup any local
    # incl/excl subtree mask
    view all included .1 80
    # context sec.model sec.level prefix read write notif
    access MyRWGroup "" any noauth 0 all all all
    AgentXSocket /tmp/agentx/master
    AgentXPerms 0777 0777 mongodb mongodb

Edit the /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf file, and add the following:

# sec.name source community
com2sec local localhost mongodb
# group.name sec.model sec.name
group MyRWGroup any local
# incl/excl subtree mask
view all included .1 80
# context sec.model sec.level prefix read write notif
access MyRWGroup "" any noauth 0 all all all
master agentx
AgentXSocket /tmp/agentx/master
AgentXPerms 0777 0777 mongod mongod

This configuration defines a UNIX domain socket for communication between the master (snmpd) and sub-agent (MongoDB), and defines basic SNMP permissions for access to the relevant MongoDB SNMP fields.

Note

To bind your master to a non-localhost IP address, add that IP address to the agentaddress field in the /etc/snmp/snmpd.conf file, and update the appropriate network security ACLs to permit a valid address range. An address range of 10.0.0.0/8 with a security name of "mynetwork" has been provided in the mongod.conf.master configuration file as an example.

The above configuration is given as an example only; you may wish to customize permissions based on your site security requirements. While MongoDB support can provide guidance on configuring MongoDB for SNMP, configuring SNMP on operating systems is out of scope.

3

Start SNMP on your system using the initialization system appropriate for your version of Linux:

  • For Linux systems using systemd (systemctl command):

    sudo systemctl start snmpd
  • For Linux systems using System V init (service command):

    sudo service snmpd start
4

Start mongod with the snmp-subagent to send data to the SNMP master.

mongod --snmp-subagent
5

Verify that MongoDB is accessible for SNMP queries with the snmpwalk testing command.

  1. Install snmpwalk on your system:

    sudo yum install net-snmp-utils
  2. Run snmpwalk with the following parameters to verify the ability to collect data from mongod:

    snmpwalk -m /usr/share/snmp/mibs/MONGOD-MIB.txt -v 2c -c mongodb 127.0.0.1:161 1.3.6.1.4.1.34601
  1. DEBIAN ONLY: If necessary, add the non-free repository to your /etc/apt/sources.list file to access the snmp-mibs-downloader package. For example, on Debian 9 "Stretch", the primary repo entries might look like this:

    deb http://deb.debian.org/debian stretch main non-free
    deb-src http://deb.debian.org/debian stretch main non-free
  2. DEBIAN / UBUNTU: Install the snmp-mibs-downloader package to supply necessary MIB files, then restart the snmpd service to reload the new MIB files:

    sudo apt-get update
    sudo apt-get -y install snmp-mibs-downloader
    sudo service snmpd restart
  3. DEBIAN / UBUNTU: Run snmpwalk with the following parameters to verify the ability to collect data from mongod:

    snmpwalk -m /usr/share/snmp/mibs/MONGOD-MIB.txt -v 2c -c mongodb 127.0.0.1:161 1.3.6.1.4.1.34601
snmpwalk -m /usr/share/snmp/mibs/MONGOD-MIB.txt -v 2c -c mongodb 127.0.0.1:161 1.3.6.1.4.1.34601

The snmpwalk command should display current values for SNMP fields such as sysUpTime, and memoryResident, among others.

Note

The port used in the above snmpwalk testing command, port 161, is the default port for the snmpd service, not the primary port for the mongod. If you have configured a different port for your snmpd service, supply that here instead.

You can run mongod with the snmp-master option for testing purposes. To do this, use the SNMP master configuration file instead of the subagent configuration file. From the directory containing the unpacked MongoDB installation files:

cp mongod.conf.master /etc/snmp/mongod.conf

Note

To bind your master to a non-localhost IP address, add that IP address to the agentaddress field in the /etc/snmp/mongod.conf file, and update the appropriate network security ACLs to permit a valid address range. An address range of 10.0.0.0/8 with a security name of "mynetwork" has been provided in the master configuration file as an example.

Then, start mongod with the snmp-master option:

mongod --snmp-master

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