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The Icinga Director REST API

Introduction

Icinga Director has been designed with a REST API in mind. Most URLs you can access with your browser will also act as valid REST url endpoints.

Base Headers

All your requests MUST have a valid accept header. The only acceptable variant right now is application/json, so please always append a header as follows to your requests:

Accept: application/json

Authentication

Please use HTTP authentication and any valid Icinga Web 2 user, granted enough permissions to accomplish the desired actions. The restrictions and permissions that have been assigned to web users will also be enforced for API users. In addition, the permission director/api is required for any API access.

Versioning

There are no version strings so far in the Director URLs. We will try hard to not break compatibility with future versions. Sure, sooner or later we also might be forced to introduce some kind of versioning. But who knows?

As a developer you can trust us to not remove any existing REST url or any provided property. However, you must always be ready to accept new properties.

URL scheme and supported methods

We support GET, POST, PUT and DELETE.

Method Meaning
GET Read / fetch data. Not allowed to run operations with the potential to cause any harm
POST Trigger actions, create or modify objects. Can also be used to partially modify objects
PUT Creates or replaces objects, cannot be used to modify single object properties
DELETE Remove a specific object

TODO: more examples showing the difference between POST and PUT

POST director/host gives 201 on success GET director/host?name=hostname.example.com PUT director/host?name=hostname.example.com gives 200 ok on success and 304 not modified on no change DELETE director/host?name=hostname.example.com gives 200 on success

First example request with CURL

curl -H 'Accept: application/json' \
     -u 'username:password' \
     'https://icinga.example.com/icingaweb2/director/host?name=hostname.example.com'

CURL helper script

A script like the following makes it easy to play around with curl:

METHOD=$1
URL=$2
BODY="$3"
USERNAME="demo"
PASSWORD="***"
test -z "$PASSWORD" || USERNAME="$USERNAME:$PASSWORD"

test -z "$BODY" && curl -u "$USERNAME" \
  -i https://icingaweb/icingaweb/$URL \
  -H 'Accept: application/json' \
  -X $METHOD

test -z "$BODY" || curl -u "$USERNAME" \
  -i https://icingaweb/icingaweb/$URL \
  -H 'Accept: application/json' \
  -X $METHOD \
  -d "$BODY"

echo

It can be used as follows:

director-curl GET director/host?name=localhost

director-curl POST director/host '{"object_name": "host2", "... }'

Should I use HTTPS?

Sure, absolutely, no doubt. There is no, absolutely no reason to NOT use HTTPS these days. Especially not for a configuration tool allowing you to configure check commands that are going to be executed on all your servers.

Icinga Objects

Special parameters

Resolve object properties

In case you add the resolve parameter to your URL, all inherited object properties will be resolved. Such a URL could look as follows:

director/host?name=hostname.example.com&resolved

Retrieve all properties

TODO: adjust the code to fix this, current implementation has withNull

Per default properties with null value are skipped when shipping a result. You can influence this behavior with the properties parameter. Just append properties=ALL to your URL:

director/host?name=hostname.example.com&properties=all

Retrieve only specific properties

The properties parameter also allows you to specify a list of specific properties. In that case, only the given properties will be returned, even when they have no (null) value:

director/host?name=hostname.example.com&properties=object_name,address,vars

Example

GET director/host?name=pe2015.example.com

{
  "address": "127.0.0.3",
  "check_command": null,
  "check_interval": null,
  "display_name": "pe2015 (example.com)",
  "enable_active_checks": null,
  "flapping_threshold": null,
  "groups": [ ],
  "imports": [
    "generic-host"
  ],
  "retry_interval": null,
  "vars": {
    "facts": {
      "aio_agent_build": "1.2.5",
      "aio_agent_version": "1.2.5",
      "architecture": "amd64",
      "augeas": {
        "version": "1.4.0"
      },
   ...
}

director/host?name=pe2015.example.com&resolved

{
    "address": "127.0.0.3",
    "check_command": "tom_ping",
    "check_interval": "60",
    "display_name": "pe2015 (example.com)",
    "enable_active_checks": true,
    "groups": [ ],
    "imports": [
      "generic-host"
    ],
    "retry_interval": "10",
    "vars": {
      "facts": {
        "aio_agent_build": "1.2.5",
        "aio_agent_version": "1.2.5",
        "architecture": "amd64",
        "augeas": {
          "version": "1.4.0"
        },
     ...
}

JSON is pretty-printed per default, at least for PHP >= 5.4

Error handling

Director tries hard to return meaningful output and error codes:

HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 46
Connection: close
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "error": "Invalid JSON: Syntax error"
}

Trigger actions

You can of course also use the API to trigger specific actions. Deploying the configuration is as simple as issueing:

POST director/config/deploy

More

Currently we do not handle Last-Modified und ETag headers. This would involve some work, but could be a cool feature. Let us know your ideas!

Sample scenario

Let's show you how the REST API works with a couple of practical examples:

Create a new host

POST director/host
{
  "object_name": "apitest",
  "object_type": "object",
  "address": "127.0.0.1",
  "vars": {
    "location": "Berlin"
  }
}

Response

HTTP/1.1 201 Created
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:43:55 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 140
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "address": "127.0.0.1",
    "object_name": "apitest",
    "object_type": "object",
    "vars": {
        "location": "Berlin"
    }
}

The most important part of the response is the response code: 201, a resource has been created. Just for fun, let's fire the same request again. The answer obviously changes:

HTTP/1.1 500 Internal Server Error
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:45:04 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 60
Connection: close
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "error": "Trying to recreate icinga_host (apitest)"
}

So, let's update this host. To work with existing objects, you must ship their name in the URL:

POST director/host?name=apitest
{
  "object_name": "apitest",
  "object_type": "object",
  "address": "127.0.0.1",
  "vars": {
    "location": "Berlin"
  }
}

Same body, so no change:

HTTP/1.1 304 Not Modified
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:45:33 GMT
Server: Apache

So let's now try to really change something:

POST director/host?name=apitest
{"address": "127.0.0.2", "vars.event": "Icinga CAMP" }

We get status 200, changes have been applied:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:46:25 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 172
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "address": "127.0.0.2",
    "object_name": "apitest",
    "object_type": "object",
    "vars": {
        "location": "Berlin",
        "event": "Icinga CAMP"
    }
}

The response always returns the full object on modification. This way you can immediately investigate the merged result. As you can see, POST requests only touch the parameters you passed - the rest remains untouched.

One more example to prove this:

POST director/host?name=apitest
{"address": "127.0.0.2", "vars.event": "Icinga CAMP" }

No modification, you get a 304. HTTP standards strongly discourage shipping a body in this case:

HTTP/1.1 304 Not Modified
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:52:05 GMT
Server: Apache

As you might have noted, we only changed single properties in the vars dictionary. Now lets override the whole dictionary:

POST director/host?name=apitest
{"address": "127.0.0.2", "vars": { "event": [ "Icinga", "Camp" ] } }

The response shows that this works as expected:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:52:33 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 181
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "address": "127.0.0.2",
    "object_name": "apitest",
    "object_type": "object",
    "vars": {
        "event": [
            "Icinga",
            "Camp"
        ]
    }
}

If merging properties is not what you want, PUT comes to the rescue:

PUT director/host?name=apitest
{ "vars": { "event": [ "Icinga", "Camp" ] }

All other properties vanished, all but name and type:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:54:33 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 153
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "object_name": "apitest",
    "object_type": "object",
    "vars": {
        "event": [
            "Icinga",
            "Camp"
        ]
    }
}

Let's put "nothing":

PUT director/host?name=apitest
{}

Works as expected:

HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:57:35 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 62
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "object_name": "apitest",
    "object_type": "object"
}

Of course, PUT also supports 304, you can check this by sending the same request again.

Now let's try to cheat:

KILL director/host?name=apitest
HTTP/1.1 400 Bad Request
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 04:54:07 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 43
Connection: close
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "error": "Unsupported method KILL"
}

Ok, no way. So let's use the correct method:

DELETE 'director/host?name=apitest
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Tue, 01 Mar 2016 05:59:22 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 109
Content-Type: application/json
{
    "imports": [
        "generic-host"
    ],
    "object_name": "apitest",
    "object_type": "object"
}

Agent Tickets

The Director is very helpful when it goes to manage your Icinga Agents. In case you want to fetch tickets through the API, please do as follows:

GET director/host/ticket?name=apitest
HTTP/1.1 200 OK
Date: Thu, 07 Apr 2016 22:19:24 GMT
Server: Apache
Content-Length: 43
Content-Type: application/json
"5de9883080e03278039bce57e4fbdbe8fd262c40"

Please expect an error in case the host does not exist or has not been configured to be an Icinga Agent.