See Also: Notifications, Time Periods
Naemon supports optional escalation of contact notifications for hosts and services. Escalation of host and service notifications is accomplished by defining host escalations and service escalations in your object configuration file(s).
Notifications are escalated if and only if one or more escalation definitions matches the current notification that is being sent out. If a host or service notification does not have any valid escalation definitions that applies to it, the contact group(s) specified in either the host group or service definition will be used for the notification. Look at the example below:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 90 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 6 last_notification 10 notification_interval 60 contact_groups nt-admins,managers,everyone }
Notice that there are “holes” in the notification escalation definitions. In particular, notifications 1 and 2 are not handled by the escalations, nor are any notifications beyond 10. For the first and second notification, as well as all notifications beyond the tenth one, the default contact groups specified in the service definition are used. For all the examples I’ll be using, I’ll be assuming that the default contact groups for the service definition is called nt-admins.
When defining notification escalations, it is important to keep in mind that any contact groups that were members of “lower” escalations (i.e. those with lower notification number ranges) should also be included in “higher” escalation definitions. This should be done to ensure that anyone who gets notified of a problem continues to get notified as the problem is escalated. Example:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 90 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 6 last_notification 0 notification_interval 60 contact_groups nt-admins,managers,everyone }
The first (or “lowest”) escalation level includes both the nt-admins and managers contact groups. The last (or “highest”) escalation level includes the nt-admins, managers, and everyone contact groups. Notice that the nt-admins contact group is included in both escalation definitions. This is done so that they continue to get paged if there are still problems after the first two service notifications are sent out. The managers contact group first appears in the “lower” escalation definition - they are first notified when the third problem notification gets sent out. We want the managers group to continue to be notified if the problem continues past five notifications, so they are also included in the “higher” escalation definition.
Notification escalation definitions can have notification ranges that overlap. Take the following example:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 20 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 4 last_notification 0 notification_interval 30 contact_groups on-call-support }
In the example above:
Recovery notifications are slightly different than problem notifications when it comes to escalations. Take the following example:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 20 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 4 last_notification 0 notification_interval 30 contact_groups on-call-support }
If, after three problem notifications, a recovery notification is sent out for the service, who gets notified? The recovery is actually the fourth notification that gets sent out. However, the escalation code is smart enough to realize that only those people who were notified about the problem on the third notification should be notified about the recovery. In this case, the nt-admins and managers contact groups would be notified of the recovery.
You can change the frequency at which escalated notifications are sent out for a particular host or service by using the notification_interval option of the hostgroup or service escalation definition. Example:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 45 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 6 last_notification 0 notification_interval 60 contact_groups nt-admins,managers,everyone }
In this example we see that the default notification interval for the services is 240 minutes (this is the value in the service definition). When the service notification is escalated on the 3rd, 4th, and 5th notifications, an interval of 45 minutes will be used between notifications. On the 6th and subsequent notifications, the notification interval will be 60 minutes, as specified in the second escalation definition.
Since it is possible to have overlapping escalation definitions for a particular hostgroup or service, and the fact that a host can be a member of multiple hostgroups, Naemon has to make a decision on what to do as far as the notification interval is concerned when escalation definitions overlap. In any case where there are multiple valid escalation definitions for a particular notification, Naemon will choose the smallest notification interval. Take the following example:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 45 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 4 last_notification 0 notification_interval 60 contact_groups nt-admins,managers,everyone }
We see that the two escalation definitions overlap on the 4th and 5th notifications. For these notifications, Naemon will use a notification interval of 45 minutes, since it is the smallest interval present in any valid escalation definitions for those notifications.
One last note about notification intervals deals with intervals of 0. An interval of 0 means that Naemon should only sent a notification out for the first valid notification during that escalation definition. All subsequent notifications for the hostgroup or service will be suppressed. Take this example:
define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 3 last_notification 5 notification_interval 45 contact_groups nt-admins,managers } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 4 last_notification 6 notification_interval 0 contact_groups nt-admins,managers,everyone } define serviceescalation{ host_name webserver service_description HTTP first_notification 7 last_notification 0 notification_interval 30 contact_groups nt-admins,managers }
In the example above, the maximum number of problem notifications that could be sent out about the service would be four. This is because the notification interval of 0 in the second escalation definition indicates that only one notification should be sent out (starting with and including the 4th notification) and all subsequent notifications should be repressed. Because of this, the third service escalation definition has no effect whatsoever, as there will never be more than four notifications.
Under normal circumstances, escalations can be used at any time that a notification could normally be sent out for the host or service. This “notification time window” is determined by the notification_period directive in the host or service definition.
You can optionally restrict escalations so that they are only used during specific time periods by using the escalation_period directive in the host or service escalation definition. If you use the escalation_period directive to specify a timeperiod during which the escalation can be used, the escalation will only be used during that time. If you do not specify any escalation_period directive, the escalation can be used at any time within the “notification time window” for the host or service.
If you would like to restrict the escalation definition so that it is only used when the host or service is in a particular state, you can use the escalation_options directive in the host or service escalation definition. If you do not use the escalation_options directive, the escalation can be used when the host or service is in any state.