:Author: Michael Fladischer :Version: 0.5-dev0
.. contents::
Access the data returned from MK Livestatus queries as Python lists or dictionaries. It does this by sending queries to the MK Livestatus UNIX socket and parses the returned rows. Read/write permission to the UNIX socket are required.
This package is known to be compatible with Python 2.7, 3.3, 34, pypy and pypy3.
Here a simple example to fetch the name and hostgroups for all servers in the UP (0) state:
>>> from mk_livestatus import Socket
>>> s = Socket("/var/lib/icinga/rw/live")
>>> q = s.hosts.columns('name', 'groups').filter('state = 0')
>>> print q
GET hosts
Columns: name groups
Filter: state = 0
>>> q.call()
[{'name': 'example.com', 'groups': ['ssh', 'snmp', 'smtp-server', 'ping-server', 'http-server', 'debian-server', 'apache2']}]
s.hosts
returns a Query to the hosts
resources on Nagios. The columns
and filter
methods modify our query and return it, so we can chain the calls. The call to call
method returns the rows as a list of dictionaries.
If you use xinetd to bind the Unix socket to a TCP socket (like explained here <http://mathias-kettner.de/checkmk_livestatus.html#Livestatus%20via%20xinetd>
_), you can create the socket like :
>>> s = Socket(('192.168.1.1', 6557))
For more information please visit the python-mk-livestatus website
. Information about MK Livestatus and it's query syntax is available at the mk-livestatus website
.
.. _python-mk-livestatus website: https://github.com/arthru/python-mk-livestatus .. _mk-livestatus website: http://mathias-kettner.de/checkmk_livestatus.html