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apache-scoreboard-tools

Every man and his dog has written tools to monitor Apache by scraping the mod_status "/server-status/" URL to tell you how many workers are in use or idle. However all of these tools suffer the same problem; because you're using one of the available TCP connections, when Apache happens to run out of them, (because your application is bricked waiting for database connections, etc.) your monitoring breaks/times out, etc. rather than correctly report that all of your workers are busy.

An alternative idea is to monitor Apache "out-of-band" using the scoreboard directly.

All you need is something like the following in your httpd.conf:

    ScoreboardFile /var/run/httpd/httpd.scoreboard

You need mod_status enabled for this to work and also ExtendedStatus set to on (the default since 2.3.6) but you don't need to expose any of this with a <Location> block and SetHandler directive.

There is a Nagios-style check you can run like so:

    # ./check_apache -w 100 -c 200 /var/run/httpd/httpd.scoreboard
    WARNING: 150 workers in use

-w and -c refer to the warning and critical thresholds for the number of workers in use.

There is also a Collectd plugin which reports the same statistics as the official plugin and can be run in one of two ways. You can run it within Collectd using the exec plugin by just passing the scoreboard:

LoadPlugin exec

<Plugin exec>
  Exec "username" "/usr/sbin/collectd_apache" "/var/run/httpd/httpd.scoreboard"
</Plugin>

Or you can run it outside of Collectd using the unixsock plugin by also passing the socket:

    # /usr/sbin/collectd_apache /var/run/httpd/httpd.scoreboard /var/run/collectd-socket

The first form can work out the polling interval and hostname as these are passed in by Collectd as environment variables however Collectd won't run things as UID 0 which you might need to be able to read the scoreboard so you can end up boxing around with sudo -E.

The second form cannot infer the polling interval so if the defaults of a 60 second polling interval and the FQDN of the host aren't desired then there are -i and -h options to adjust these as necessary.

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